Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus Delivery Option for Registered Open-End Management Investment Companies, 4546-4593 [E9-1035]
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4546
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, and 274
[Release Nos. 33–8998; IC–28584; File No.
S7–28–07]
RIN 3235–AJ44
Enhanced Disclosure and New
Prospectus Delivery Option for
Registered Open-End Management
Investment Companies
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange
Commission is adopting amendments to
the form used by mutual funds to
register under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 and to offer their securities
under the Securities Act of 1933 in
order to enhance the disclosures that are
provided to mutual fund investors. The
amendments require key information to
appear in plain English in a
standardized order at the front of the
mutual fund statutory prospectus. The
Commission is also adopting rule
amendments that permit a person to
satisfy its mutual fund prospectus
delivery obligations under section
5(b)(2) of the Securities Act by sending
or giving the key information directly to
investors in the form of a summary
prospectus and providing the statutory
prospectus on an Internet Web site.
Upon an investor’s request, mutual
funds are also required to send the
statutory prospectus to the investor.
These amendments are intended to
improve mutual fund disclosure by
providing investors with key
information in plain English in a clear
and concise format, while enhancing the
means of delivering more detailed
information to investors. Finally, the
Commission is adopting additional
amendments that are intended to result
in the disclosure of more useful
information to investors who purchase
shares of exchange-traded funds on
national securities exchanges.
DATES: Effective Date: March 31, 2009.
Compliance Date: See Part III.D. of
this release for information on
compliance dates.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kieran G. Brown, Senior Counsel;
Sanjay Lamba, Senior Counsel; Devin F.
Sullivan, Attorney; or Mark T. Uyeda,
Assistant Director, Office of Disclosure
Regulation, at (202) 551–6784, or, with
respect to exchange-traded funds, Adam
B. Glazer, Senior Counsel, Office of
Regulatory Policy, at (202) 551–6792,
Division of Investment Management,
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Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–5720.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) is adopting
amendments to rules 159A,1 482,2 485,3
497,4 and 498 5 under the Securities Act
of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’) and rules
304 6 and 401 7 of Regulation S–T.8 The
Commission is also adopting
amendments to Form N–1A,9 the form
used by open-end management
investment companies to register under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Company Act’’) and to
offer securities under the Securities Act;
Form N–4,10 the form used by insurance
company separate accounts organized as
unit investment trusts and offering
variable annuity contracts to register
under the Investment Company Act and
to offer securities under the Securities
Act; and Form N–14,11 the form used by
registered management investment
companies and business development
companies to register under the
Securities Act securities to be issued in
business combinations.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to Form N–1A
1. General Instructions to Form N–1A
2. Exchange Ticker Symbols
3. Information Required in Summary
Section
a. Elimination of Proposed Portfolio
Holdings Requirement
b. Order of Information
c. Investment Objectives and Goals
d. Fee Table
e. Investments, Risks, and Performance
f. Management
g. Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares
h. Tax Information
i. Financial Intermediary Compensation
4. Exchange-Traded Funds
a. Purchasing and Redeeming Shares
b. Total Return
c. Premium/Discount Information
5. Conforming and Technical Amendments
to Form N–1A
B. New Delivery Option for Mutual Funds
1. Use of Summary Prospectus and
Satisfaction of Statutory Prospectus
Delivery Requirements
2. Content of Summary Prospectus
a. General
1 17
CFR 230.159A.
CFR 230.482.
3 17 CFR 230.485.
4 17 CFR 230.497.
5 17 CFR 230.498.
6 17 CFR 232.304.
7 17 CFR 232.401.
8 17 CFR 232.10 et seq.
9 17 CFR 239.15A and 274.11A.
10 17 CFR 239.17b and 274.11c.
11 17 CFR 239.23.
2 17
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b. Cover Page or Beginning of Summary
Prospectus
c. Updating Requirements
3. Provision of Statutory Prospectus, SAI,
and Shareholder Reports
a. Documents Required To Be Provided on
the Internet
b. Formatting Requirements for
Information Provided on the Internet
c. Technological Requirements for Online
Information
d. Ability To Retain Documents
e. Safe Harbor for Temporary
Noncompliance
f. Requirement To Send Documents
4. Incorporation by Reference
a. Permissible Incorporation by Reference
b. Effect of Incorporation by Reference
5. Filing Requirements for the Summary
Prospectus
C. Technical and Conforming Amendments
D. Compliance Date
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. Cost/Benefit Analysis
VI. Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency,
Competition, and Capital Formation
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VIII. Statutory Authority
Text of Final Rule and Form Amendments
I. Executive Summary
Today, the Commission is adopting an
improved mutual fund disclosure
framework that it originally proposed in
November 2007.12 This improved
disclosure framework is intended to
provide investors with information that
is easier to use and more readily
accessible, while retaining the
comprehensive quality of the
information that is available today. The
foundation of the improved disclosure
framework is the provision to all
investors of streamlined and userfriendly information that is key to an
investment decision.
To implement the new disclosure
framework, we are adopting
amendments to Form N–1A that will
require every prospectus to include a
summary section at the front of the
prospectus, consisting of key
information about the fund, including
investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance. We are
also adopting a new option for satisfying
prospectus delivery obligations with
respect to mutual fund securities under
the Securities Act. Under the option,
key information will be sent or given to
investors in the form of a summary
prospectus (‘‘Summary Prospectus’’),
and the statutory prospectus will be
provided on an Internet Web site.13
Funds that select this option will also be
12 Investment Company Act Release No. 28064
(Nov. 21, 2007) [72 FR 67790 (Nov. 30, 2007)]
(‘‘Proposing Release’’).
13 A ‘‘statutory prospectus’’ is a prospectus that
meets the requirements of Section 10(a) of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j(a)].
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
required to send the statutory
prospectus to the investor upon request.
In addition, the Commission is
adopting amendments to Form N–1A
relating to exchange-traded funds
(‘‘ETFs’’) that we proposed in a separate
release in March 2008.14 These
amendments are intended to result in
the disclosure of more useful
information to investors who purchase
shares of exchange-traded funds on
national securities exchanges.
II. Background
Millions of individual Americans
invest in shares of open-end
management investment companies
(‘‘mutual funds’’),15 relying on mutual
funds for their retirement, their
children’s education, and their other
basic financial needs.16 These investors
face a difficult task in choosing among
the more than 8,000 available mutual
funds.17 Fund prospectuses, which have
been criticized by investor advocates,
representatives of the fund industry,
and others as being too long and
complicated, often prove difficult for
investors to use efficiently in comparing
their many choices.18 Current
14 See Investment Company Act Release No.
28193 (Mar. 11, 2008) [73 FR 14618 (Mar. 18, 2008)]
(‘‘ETF Proposing Release’’).
15 An open-end management investment
company is an investment company, other than a
unit investment trust or face-amount certificate
company, that offers for sale or has outstanding any
redeemable security of which it is the issuer. See
Sections 4 and 5(a)(1) of the Investment Company
Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–4 and 80a–5(a)(1)].
16 Investment Company Institute, 2008
Investment Company Fact Book, at 70 (2008) (‘‘2008
ICI Fact Book’’), available at https://www.ici.org/pdf/
2008_factbook.pdf (88 million individual investors
own mutual funds).
17 Id. at 16 (in 2007, there were 8,752 mutual
funds).
18 See, e.g., Don Phillips, Managing Director,
Morningstar, Inc., Transcript of U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission Interactive Data Roundtable,
at 26 (June 12, 2006), available at https://
www.sec.gov/spotlight/xbrl/
xbrlofficialtranscript0606.pdf (‘‘June 12 Roundtable
Transcript’’) (stating that current prospectus is
‘‘bombarding investors with way more information
than they can handle and that they can intelligently
assimilate’’). A Webcast archive of the June 12
Interactive Data Roundtable is available at https://
www.connectlive.com/events/secxbrl/. See also
Investment Company Institute, Understanding
Preferences for Mutual Fund Information, at 8 (Aug.
2006), available at https://ici.org/pdf/rpt_06_inv_
prefs_summary.pdf (‘‘ICI Investor Preferences
Study’’) (noting that sixty percent of recent fund
investors describe mutual fund prospectuses as very
or somewhat difficult to understand, and two-thirds
say prospectuses contain too much information);
Associated Press Online, Experts: Investors Face
Excess Information (May 25, 2005) (‘‘There is broad
agreement * * * that prospectuses have too much
information * * * to be useful.’’ (quoting Mercer
Bullard, President, Fund Democracy, Inc.)); Thomas
P. Lemke and Gerald T. Lins, The ‘‘Gift’’ of
Disclosure: A Suggested Approach for Managed
Investments, The Investment Lawyer, at 19 (Jan.
2001) (stating that the fund prospectus ‘‘typically
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Commission rules require mutual fund
prospectuses to contain key information
about investment objectives, risks, and
expenses that, while important to
investors, can be difficult for investors
to extract. Prospectuses are often long,
both because they contain a wealth of
detailed information, which our rules
require, and because prospectuses for
multiple funds are often combined in a
single document. Too frequently, the
language of prospectuses is complex
and legalistic, and the presentation
formats make little use of graphic design
techniques that would contribute to
readability.
Numerous commentators have
suggested that investment information
that is key to an investment decision
should be provided in a streamlined
document with other more detailed
information provided elsewhere.19
Furthermore, recent investor surveys
indicate that investors prefer to receive
contains more information than the average investor
needs’’).
19 See, e.g., Charles A. Jaffe, Improving Disclosure
of Funds Can Be Done, The Fort Worth StarTelegram (May 7, 2006) (‘‘Bring back the profile
prospectus, and make its use mandatory * * *. A
two page-summary of [the] key points [in the
profile]—at the front of the prospectus—would give
investors the bare minimum of what they should
know out of the paperwork.’’); Experts: Investors
Face Excess Information, supra note 18 (stating ‘‘a
possible middle ground in the disclosure debate is
to rely more heavily on so-called profile documents
which provide a two-page synopsis of a fund’’
(attributing statement to Mercer Bullard, President,
Fund Democracy, Inc.)); Mutual Funds: A Review of
the Regulatory Landscape, Hearing Before the
Subcomm. on Capital Markets, Insurance and
Government Sponsored Enterprises of the Comm.
on Financial Services, U.S. House of
Representatives, 109th Cong. (May 10, 2005), at 24
(‘‘To my mind, a new and enhanced mutual fund
prospectus should have two core components. It
should be short, addressing only the most important
factors about which typical fund investors care in
making investment decisions, and it should be
supplemented by additional information available
electronically, specifically through the Internet,
unless an investor chooses to receive additional
information through other means.’’ (Testimony of
Barry P. Barbash, then Partner, Shearman & Sterling
LLP)); Thomas P. Lemke and Gerald T. Lins, The
‘‘Gift’’ of Disclosure: A Suggested Approach for
Managed Investments, supra note 18, at 19
(information that is important to investors includes
goals and investment policies, risks, costs,
performance, and the identity and background of
the manager).
In addition, a mutual fund task force organized
by the National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. (‘‘NASD’’) supported the use of a ‘‘profile plus’’
document, on the Internet, that would include,
among other things, basic information about a
fund’s investment strategies, risks, and total costs,
with hyperlinks to additional information in the
prospectus. See NASD Mutual Fund Task Force,
Report of the Mutual Fund Task Force: Mutual
Fund Distribution (Mar. 2005), available at https://
www.finra.org/web/groups/rules_regs/documents/
rules_regs/p013690.pdf (‘‘NASD Mutual Fund Task
Force Report’’). The name of NASD has been
changed to the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’).
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information in concise, user-friendly
formats.20
Similar opinions were voiced at a
roundtable held by the Commission in
June 2006, at which representatives
from investor groups, the mutual fund
industry, analysts, and others discussed
how the Commission could change the
mutual fund disclosure framework so
that investors would be provided with
better information. Significant
discussion at the roundtable concerned
the importance of providing mutual
fund investors with access to key fund
data in a shorter, more easily
understandable format.21 The
participants focused on the importance
of providing mutual fund investors with
shorter disclosure documents,
containing key information, with more
detailed disclosure documents available
to investors and others who choose to
review additional information.22 There
was consensus among the roundtable
participants that the key information
that investors need to make an
investment decision includes
information about a mutual fund’s
investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance.23
20 See ICI Investor Preferences Study, supra note
18, at 29 (‘‘Nearly nine in 10 recent fund investors
say they prefer a summary of the information they
want to know before buying fund shares, either
alone or along with a detailed document * * *. Just
13 percent prefer to receive only a detailed
document.’’); Barbara Roper and Stephen Brobeck,
Consumer Federation of America, Mutual Fund
Purchase Practices, at 13–14 (June 2006), available
at https://www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/mutual_
fund_survey_report.pdf (survey respondents more
likely to consult a fund summary document rather
than a prospectus or other written materials).
21 See, e.g., Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President and
Chief Legal Counsel, T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.,
June 12 Roundtable Transcript, supra note 18, at 31
(‘‘[S]hareholders prefer receiving a concise
summary of fund information before buying.’’).
22 See, e.g., Don Phillips, Managing Director,
Morningstar, Inc., id. at 27 (stating that mutual fund
investors need two different documents, including
a simplified print document and a tagged electronic
document); Paul Schott Stevens, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Investment Company
Institute, id. at 72–73 (urging the Commission to
consider permitting mutual funds to ‘‘deliver a
clear, concise disclosure document * * * much
like the profile prospectus’’ with a statement that
additional disclosure is available on the funds’ Web
site or upon request in paper).
23 See, e.g., Barbara Roper, Director of Investor
Protection, Consumer Federation of America, id. at
20 (noting that there is ‘‘agreement to the point of
near unanimity about the basic factors that
investors should consider when selecting a mutual
fund. These closely track the content of the original
fund profile with highest priority given to
investment objectives and strategies, risks, costs,
and past performance particularly as it relates to the
volatility of past returns.’’). See also Paul G. Haaga,
Jr., Executive Vice President, Capital Research and
Management Company, id. at 90 (stating that the
Commission should ‘‘specify some minimum
amounts of information’’ to provide investors with
‘‘something along the lines of the [fund] profile’’);
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The roundtable participants also
discussed the potential benefits of
increased Internet availability of fund
disclosure documents, which include,
among other things, facilitating
comparisons among funds and replacing
‘‘one-size-fits-all’’ disclosure with
disclosure that each investor can tailor
to his or her own needs.24 In recent
years, access to the Internet has greatly
expanded,25 and significant strides have
been made in the speed and quality of
Internet connections.26 The Commission
has already harnessed the power of
these technological advances to provide
better access to information in a number
of areas. Recently, for example, we
created a program that permits issuers,
on a voluntary basis, to submit to the
Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President and Chief Legal
Counsel, T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., id. at 31 (‘‘The
profile is an excellent, well organized disclosure
document whose content requirements were
substantiated by SEC-sponsored focus groups and
an industry pilot program.’’).
24 See, e.g., Paul Schott Stevens, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Investment Company
Institute, id. at 70–71 (stating that the Internet can
serve as ‘‘far more than a stand-in for paper
documents * * *. It can * * * put investors in
control when it comes to information about their
investments.’’); Don Phillips, Managing Director,
Morningstar, Inc., id. at 49 (discussing ‘‘the ability
to use the Internet as a tool for comparative
shopping’’).
25 Recent surveys show that Internet use among
adults is at an all time high with approximately
three quarters of Americans having access to the
Internet. See A Typology of Information and
Technology Users, Pew Internet & American Life
Project, at 2 (May 2007), available at https://
www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_ICT_Typology.pdf;
Internet Penetration and Impact, Pew Internet &
American Life Project, at 3 (Apr. 2006), available at
https://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Internet_
Impact.pdf. Further, while some have noted a
‘‘digital divide’’ for certain groups, see, e.g.,
Susannah Fox, Digital Divisions, Pew Internet &
American Life Project, at 1 (Oct. 5, 2005) (noting
that certain groups lag behind in Internet usage,
including Americans age 65 and older, AfricanAmericans, and those with less education), others
have noted that this divide may be diminishing for
those groups. See, e.g., Mutual Fund Shareholders’
Use of the Internet, 2006, Investment Company
Institute, Research Fundamentals, at 7 (Oct. 2006),
available at https://www.ici.org/stats/res/fmv15n6.pdf (‘‘Recent increases in Internet access
among older shareholders * * * have narrowed the
generational gap considerably. Today, shareholders
age 65 or older are more than twice as likely to have
Internet access than in 2000.’’); Michel Marriott,
Blacks Turn to Internet Highway, and Digital Divide
Starts to Close, The New York Times (Mar. 31,
2006), available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2006/
03/31/us/31divide.html?ex=1301461200&
en=6fd4e942aaaa04ad&ei=5088 (‘‘AfricanAmericans are steadily gaining access to and ease
with the Internet, signaling a remarkable closing of
the ‘digital divide’ that many experts had worried
would be a crippling disadvantage in achieving
success.’’).
26 See John B. Horrigan, Home Broadband
Adoption 2007, Pew Internet & American Life
Project, at 1 (June 2007), available at https://
www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_
Broadband%202007.pdf (47% of all adult
Americans had a broadband connection at home as
of early 2007).
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Commission financial information and,
in the case of mutual funds, key
prospectus information, in an
interactive data format that facilitates
automated retrieval, analysis, and
comparison of the information.27 More
recently, we proposed rules that would
require mutual funds to provide the
risk/return summary section of their
prospectuses, and companies to provide
their financial statements, to the
Commission in interactive data
format.28 In addition, we recently
adopted rules that provide all
shareholders with the ability to choose
whether to receive proxy materials in
paper or via the Internet.29
As suggested by the participants at the
June 2006 roundtable, advances in
technology also offer a promising means
to address the length and complexity of
mutual fund prospectuses by
streamlining the key information that is
provided to investors, ensuring that
access to the full wealth of information
about a fund is immediately and easily
accessible, and providing the means to
present all information about a fund
online in an interactive format that
facilitates comparisons of key
information, such as expenses, across
different funds and different share
classes of the same fund.30 Technology
has the potential to replace the current
one-size-fits-all mutual fund prospectus
with an approach that allows investors,
their financial intermediaries, thirdparty analysts, and others to tailor the
wealth of available information to their
particular needs and circumstances.
In November 2007, the Commission
proposed an improved mutual fund
disclosure framework that was intended
to address the concerns that have been
raised about mutual fund prospectuses
and to make use of technological
advances to enhance the provision of
information to mutual fund investors.
The Commission received
27 See Investment Company Act Release No.
27884 (July 11, 2007) [72 FR 39290 (July 17, 2007)]
(adopting rule amendments to enable mutual funds
voluntarily to submit supplemental tagged
information contained in the risk/return summary
section of their prospectuses); Securities Act
Release No. 8529 (Feb. 3, 2005) [70 FR 6556 (Feb.
8, 2005)] (adopting rule amendments to enable
registrants voluntarily to submit supplemental
tagged financial information).
28 Investment Company Act Release No. 28298
(June 10, 2008) [73 FR 35442 (June 23, 2008)];
Securities Act Release No. 8924 (May 30, 2008) [73
FR 32794 (June 10, 2008)].
29 Exchange Act Release No. 56135 (July 26, 2007)
[72 FR 42222 (Aug. 1, 2007)].
30 A mutual fund may issue more than one class
of shares that represent interests in the same
portfolio of securities with each class, among other
things, having a different arrangement for
shareholder services or the distribution of
securities, or both. See rule 18f–3 under the
Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.18f–3].
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approximately 155 comment
submissions.31 The commenters
generally supported the proposals, with
some commenters suggesting specific
changes to the proposals. Commission
staff also arranged for investor focus
group testing of the proposed Summary
Prospectus.32 Today, the Commission is
adopting the proposed amendments
with modifications to respond to the
focus group testing and to address
commenters’ recommendations.
We are adopting amendments to Form
N–1A that will require every prospectus
to include a summary section at the
front of the prospectus, consisting of key
information about the fund, including
investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance. This key
information is required to be presented
in plain English in a standardized order.
Our intent is that this information will
be presented succinctly, in three or four
pages, at the front of the prospectus.
We are also adopting a new option for
satisfying prospectus delivery
obligations with respect to mutual fund
securities under the Securities Act.
Under the option, key information will
be sent or given to investors in the form
of a Summary Prospectus, and the
statutory prospectus will be provided on
an Internet Web site. Upon an investor’s
request, funds will also be required to
send the statutory prospectus to the
investor. Our intent in providing this
option is that funds take full advantage
of the Internet’s search and retrieval
capabilities in order to enhance the
provision of information to mutual fund
investors.
The disclosure framework that we are
adopting has the potential to
31 In response to the ETF Proposing Release, the
Commission received seven comment submissions
that addressed the proposed ETF amendments to
Form N–1A.
32 The Commission engaged a consultant to
conduct focus group interviews and a telephone
survey concerning investors’ views and opinions
about various disclosure documents filed by
companies, including mutual funds. During this
process, investors participating in focus groups
were asked questions about a hypothetical
Summary Prospectus. Investors participating in the
telephone survey were asked questions relating to
several disclosure documents, including mutual
fund prospectuses. We have placed in the comment
file (available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s728-07/s72807.shtml) for the proposed rule the
following documents from the investor testing that
relate to mutual fund prospectuses and the
proposed Summary Prospectus: (1) The consultant’s
report concerning focus group testing of the
hypothetical Summary Prospectus and related
disclosures (‘‘Focus Group Report’’); (2) transcripts
of focus groups relating to the hypothetical
Summary Prospectus and related disclosures
(‘‘Focus Group Transcripts’’); (3) disclosure
examples used in these focus groups; and (4) an
excerpt from the consultant’s report concerning the
telephone survey of individual investors
(‘‘Telephone Survey Report’’).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
revolutionize the provision of
information to the millions of investors
who rely on mutual funds for their most
basic financial needs. It is intended to
help investors who are overwhelmed by
the choices among thousands of
available funds described in lengthy and
legalistic documents to access readily
key information that is important to an
informed investment decision. At the
same time, by harnessing the power of
technology to deliver information in
better, more useable formats, the
disclosure framework can help those
investors, their intermediaries, thirdparty analysts, the financial press, and
others to locate and compare facts and
data from the wealth of more detailed
disclosures that are available.
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to Form N–1A
The Commission is adopting, with
modifications to address commenters’
suggestions, amendments to Form N–1A
that will require the statutory
prospectus of every mutual fund to
include a summary section at the front
of the prospectus consisting of key
information presented in plain English
in a standardized order.33 Commenters
and investors participating in focus
groups arranged by Commission staff
generally supported the proposed
summary presentation and agreed that it
will address investors’ preferences for
concise, user-friendly information.34
The summary section will provide
investors with key information about
the fund that investors can use to
evaluate and compare the fund. This
summary will be located in a
standardized, easily accessible place
and will be available to all investors,
regardless of whether the fund uses a
Summary Prospectus and whether the
investor is reviewing the prospectus in
a paper or electronic format.
As in our proposal, the information
required in the summary section of the
prospectus will be the same as that
required in the new Summary
Prospectus, and it is key information
that is important to an investment
decision. We believe, and commenters
33 The Commission is also adopting amendments
to Form N–1A relating to exchange-traded funds.
See discussion infra Part III.A.4.
34 See, e.g., Letter of AARP (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘AARP Letter’’); Letter of Capital Research and
Management Company (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Capital
Research Letter’’); Letter of Fund Democracy,
Consumer Federation of America, and Consumer
Action (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Fund Democracy et al.
Letter’’); Letter of Investment Company Institute
(Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘ICI Letter’’); Letter of Mutual Fund
Directors Forum (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘MFDF Letter’’);
Letter of Morningstar, Inc. (Feb. 27, 2008)
(‘‘Morningstar Letter’’); Focus Group Report, supra
note 32, at 5.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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generally agreed,35 that the key
information that is important to an
investment decision is the same,
whether an investor is reviewing the
summary section of a statutory
prospectus or a short-form disclosure
document. For that reason, we are
requiring the same information in the
summary section of the statutory
prospectus and in the Summary
Prospectus. In each case, our intent is
that funds prepare a concise summary
(on the order of three or four pages) that
will provide key information.
In addition, with the exception of
some information that is common to
multiple funds, we are requiring, as
proposed, that the summary section be
presented separately for each fund
covered by a multiple fund prospectus
and that the information for multiple
funds not be integrated.36 This
requirement is intended to assist
investors in finding important
information regarding the particular
fund in which they are interested.
Multiple fund prospectuses contribute
substantially to prospectus length and
complexity, which act as barriers to
understanding. We have concluded that
requiring a self-contained summary
section for each fund will significantly
aid investors’ ability to use multiple
fund prospectuses effectively.
The Commission is committed to
encouraging statutory prospectuses that
are simpler, clearer, and more useful to
investors. The prospectus summary
section is intended to provide investors
with streamlined disclosure of key
mutual fund information at the front of
the statutory prospectus, in a
standardized order that facilitates
comparisons across funds. We are
adopting the following amendments to
Form N–1A in order to implement the
summary section.
1. General Instructions to Form N–1A
We are adopting, substantially as
proposed, amendments to the General
Instructions to Form N–1A to address
the new summary section of the
statutory prospectus. These
amendments address plain English and
organizational requirements.
Plain English
We are amending, as proposed, the
General Instructions to state that the
summary section of the prospectus must
35 See, e.g., Letter of Bo Li (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Bo
´
Li Letter’’); Letter of Data Communique, Inc. (Feb.
´
27, 2008) (‘‘Data Communique Letter’’); Letter of
Firehouse Communications LLC (Feb. 29, 2008)
(‘‘Firehouse Letter’’); Letter of L.A. Schnase (Feb.
26, 2008) (‘‘Schnase Letter’’). But see Letter of
Kathleen K. Clarke (Mar. 4, 2008) (‘‘Clarke Letter’’).
36 General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N–1A.
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4549
be provided in plain English under rule
421(d) under the Securities Act.37 Rule
421(d) requires an issuer to use plain
English principles in the organization,
language, and design of the front and
back cover pages, the summary, and the
risk factors sections of its prospectus.38
The amended instruction will serve as
a reminder that the new prospectus
summary section is subject to rule
421(d). The use of plain English
principles in the new summary section
will further our goal of encouraging
funds to create useable summaries at the
front of their prospectuses. The
prospectus, in its entirety, also will
remain subject to the requirement that
the information be presented in a clear,
concise, and understandable manner.39
Organizational Requirements
We are also adopting amendments to
the organizational requirements of the
General Instructions, with one
modification to address commenters’
suggestions. The amendments will
require mutual funds to disclose the
summary information in numerical
order at the front of the prospectus and
not to precede this information with any
information other than the cover page or
table of contents.40 Commenters
generally supported standardizing the
order and content of the summary
section, agreeing that a standardized
summary section will enhance investor
understanding and the ability to
compare funds.41 Information included
37 General Instruction B.4.(c) of Form N–1A; rule
421(d) [17 CFR 230.421(d)].
Commenters generally supported the use of plain
English in the summary section. See, e.g., AARP
Letter, supra note 34; Letter of CFA Institute (Feb.
28, 2008) (‘‘CFA Institute Letter’’); Letter of
Committee on Federal Regulation of Securities of
the American Bar Association’s Section of Business
Law (Mar. 17, 2008) (‘‘ABA Letter’’); Letter of
Investment Company Institute and Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association (Feb.
28, 2008) (‘‘ICI and SIFMA Letter’’).
38 Rule 421(d) lists the following plain English
principles: (1) Short sentences; (2) definite,
concrete, everyday words; (3) active voice; (4)
tabular presentation or bullet lists for complex
material, wherever possible; (5) no legal jargon or
highly technical business terms; and (6) no multiple
negatives.
39 Pursuant to rule 421(b) [17 CFR 230.421(b)], the
following standards must be used when preparing
prospectuses: (1) present information in clear,
concise sections, paragraphs, and sentences; (2) use
descriptive headings and subheadings; (3) avoid
frequent reliance on glossaries or defined terms as
the primary means of explaining information in the
prospectus; and (4) avoid legal and highly technical
business terminology. We note that these standards
provide funds with flexibility, for example, in
determining whether or not to use headings in a
question-and-answer format.
40 General Instruction C.3.(a) to Form N–1A.
41 See, e.g., Letter of Evergreen Investments (Feb.
28, 2008) (‘‘Evergreen Letter’’); Letter of Financial
Services Institute (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Financial
Services Institute Letter’’).
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in the summary section need not be
repeated elsewhere in the prospectus.
While a fund may continue to include
information in the prospectus that is not
required, a fund may not include any
such additional information in the
summary section of the prospectus.42
As noted above, we are, with one
exception, requiring as proposed that a
multiple fund prospectus present the
summary information for each fund
sequentially and not integrate the
information for more than one fund.43
That is, a multiple fund prospectus will
be required to present all of the
summary information for a particular
fund together, followed by all of the
summary information for each
additional fund. For example, a
multiple fund prospectus will not be
permitted to present the investment
objectives for several funds followed by
the fee tables for several funds. A
multiple fund prospectus will also be
required to identify clearly the name of
the particular fund at the beginning of
the summary information for that fund.
Many commenters agreed that
multiple fund prospectuses should
present the summary information for
each fund separately.44 Some
commenters stated that requiring a
separate summary for each fund will
better achieve the Commission’s goal of
keeping summaries short, which should
help facilitate comparisons across
funds.45 Commenters also stated that
multiple fund prospectuses often
confuse investors and make reviewing
key information for a single fund more
difficult.46
A number of commenters, however,
expressed reservations about the
Commission’s proposal to prohibit
42 General Instruction C.3.(b) of Form N–1A. See,
e.g., CFA Institute Letter, supra note 37; Letter of
Great-West Retirement Services (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Great-West Letter’’); ICI Letter, supra note 34;
Letter of The Vanguard Group, Inc. (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Vanguard Letter’’) (supporting prohibition on
including information in the summary section that
is not required).
43 General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N–1A.
See supra note 36 and accompanying text.
44 See, e.g., CFA Institute Letter, supra note 37;
Letter of Coalition of Mutual Fund Investors (Feb.
13, 2008) (‘‘CMFI Letter’’); Fund Democracy et al.
Letter, supra note 34; Evergreen Letter, supra note
41; MFDF Letter, supra note 34; Letter of the
National Association of Personal Financial Advisors
(Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘NAPFA Letter’’); Letter of
Oppenheimer Funds (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Oppenheimer Letter’’).
45 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
´
note 34; Data Communique Letter, supra note 35.
See also ICI Letter, supra note 34 (stating that some
of its members believe that requiring a separate
summary for each fund will better facilitate the
Commission’s goals of keeping documents short
and facilitating comparisons across funds).
46 See, e.g., Data Communique Letter, supra note
´
35; CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Oppenheimer
Letter, supra note 44.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
multiple fund summary sections,
requesting that the Commission permit
integrated summaries for multiple funds
in at least some circumstances.47 Some
commenters suggested that integrated
summary information would allow
investors to better compare all funds
within a fund family, or at least certain
categories of funds within a fund
family.48 Categories of funds cited
included international funds, asset
allocation funds, and U.S. Treasury
Funds.49 In addition, some commenters
argued that prohibiting multiple fund
summaries would lead to unnecessary
duplication of information and longer
statutory prospectuses.50
A number of investors in our focus
groups expressed the view that multiple
fund presentations of mutual fund
information could be helpful in
facilitating useful comparisons among
funds.51 Some of these investors stated
that multiple fund presentations could
be used as a screening tool to determine
which funds to research in more
detail.52 Some investors in our focus
groups, however, indicated that
combining too many funds within a
single summary can result in confusing
complexity.53 The investors in our focus
groups did not express a consensus on
a specific limit on the number of funds
or page length that would be
appropriate in multiple fund
presentations.
47 See, e.g., Letter of AIM Investments (Feb. 27,
2008) (‘‘AIM Letter’’) (favoring integrated
summaries for target date, asset allocation or
lifestyle funds, and variable annuity funds); Capital
Research Letter, supra note 34 (favoring integrated
summaries for target date and variable annuity
funds).
48 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Letter of
American Century Investments (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘American Century Letter’’); Clarke Letter, supra
note 35; ICI Letter, supra note 34; Letter of Putnam
Investments (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Putnam Letter’’);
Letter of Russell Investments (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Russell Letter’’).
49 See, e.g., Letter of T. Rowe Price Associates,
Inc. (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘T. Rowe Letter’’) (favoring
integrated summaries for certain categories of funds
and citing focus group research conducted by T.
Rowe Price concerning integrated versus singlefund summaries).
50 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; Letter of Dechert LLP
(Mar. 3, 2008) (‘‘Dechert Letter’’); Putnam Letter,
supra note 48; Russell Letter, supra note 48. See
also ICI Letter, supra note 34 (members split, with
some noting that an integrated summary may be
more useful to investors in certain circumstances,
in particular for groups of funds an investor may
wish to compare, and others believing that a
separate document for each fund would better
accomplish goals of keeping the document short
and facilitating comparisons across funds).
51 See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 9.
52 See Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at
20.
53 Id. at 19 (‘‘I thought there were too many in the
[multiple fund prospectus]. It just really makes your
head spin when you have to read all that.’’), 22, 46.
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While we believe that multiple fund
presentations can, in limited
circumstances, be useful in helping
investors to compare funds, we have
determined that prohibiting multiple
fund summary sections is more
consistent with the goal of achieving
concise, readable summaries for
investors. The requirement that
summary information be separately
presented for each fund in a multiple
fund prospectus is intended to address
the problem of lengthy and complex
multiple fund prospectuses in the least
intrusive manner possible. Multiple
fund prospectuses contribute
substantially to prospectus length and
complexity, which act as barriers to
investor understanding. We have
concluded that permitting information
for multiple funds to be integrated in
the summary section would undermine
our goal of providing mutual fund
investors with concise and readable key
information.
We note, however, that our rules do
not restrict in any way the use of
multiple fund presentations in
advertising and sales materials, whether
those materials are provided along with
the Summary Prospectus or
separately.54 Funds have complete
flexibility to prepare and present
comparative information to investors
regarding any grouping of multiple
funds that they believe is useful, and
also to provide automated tools on their
Web sites permitting investors to choose
which funds to compare. As a result, we
do not believe that the prohibition on
multiple fund summaries in the
statutory prospectus will impair in any
significant manner funds’ ability to
provide useful, comparative information
to investors.
We are adopting one exception to the
requirement that multiple fund
prospectuses not integrate the summary
information for more than one fund in
order to eliminate duplicative
information and reduce prospectus
length. Two commenters recommended
that the Commission permit summary
information that is identical for multiple
funds to be presented once, at the end
of all the individual summaries within
a multiple fund statutory prospectus.55
We agree with these commenters that
permitting integration of information
that is likely to be uniform for multiple
funds will further our goal of concise,
user-friendly summary sections.
Therefore, a multiple fund prospectus
54 See rule 482 under the Securities Act [17 CFR
230.482] and rule 34b–1 under the Investment
Company Act [17 CFR 270.34b–1] (investment
company advertising rules).
55 See Capital Research Letter, supra note 34; ICI
Letter, supra note 34.
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will be permitted to integrate the
information required by any of new Item
6 (purchase and sale of fund shares),
Item 7 (tax information), and Item 8
(financial intermediary compensation) if
it is identical for all funds covered in
the prospectus.56 This information is
often uniform across multiple funds
unlike, for example, information about
investment objectives, costs,
performance, or portfolio managers. If
the information required by any of Items
6 through 8 is integrated, the integrated
information will be required to
immediately follow the separate
individual fund summaries containing
the other non-integrated information. In
addition, a statement containing the
following information will be required
in each individual fund summary
section in the location where the
information that is integrated, and
presented later, would have appeared.
For important information about [purchase
and sale of fund shares,] [tax information,]
and [financial intermediary compensation],
please turn to [identify section heading and
page number of prospectus].
As proposed, the instructions will
permit a fund with multiple share
classes, each with its own cost structure,
to present the summary information
separately for each class, to integrate the
information for multiple classes, or to
use another presentation that is
consistent with disclosing the summary
information in a standard order at the
beginning of the prospectus.57
Commenters generally supported, or did
not express a view with respect to,
allowing multiple class summary
sections; and some commenters noted
that such sections would assist investors
in choosing the class most appropriate
for their circumstances.58 We are not
requiring the integration of information
for multiple classes of a fund, which
two commenters argued was important
to facilitate cost comparisons.59 We are
retaining flexibility in this area because
we believe that whether a multiple class
presentation is helpful or overwhelming
depends on the particular
circumstances. We note, however, that
our ongoing interactive data initiative is
intended, among other things, to
facilitate cost comparisons by investors
56 General Instruction C.3.(c)(iii) of Form N–1A.
This exception will not be available to Summary
Prospectuses delivered pursuant to new rule 498
because a Summary Prospectus may describe only
one fund. See discussion infra Part III.B.2.a.
57 General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N–1A.
58 See, e.g., Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35; Great-West
Letter, supra note 42; Oppenheimer Letter, supra
note 44.
59 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
note 34; Letter of Brock Hastie (Jan. 8, 2008)
(‘‘Hastie Letter’’).
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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across multiple classes of a single fund,
as well as across different funds.60
Page Limits
As proposed, we are not imposing
page limits on the summary section. We
emphasize, however, that it is our intent
that funds prepare a concise summary
(on the order of three or four pages) that
will provide key information.
Commenters differed regarding whether
the Commission should impose page
limits on the summary.
Several commenters supported page
limits. One commenter expressed
concern that, in the absence of a page
limit, the summary section would tend
to expand over time, which would
undermine its usefulness.61 Another
commenter noted that, absent page
limits, lengths of summary sections
would vary widely, hindering investors’
ability to compare funds.62
While we share these commenters’
concerns, especially with respect to the
possibility of summary sections getting
longer over time, we believe that these
concerns are outweighed by the
concerns of other commenters that page
limits could constrain appropriate
disclosure and lead funds to omit
material information.63 We also agree
with a commenter who noted that the
prohibition of multiple fund summary
sections should help to limit their
length.64
Elimination of Separate Purchase and
Redemption Document
As proposed, we are eliminating the
provisions of Form N–1A that permit a
fund to omit detailed information about
purchase and redemption procedures
from the prospectus and to provide this
information in a separate document that
is incorporated into and delivered with
the prospectus, as well as a similar
provision in the requirements for the
statement of additional information
(‘‘SAI’’).65 We have concluded that this
option is unnecessary in light of the
new Summary Prospectus which could
be used, at a fund’s option, along with
any additional sales materials, including
a document describing purchase and
60 See
supra note 28 and accompanying text.
Letter of Independent Directors Council
(Feb. 15, 2008) (‘‘IDC Letter’’).
62 See Firehouse Letter, supra note 35. See also
Letter of Jeffrey C. Keil (Jan. 9, 2008) (‘‘Keil Letter’’)
(suggesting that summaries might garner more
investor attention if limited to two or three pages).
63 See, e.g., Letter of Janus Capital Group (Feb. 28,
2008) (‘‘Janus Letter’’); CMFI Letter, supra note 44.
64 See Data Communique Letter, supra note 35.
´
65 Instruction 6 to current Item 1(b) of Form N–
1A; current Item 6(g) of Form N–1A; Instruction to
current Item 18(a) of Form N–1A.
61 See
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4551
redemption procedures.66 The
elimination of these provisions does not
otherwise alter the information about
purchase and redemption procedures
that must appear in the fund’s
prospectus and SAI, and this
information will continue to be required
in those documents.
Variable Contract and Retirement Plan
Funds
Finally, we are modifying the
proposal to permit funds that are used
as investment options for retirement
plans and variable insurance contracts
to modify or omit certain information
required in the new summary section.
This modification addresses
commenters’ concerns that certain
information is not relevant to those
funds.67 Specifically, we are amending
the General Instructions to Form N–1A
to permit funds that are used as
investment options for retirement plans
and variable insurance contracts to
modify or omit the information required
by new summary section Item 6
(purchase and sale of fund shares).68
Existing Form N–1A permits funds that
are used as investment options for
retirement plans and variable insurance
contracts to modify or omit certain
information regarding the purchase and
sale of fund shares that is not relevant
in these contexts.69 The amendment we
are making extends the same treatment
to the purchase and sale information in
the new summary section.
2. Exchange Ticker Symbols
We requested comment on whether
we should require or permit a fund to
include its ticker symbol in the
summary, or on the front or back cover
page of the statutory prospectus or SAI
or elsewhere. Many commenters
suggested that the Commission should
require or permit funds to disclose their
exchange ticker symbols.70 We agree
66 See discussion infra Part III.B.1. Most
commenters did not address this proposed change.
But see Clarke Letter, supra note 35 (supporting
change); Schnase Letter, supra note 35 (opposing
change).
67 See Letter of EQ Advisors Trust/AXA Premier
VIP Trust (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘EQ/AXA Letter’’); Letter
of Committee of Annuity Insurers (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘CAI Letter’’).
68 General Instruction C.3.(d)(i) of Form N–1A.
69 General Instruction C.3.(d)(i) of existing Form
N–1A. We note that Item 7 of the summary section,
which requires tax information that may not be
relevant in the context of retirement plans and
variable insurance contracts, expressly states that
the disclosures are only required to be made, as
applicable.
70 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35; Firehouse
Letter, supra note 35; Hastie Letter, supra note 59;
Letter of William E. Kent (Dec. 26, 2007) (‘‘Kent
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with these commenters that requiring
exchange ticker symbols to be included
in fund disclosure documents would
make it easier for investors to find
information about particular funds and
share classes of funds. Accordingly, we
are requiring that a fund include its
exchange ticker symbol on the cover
pages of the statutory prospectus and
SAI.71 Specifically, a fund will be
required to disclose the exchange ticker
symbol of the fund’s shares or, if the
prospectus or SAI relate to one or more
classes of the fund’s shares, adjacent to
each such class, the exchange ticker
symbol of that class.
3. Information Required in Summary
Section
We are adopting the required content
of the summary section substantially as
proposed, except that, having
considered commenters’ concerns and
the views of investors expressed in
focus groups, we have determined not to
require disclosure of a fund’s portfolio
holdings. The summary section of a
mutual fund statutory prospectus will
consist of the following information: (1)
Investment objectives; (2) costs; (3)
principal investment strategies, risks,
and performance; (4) investment
advisers and portfolio managers; (5)
brief purchase and sale and tax
information; and (6) financial
intermediary compensation. These
items will appear in the same order that
we proposed. We have modified the
requirements for some items to address
comments and views expressed in the
focus groups.
a. Elimination of Proposed Portfolio
Holdings Requirement
The Commission has determined not
to require the summary section to
include the list of the fund’s 10 largest
holdings which we proposed.72 As
proposed, the top 10 holdings list would
have been updated in the statutory
prospectus on an annual basis and in
the Summary Prospectus on a quarterly
basis.73
Letter’’); NAPFA Letter, supra note 44; Letter of Art
Ticknor (Feb. 6, 2008) (‘‘Ticknor Letter’’).
71 Item 1(a)(2) of Form N–1A; Item 14(a)(2) of
Form N–1A. Exchange ticker symbols will also be
required on the cover page, or at the beginning of,
the Summary Prospectus. Rule 498(b)(1)(ii).
72 Proposed Item 5 of Form N–1A.
73 Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C.
77j(a)(3)] generally requires that when a prospectus
is used more than nine months after the effective
date of the registration statement, the information
in the prospectus must be as of a date not more than
sixteen months prior to such use. The effect of this
provision is to require mutual funds to update their
prospectuses annually to reflect current cost,
performance, and other financial information. See
proposed rule 498(b)(2)(iii) (proposed Summary
Prospectus quarterly updating requirement).
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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Commenters were split regarding
whether the top 10 portfolio holdings
should be required in the summary
section. We are persuaded by the
commenters who pointed out the
limited utility of the proposed top 10
holdings list.74 Commenters expressed
the view that top 10 holdings
information may mislead investors
because the top 10 holdings may not
accurately represent a fund’s overall
holdings 75 and because the top 10
holdings information may become
stale.76 Commenters also pointed out
that portfolio holdings information is
already widely available through other
sources, such as shareholder reports and
other Commission filings,77 as well as
fund Web sites and sales materials.78
We continue to believe that
information concerning a fund’s
portfolio holdings may provide
investors with a greater understanding
of a fund’s stated investment objectives
74 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Letter of
Cornell Securities Law Clinic (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Cornell Law Clinic Letter’’); Evergreen Letter,
supra note 41; Letter of Foreside Compliance
Services, LLC (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Foreside Letter’’);
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell Letter,
supra note 48.
Other commenters supported including the top
10 portfolio holdings in the summary section. See,
´
e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data Communique
Letter, supra note 35; Firehouse Letter, supra note
35; Letter of Jill Gross (Feb. 28, 2008); Letter of
Richard K. Hopkins (Feb. 15, 2008) (‘‘Hopkins
Letter’’); Letter of Richard McCormick (Feb. 11,
2008) (‘‘McCormick Letter’’); Letter of William
Mahavier (Feb. 10, 2008) (‘‘Mahavier Letter’’); Letter
of Dan Meador (Feb. 12, 2008); NAPFA Letter,
supra note 44; Letter of Bruce R. Bent (Feb. 28,
2008) (‘‘Bent Letter’’).
75 See, e.g., Dechert Letter, supra note 50 (top 10
holdings information could mislead investors of a
diversified fund where top 10 holdings represent a
relatively small percentage of the fund’s holdings);
ICI Letter, supra note 34 (noting that a fund’s top
10 holdings may be misleading for funds in a
master-feeder structure, funds of funds, fixed
income funds, index funds, money market funds,
exchange-traded funds, and new funds); Letter of
New York City Bar (Feb. 25, 2008) (‘‘NYC Bar
Letter’’) (arguing that for certain types of funds,
such as money market funds, fixed income funds,
and index funds, top 10 holdings information may
be misleading); Letter of Leslie L. Ogg (Feb. 1, 2008)
(‘‘Ogg Letter’’) (noting that top 10 holdings
information can be misleading for multi-manager
funds, funds of funds, long-short funds, and funds
using derivative instruments).
76 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; CAI Letter,
supra note 67; Capital Research Letter, supra note
34; Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Dechert Letter,
supra note 50; ICI Letter, supra note 34; IDC Letter,
supra note 61; Janus Letter, supra note 63; NYC Bar
Letter, supra note 75; Oppenheimer Letter, supra
note 44; Russell Letter, supra note 48.
77 Form N–CSR [17 CFR 249.331; 17 CFR 274.128]
(form used by investment companies semi-annually
to file certified shareholder reports); Form N–Q [17
CFR 249.332; 17 CFR 274.130] (form used by
investment companies to file schedule of portfolio
holdings for first and third quarters).
78 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; EQ/AXA
Letter, supra note 67; Evergreen Letter, supra note
41; Russell Letter, supra note 48; T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49.
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and strategies and may assist investors
in making more informed asset
allocation decisions. In light of the
limited utility of top 10 holdings
information, however, and the
widespread availability of portfolio
holdings information from other
sources, we have determined not to
require this information in the summary
section. Some commenters and
investors in our focus groups suggested
that we instead require disclosure about
the current allocation of a fund’s
portfolio by asset type, such as a pie
chart that would graphically display
this information.79 We have determined
not to require this information because
we have concluded that it is subject to
the same concerns about staleness as top
10 holdings information and because of
the widespread availability of portfolio
holdings information from other
sources. Nonetheless, where a fund’s
asset allocation strategy is a principal
investment strategy of the fund, the
fund should clearly disclose this
strategy,80 and we would encourage the
use of graphical representations as a
potentially helpful communications
tool.
In reaching our determination with
respect to portfolio holdings
information, we carefully considered
the views of investors expressed in our
focus groups. Many investors in the
focus groups expressed significant
interest in portfolio holdings
information.81 At the same time, like the
commenters, a number of the investors
participating in our focus groups
pointed out that top 10 portfolio
holdings information changes frequently
and can quickly become outdated, and
some participants acknowledged that
the top 10 holdings information can
sometimes account for a relatively small
portion of a fund’s holdings.82 We
concluded that investors’ interest in this
information is outweighed by its
potential to mislead and confuse in the
context of the summary section of a
prospectus. Because this information is
widely available through other sources,
we are persuaded that investors’ interest
in this information can be satisfied
through these other sources.
b. Order of Information
We are adopting the order of the
information required in the summary
79 See, e.g., Cornell Law Clinic Letter, supra note
74; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Focus
Group Report, supra note 32, at 6.
80 Items 4(a) and 9 of Form N–1A (requiring
disclosure of principal investment strategies).
81 Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 7; Focus
Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 12.
82 Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 7; Focus
Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 13–14, 78.
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section, as proposed. This includes
moving the fee table forward from its
current location, which follows
information about investment strategies,
risks, and past performance. We
continue to believe that the change to
the location of the fee table will enhance
the prominence of this information,
which is important to address
continuing concerns about investor
understanding of mutual fund costs.83
Several commenters agreed that
relocation of the fee table will place fee
information in a more prominent
location and encourage investors to give
greater attention to costs and cost
comparisons.84 While several
commenters suggested alternative orders
for the information in the summary
section, there was no consensus by
commenters regarding any alternative.85
A number of commenters, largely
from the fund industry, opposed
relocating the fee table. These
commenters argued that moving the fee
table forward inappropriately
overemphasizes costs over other more
important information and that the fee
table should not come between
investment objectives and principal
investment strategies and risks.86 Some
of these commenters argued that the fee
table should not be moved forward,
because it is important for investors to
first and foremost understand a fund
and its risks, and that a fund’s
objectives, strategies, and risks provide
necessary context for fees. Some
commenters also argued that moving the
fee table forward is unnecessary because
83 See Barbara Roper, Director of Investor
Protection, Consumer Federation of America, June
12 Roundtable Transcript, supra note 18, at 21;
James J. Choi, David Laibson, & Brigitte C. Madrian,
National Bureau of Economic Research, Why Does
the Law of One Price Fail? An Experiment on Index
Mutual Funds, at 6 (May 2006), available at
https://www.nber.org/papers/w12261.pdf.; Focus
Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 6 (‘‘[The
hypothetical summary prospectus] shows the fee
right up there, what they charge, so that would
appeal to me.’’).
84 See, e.g., Letter of Roy J. Biegel (Feb. 14, 2008)
(‘‘Biegel Letter’’); CFA Institute Letter, supra note
37; Foreside Letter, supra note 74; Letter of Fund
Democracy and Consumer Federation of America
(Apr. 17, 2008); NAPFA Letter, supra note 44; Letter
of Charles Sikorovsky (Feb. 29, 2008) (‘‘Sikorovsky
Letter’’). See also Focus Group Transcripts, supra
note 32, at 10 (investors expressed view that fund
costs are important); Letter of Investment Company
Institute (Mar. 14, 2008) (‘‘ICI Survey’’) (finding that
95% of respondents believed that fees are
important).
85 See, e.g., Letter of Ward C. Bourn (Feb. 27,
2008); Capital Research Letter, supra note 34;
Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Financial Services
Institute Letter, supra note 41; Vanguard Letter,
supra note 42.
86 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Evergreen
Letter, supra note 41; Letter of Fidelity Investments
(Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Fidelity Letter’’); ICI Letter, supra
note 34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell
Letter, supra note 48; T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
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the short length of the summary section
will make the fee table sufficiently
prominent.
We are not persuaded by these
commenters. We continue to believe,
along with a number of commenters,
that placement of the fee table in a more
prominent location will encourage
investors to give greater attention to
costs. The fee table and example are
designed to help investors understand
the costs of investing in a fund and
compare those costs with the costs of
other funds. Placing the fee table and
example at the front of the summary
section reflects the importance of costs
to an investment decision.87 Moving the
fee table forward also eliminates the
possibility that the fee table could be
obscured by other information.88
c. Investment Objectives and Goals
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that the summary section
begin with disclosure of a fund’s
investment objectives or goals, which
commenters generally supported.89 As
proposed, a fund also will be permitted
to identify its type or category (e.g., that
it is a money market fund or balanced
fund).90
d. Fee Table
We are adopting, with modifications
to address commenters’ concerns and
views expressed by investors in the
focus groups, the fee table and example.
The fee table and example disclose the
costs of investing and immediately
follow the fund’s investment
objectives.91
Breakpoint Discounts
We are requiring, substantially as
proposed, that mutual funds that offer
discounts on front-end sales charges for
volume purchases (so-called
‘‘breakpoint discounts’’) include brief
narrative disclosure alerting investors to
the availability of those discounts.92
Commenters generally supported the
disclosure about breakpoint discounts,
although many commenters, as well as
87 For example, a 1% increase in annual fees
reduces an investor’s return by approximately 18%
over 20 years.
88 See Sikorovsky Letter, supra note 84 (stating
that if an investment manager can in any way
‘‘hide’’ fees from an investor, the document has
failed to fulfill its function).
89 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; Firehouse
Letter, supra note 35; ICI and SIFMA Letter, supra
note 37; Letter of Christine A. Nelson (Feb. 12,
2008); Schnase Letter, supra note 35. See also ICI
Survey, supra note 84 (providing survey results that
found investment objectives was one of the most
important pieces of information to investors).
90 Item 2 of Form N–1A.
91 Item 3 of Form N–1A.
92 Item 3 of Form N–1A; Instruction 1(b) to Item
3 of Form N–1A.
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4553
focus group investors, provided
suggestions for revising the narrative
proposed.93 We are modifying the
proposal in two ways to address these
comments.
First, we are adding to the required
narrative a description of where
investors can find additional
information regarding breakpoint
discounts.94 Specifically, the narrative
will be required to state that further
information is available from the
investor’s financial professional, as well
as identify the section heading and page
number of the fund’s prospectus and
SAI where more information can be
found. This information is intended to
address the views of both commenters
and investors in the focus groups that it
would be helpful for more detailed
information about breakpoint discounts
to be readily available to investors.95
Second, we are clarifying the
instruction that the dollar level at which
investors may qualify for breakpoint
discounts that is required to be
disclosed in the new item is the
minimum level of investment required
to qualify for a discount as disclosed in
the table required by current Item 7(a)(1)
of Form N–1A.96 This change makes
clear that the required dollar threshold
to be disclosed is the same as disclosure
that is already required in Form N–1A.
This change, together with the added
narrative about additional information,
addresses commenters’ concerns that
the breakpoints disclosure does not
capture the complexity and variety of
policies regarding breakpoint
discounts.97
Parenthetical to ‘‘Annual Fund
Operating Expenses’’
We are adopting, substantially as
proposed, revisions to the heading
‘‘Annual Fund Operating Expenses’’ in
the fee table. Specifically, we are
revising the parenthetical following the
93 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; Fund Democracy et
al. Letter, supra note 34; Letter of Manuela A. De
Leon (Feb. 7, 2008); ICI Letter, supra note 34; Keil
Letter, supra note 62; NAPFA Letter, supra note 44;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell Letter,
supra note 48; Focus Group Report, supra note 32,
at 8.
94 Item 3 of Form N–1A.
95 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44 (summary
should indicate where additional information about
breakpoint discounts is available); NAPFA Letter,
supra note 44 (same); Focus Group Transcripts,
supra note 32, at 17 (participant observes that ‘‘I’ll
go to the long-form and look that up and then make
my decision.’’).
96 Instruction 1(b) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. Item
7 of Form N–1A is being renumbered as Item 12 in
this rulemaking.
97 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; Russell Letter, supra note 48; Letter
of Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘SIFMA Letter’’).
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heading to read ‘‘expenses that you pay
each year as a percentage of the value
of your investment’’ in place of
‘‘expenses that are deducted from Fund
assets.’’ 98 In recent years, we have taken
significant steps to address concerns
that investors do not understand that
they pay costs every year when they
invest in mutual funds, including
requiring disclosure of these costs in
shareholder reports.99 Our revision
further addresses those concerns by
making clear that the expenses in
question are paid by investors as a
percentage of the value of their
investments in the fund.
Many commenters supported the
Commission’s proposed revision.100 We
have deleted the word ‘‘ongoing’’ from
the beginning of the parenthetical
language to address commenters’
concerns that this term incorrectly
suggests that fund operating expenses
are the same each year.101 We are not
modifying the parenthetical to address
the views of some industry commenters
that the statement incorrectly implies
that shareholders directly pay fund
expenses, when in fact expenses are
paid out of fund assets.102 The purpose
of the revision is to make clear to
investors that they, in fact, bear these
expenses, and the proposed language
conveys this fact. Our conclusion is
supported by commenters representing
investor groups.103
Portfolio Turnover Rate
We are adopting, with two
modifications, the requirement that
funds, other than money market funds,
include brief disclosure regarding
portfolio turnover immediately
following the fee table example.104 A
3 of Form N–1A.
27(d)(1) of Form N–1A; Investment
Company Act Release No. 26372 (Feb. 27, 2004) [69
FR 11244 (Mar. 9, 2004)] (adopting disclosure of
costs in shareholder reports). See also General
Accounting Office Report on Mutual Fund Fees:
Additional Disclosure Could Encourage Price
Competition, at 66–81 (June 2000), available at
https://www.gao.gov/archive/2000/gg00126.pdf
(discussing lack of investor awareness of the fees
they pay and investor focus on mutual fund sales
charges rather than recurring fees).
100 See, e.g., CFA Institute Letter, supra note 37;
Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Fund Democracy et al.
Letter, supra note 34.
101 See, e.g., CFA Institute Letter, supra note 37;
Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Fund Democracy et al.
Letter, supra note 34; Evergreen Letter, supra note
41; Letter of Fenimore Asset Management (Feb. 28,
2008); Fidelity Letter, supra note 86; MFDF Letter,
supra note 34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44;
T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
102 See, e.g., Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; ICI
Letter, supra note 34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra
note 44; Putnam Letter, supra note 48; Russell
Letter, supra note 48; T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
103 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34.
104 Instruction 5 to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
fund will be required to disclose its
portfolio turnover rate for the most
recent fiscal year as a percentage of the
average value of its portfolio. This
numerical disclosure will be
accompanied by a brief explanation of
the effect of portfolio turnover on
transaction costs and fund performance.
Some concerns have been expressed in
recent years regarding the degree to
which investors understand the effect of
portfolio turnover, and the resulting
transaction costs, on fund expenses and
performance.105 The requirement to
provide brief portfolio turnover
disclosure in the summary section of the
prospectus is intended to address these
concerns, and the proposed disclosure
received support from a significant
number of commenters.106 Because we
believe that it is important to address
investors’ lack of understanding of the
effect of portfolio turnover and
transaction costs on fund expenses and
performance, we disagree with
commenters opposing the disclosure of
portfolio turnover rate on the grounds
that such information is too complicated
or unnecessary for the summary
section.107
We are modifying the proposed
required explanation of the effect of
portfolio turnover to require that the
explanation also address the adverse tax
consequences that may result from a
higher portfolio turnover rate when
fund shares are held in a taxable
account. We agree with commenters
who suggested that adverse tax
consequences, as well as higher
transaction costs, should be expressly
addressed by the explanation.108 We are
also making a technical revision to the
final sentence of the proposed required
explanation.109
98 Item
99 Item
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105 See Investment Company Act Release No.
26313 (Dec. 18, 2003) [68 FR 74820 (Dec. 24, 2003)]
(request for comment regarding ways to improve
disclosure of transaction costs); Report of the
Mutual Fund Task Force on Soft Dollars and
Portfolio Transaction Costs (Nov. 11, 2004),
available at https://www.finra.org/web/groups/
rules_regs/documents/rules_regs/p012356.pdf.
106 See, e.g., Biegel Letter, supra note 84; CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; CMFI Letter, supra
note 44; Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34; IDC Letter, supra note 61; Mahavier Letter,
supra note 74; NAPFA Letter, supra note 44;
Schnase Letter, supra note 35; Vanguard Letter,
supra note 42. See also ICI Letter, supra note 34
(stating that it does not oppose the disclosure).
107 See, e.g., American Century Letter, supra note
48; Capital Research Letter, supra note 34; Clarke
Letter, supra note 35; Evergreen Letter, supra note
41; Foreside Letter, supra note 74; McCormick
Letter, supra note 74; Oppenheimer Letter, supra
note 44; Russell Letter, supra note 48.
108 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34; Letter from Representative Donald A. Manzullo
(Feb. 26, 2008) (‘‘Manzullo Letter’’).
109 Item 3 of Form N–1A. We are deleting the
reference to portfolio turnover rate as a percentage
of the average value of the fund’s ‘‘whole’’ portfolio
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We have determined not to adopt two
significant suggestions that were made
by commenters: First, that we require
the impact of transaction costs to be
reflected in a fund’s expense ratio in the
fee table and, second, that we require
disclosure of portfolio turnover rates
over a period greater than one year.
While we believe that both of these
suggestions have considerable merit, we
have concluded that it is not feasible to
implement either at the present time as
discussed further below.
Several commenters expressed the
view that the Commission should
require that transaction costs be
reflected in a fund’s expense ratio in the
fee table and that this disclosure would
be more meaningful to investors than
the rate of portfolio turnover.110 The
comments on this rulemaking, however,
do not provide an adequate basis for
prescribing a specific and accurate
methodology for reflecting transaction
costs in a fund’s expense ratio.111 We do
agree with the commenters that
portfolio turnover rate is an imperfect
measure of portfolio transaction costs.
While a higher portfolio turnover rate
tends to result in higher transaction
costs and a lower portfolio turnover rate
tends to result in lower transaction
costs, there is not necessarily a direct
correlation between portfolio turnover
rate and portfolio transaction costs.
Nonetheless, in the absence of a basis
for prescribing a better measure, we
believe that portfolio turnover rate,
though imperfect, is an appropriate
indicator of transaction costs for
purposes of the summary section.
A number of commenters argued that
disclosing a portfolio turnover rate over
a one-year period would not yield a
representative portfolio turnover rate
because portfolio turnover rates vary
significantly over time depending on a
variety of factors, including the need to
meet redemption requests, unexpected
cash inflows due to sharp swings in
in the explanation to reflect the fact that the rate
is calculated without reference to securities whose
maturities at the time of acquisition are one year or
less. See Instruction 4(d)(ii) to current Item 8(a) of
Form N–1A (describing how to calculate portfolio
turnover rate; current Item 8 is being renumbered
as Item 13).
110 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
note 34; Letter from Representative George Miller,
Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Representative Robert
E. Andrews, Senator Tom Harkin, and Senator Herb
Kohl (Mar. 13, 2008) (‘‘Miller Letter’’).
111 In addition, in 2003 the Commission issued a
concept release that sought public comment on a
number of issues related to the disclosure of mutual
fund transaction costs. See Investment Company
Act Release No. 26313, supra note 105, 68 FR at
74820. While most commenters who responded to
the concept release felt that there should be greater
transparency of mutual fund transaction costs, there
was a wide range of opinions on what should be
disclosed.
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markets, or the occurrence of a
significant event not likely to repeat in
future years, such as a fund merger or
a new portfolio manager restructuring
the fund’s holdings.112 These
commenters suggested that the
Commission address this concern by, for
example, requiring funds to disclose
year-by-year turnover rates for a longer
period (e.g., 5–10 years) or an average
turnover rate over a longer period of
time (e.g., five years).113 We believe that
requiring year-by-year turnover rates for
multiple years in the summary section
would not further our goal of providing
concise, user-friendly disclosure,
particularly in light of the fact that there
is not necessarily a direct correlation
between portfolio turnover and
transaction costs. We note that portfolio
turnover rates for each of the past five
years are already required elsewhere in
the prospectus.114 We do not believe
that there is a sufficient basis in the
comments to require disclosure of an
average turnover rate over a longer
period of time (e.g., five years). Doing so
would require us to address a number
of questions that have not been subject
to adequate comment in this
rulemaking, including devising a
calculation methodology and addressing
questions of comparability across funds
that have been in existence for different
periods of time.
Expense Reimbursement and Fee
Waiver Arrangements
Finally, we are adopting, with
modifications to address commenters’
recommendations, the proposed
amendments to the requirement that a
fund disclose in its fee table gross
operating expenses that do not reflect
the effect of expense reimbursement or
fee waiver arrangements, which result
in reduced expenses being paid by the
fund.115 The adopted amendments will
permit a fund to place two additional
captions directly below the ‘‘Total
Annual Fund Operating Expenses’’
caption in cases where there are
expense reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangements that will reduce any fund
operating expenses for no less than one
year from the effective date of the fund’s
112 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44;
Firehouse Letter, supra note 35; IDC Letter, supra
note 61.
113 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Mahavier
Letter, supra note 74.
114 Item 13(a) of Form N–1A.
115 Instruction 3(d)(i) and 6(a) to Item 3 of Form
N–1A. In an expense reimbursement arrangement,
the adviser reimburses the fund for expenses
incurred. Under a fee waiver arrangement, the
adviser agrees to waive a portion of its fees in order
to limit fund expenses.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
registration statement.116 We have
eliminated the proposed requirement
that the reimbursement or waiver
arrangement has reduced operating
expenses in the past, as suggested by
two commenters, because this is
irrelevant to the impact that the
arrangements will have in the future.117
The purpose of the permitted line items
is to show investors how the
arrangements will affect expenses in the
future and not how they have affected
expenses in the past.118
One caption will show the amount of
the expense reimbursement or fee
waiver, and a second caption will show
the fund’s net expenses after subtracting
the fee reimbursement or expense
waiver from the total fund operating
expenses. Funds that disclose these
arrangements will also be required to
disclose the period for which the
expense reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangement is expected to continue,
including the expected termination
date, and briefly describe who can
terminate the arrangement and under
what circumstances. We are adding an
express requirement that the expected
termination date of the arrangement be
disclosed in order to address a
commenter’s concern that investors
should be informed in cases where the
commitment on a fee waiver becomes
shorter than one year.119
In computing the fee table example, a
fund will be permitted to reflect any
expense reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangements that will reduce any
operating expenses for no less than one
year from the effective date of the fund’s
registration statement.120 This
116 Instruction 3(e) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. A
fund may not include the additional captions if the
expense reimbursement or fee waiver arrangement
may be terminated without agreement of the fund’s
board of directors (e.g., unilaterally by the fund’s
investment adviser) during the one-year period. If
a fee waiver or expense reimbursement
arrangement, in fact, terminates less than a year
after the effective date of a fund’s registration
statement, the fund generally would be required to
supplement or ‘‘sticker’’ its prospectus to reflect the
termination. The ‘‘sticker’’ would be filed with the
Commission in accordance with rule 497 under the
Securities Act.
117 Instruction 3(e) to Item 3. We are also making
a similar change in the instructions to the fee table
example. Instruction 4(a) to Item 3. See, e.g.,
Dechert Letter, supra note 50; Evergreen Letter,
supra note 41.
118 Because expense reimbursement and fee
waiver arrangements of new funds will be disclosed
in the same manner as existing funds as a result of
the elimination of the proposed requirement
described in the text, we are eliminating current
Instruction 5(b) (renumbered as Instruction 6(b) in
the Proposing Release) to Item 3 of Form N–1A,
which pertains to new funds, rather than adopting
the proposed revision to the Instruction.
119 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
note 34.
120 Instruction 4(a) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. We
have modified this instruction from the proposal to
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4555
adjustment may be reflected only in the
periods for which the expense
reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangement is expected to continue.
For example, if such an arrangement
were expected to continue for one year,
then, in the computation of 10-year
expenses in the fee table example, the
arrangement could only be reflected in
the first of the 10 years.121
Commenters made several suggestions
with respect to cost disclosure that we
have determined not to implement at
this time. First, a number of commenters
suggested that the fee table in the
summary section should simply
disclose the total fees and expenses and
should omit certain line item
breakdowns of expenses that are
currently required in the statutory
prospectus.122 Commenters argued that
a more abbreviated presentation, such as
a fund’s total expense ratio, is preferable
because they argued that the current
breakdown of fees is not crucial
information to an investor’s investment
decision.123 We believe that this idea
deserves further consideration, and we
will consider it for possible future
rulemaking.
Second, some commenters suggested
that we consider alternative terms to
describe sales loads or rule 12b–1
fees 124 because the terms are not easily
understood by most investors.125 We
have concluded that it is more
appropriate to consider these changes in
the context of a full reconsideration of
eliminate the requirement that the arrangement has
reduced fund operating expenses during the most
recently completed calendar year. This
modification is consistent with the modification
that is described at notes 117 and 118 and the
accompanying text.
We are also adopting, as proposed, a technical
amendment to the instructions to the expense
example to eliminate language permitting funds to
reflect the impact of the amortization of initial
organization expenses in the expense example
numbers. Id. This language is unnecessary because
initial organization expenses must be expensed as
incurred and may no longer be capitalized. See
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants,
Statement of Position 98–5, Reporting on the Costs
of Start-Up Activities (Apr. 3, 1998).
121 A fund may not reflect the arrangement in any
period during which the arrangement may be
terminated without agreement of the fund’s board
of directors (e.g., unilaterally by the fund’s
investment adviser).
122 See, e.g., Capital Research Letter, supra note
34; Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Fund
Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34.
123 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34.
124 ‘‘Rule 12b–1 fees’’ or ‘‘12b–1 fees’’ are fees
paid out of fund assets pursuant to a distribution
plan adopted under rule 12b–1 under the
Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.12b–1].
125 See, e.g., Miller Letter, supra note 110; CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; Manzullo Letter,
supra note 108; Letter of Investor Rights Clinic at
Pace University School of Law (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘Pace Letter’’).
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sales charges and rule 12b–1 rather than
in the current rulemaking.126
Finally, some commenters suggested
that the fee table require some form of
comparison of the fund’s fees to a
relevant benchmark based on the fees of
similar funds.127 The Commission
shares the commenters’ view that the
ability to compare fees across mutual
funds is extremely important to
investors. To facilitate this comparison,
we have designed the summary section
to provide investors with key
information in a standardized order. We
also note that the Commission’s ongoing
interactive data initiative is intended to
provide investors and other users with
the tools necessary to facilitate
comparisons of fee information. The
Commission recently proposed rules
that would, if adopted, require mutual
funds to file the information in their fee
tables in an interactive data format that
would facilitate automated analysis of
the information and comparison to other
funds.128 The interactive data format
would allow users of fee table
information to download cost and
performance information directly into
spreadsheets and analyze it using
commercial off-the-shelf software.
e. Investments, Risks, and Performance
Following the fee table and example,
we are requiring, substantially as
proposed, that a fund disclose its
principal investment strategies and
risks.129 This includes the current bar
chart and table illustrating the
variability of returns and showing the
fund’s past performance.
We are modifying the narrative that is
required to accompany the bar chart and
performance table in one respect to
address the views expressed by both
focus group investors and commenters.
A fund that makes updated performance
information available on a Web site or
126 The Commission last year hosted a roundtable
that brought together representatives from mutual
funds, financial services companies, and investor
advocacy groups to discuss issues relating to rule
12b–1. See Commission Roundtable on Rule 12b–
1 (Jun. 19, 2007) available at https://www.sec.gov/
spotlight/rule12b-1.htm. Following the roundtable,
we sought public comment on these topics and
have received almost 1,500 comment letters.
127 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; Fund
Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34; Letter of
Gary M. Keenan (Feb. 14, 2008).
128 See Investment Company Act Release No.
28298, supra note 28, 73 FR at 35442.
129 Item 4 of Form N–1A. To conform to other
changes we are adopting to Form N–1A, the
Instructions to Item 4 contain technical revisions
that (1) amend cross-references to other Items in
Form N–1A; and (2) eliminate language related to
the presentation of performance information for
more than one fund, given the requirement that
information for each fund be presented separately.
Instructions 2(e) and 3 to Item 4(b)(2) of Form N–
1A.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
at a toll-free (or collect) telephone
number will be required to include a
statement explaining this and providing
the Web site address and/or telephone
number.130 A number of investors in
focus groups expressed the view that the
availability of updated performance
information, particularly at a Web site,
would be helpful.131 In addition, many
industry commenters noted that funds
routinely make updated performance
information available to investors either
by Internet Web site or by telephone and
suggested that the summary section
direct investors to this information.132
Particularly in light of our
determination not to require quarterly
updating of the Summary Prospectus,
which is discussed below,133 we believe
that it will be helpful to investors for the
summary section to indicate where
updated performance information may
be found.
We are not modifying the required bar
chart and performance table to add
additional comparative information as
suggested by several commenters.134
Currently, funds are required to include
an appropriate broad-based securities
market index in the performance
table.135 We have determined not to
require additional comparative
performance information at this time
because we are concerned that it would
tend to undermine our goal of a concise,
user-friendly summary of key
information by contributing to the
length and complexity of the summary
section. Further, as with cost
information,136 we believe that it is
preferable for investors and other users
of the prospectus to be given the
flexibility to make a variety of
performance benchmark comparisons.
130 Item
4(b)(2)(i) of Form N–1A.
Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 11;
see, e.g., Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32,
at 49, 78.
132 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; Capital Research
Letter, supra note 34; Fidelity Letter, supra note 86;
ICI Letter, supra note 34; Janus Letter, supra note
63; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Putnam
Letter, supra note 48; Russell Letter, supra note 48;
T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
133 See discussion infra Part III.B.2.c.
134 See, e.g., Letter of Scott Hastings (Feb. 11,
2008) (suggesting comparative disclosure of the
portfolio manager’s stated benchmark); Morningstar
Letter, supra note 34 (same).
135 Current Item 2(c)(2)(iii) of Form N–1A;
Instruction 5 to current Item 22(b)(7) of Form N–
1A. A fund is also permitted to include information
for one or more other indexes. Instruction 6 to
current Item 22(b)(7) of Form N–1A. If an additional
index is included, a fund is required to disclose
information about the additional index in the
narrative explanation accompanying the bar chart
and table (e.g., by stating that the information
shows how the fund’s performance compares with
the returns of an index of funds with similar
investment objectives).
136 See supra note 127 and accompanying text.
131 See
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Our ongoing interactive data initiative is
intended to provide the tools necessary
to facilitate dynamic comparisons of
this type, and we note that the
information in the bar chart and
performance table is covered by our
recently proposed rules that would, if
adopted, require mutual funds to file
information in an interactive data
format.137
f. Management
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that the summary section
include the name of each investment
adviser and sub-adviser of the fund,
followed by the name, title, and length
of service of the fund’s portfolio
managers.138 A fund will not be
required to identify a sub-adviser whose
sole responsibility is limited to day-today management of cash instruments
unless the fund is a money market fund
or other fund with a principal
investment strategy of regularly holding
cash instruments.139 Also, a fund having
three or more sub-advisers, each of
which manages a portion of the fund’s
portfolio, will not be required to
identify each sub-adviser, except that
the fund will be required to identify any
sub-adviser that is (or is reasonably
expected to be) responsible for the
management of a significant portion of
the fund’s net assets. For this purpose,
a significant portion of a fund’s net
assets generally will be deemed to be
30% or more of the fund’s net assets.140
The portfolio managers required to be
listed will be the same ones with respect
to which information is currently
required in the prospectus.141
Several commenters opposed
requiring funds to disclose portfolio
managers.142 Two of these commenters
argued that the identity and length of
service of portfolio managers do not rise
to the level of importance necessary to
warrant inclusion in the summary.143
However, the Commission continues to
believe, along with other
137 See Investment Company Act Release No.
28298, supra note 28, 73 FR at 35442.
138 Item 5 of Form N–1A. Additional disclosures
regarding investment advisers and portfolio
managers that are currently required in the
prospectus will continue to be required, but not in
the summary section. Item 10(a) of Form N–1A.
139 Instruction 1 to Item 5(a) of Form N–1A. A
fund will continue to be required to provide the
name, address, and experience of all sub-advisers
elsewhere in the prospectus. Item 10(a)(1)(i) of
Form N–1A.
140 Instruction 2 to Item 5(a) of Form N–1A.
141 Item 10(a)(2) of Form N–1A.
142 See, e.g., Capital Research Letter, supra note
34; ICI Letter, supra note 34; Vanguard Letter, supra
note 42.
143 See ICI Letter, supra note 34; Russell Letter,
supra note 48.
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commenters,144 that investors in a fund
should be provided basic information
about the individuals who significantly
affect the fund’s investment operations.
Some commenters noted that funds
are often managed by teams and that
disclosing the individuals making up
such teams would make the summary
section too long and would not add
substantive disclosure.145 We note that,
as is currently the case, disclosure will
be required only with respect to the
members of a management team who are
jointly and primarily responsible for the
day-to-day management of the fund’s
portfolio.146 We agree with other
commenters that investors have the
same interest in the identity of the
individuals who are primarily
responsible for management, regardless
of whether a fund is managed by an
individual portfolio manager or a
team.147
g. Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares
We are adopting, with modifications
to address exchange-traded funds,148 the
proposed requirement that the summary
section disclose the fund’s minimum
initial or subsequent investment
requirements and the fact that the fund’s
shares are redeemable, and identify the
procedures for redeeming shares (e.g.,
on any business day by written request,
telephone, or wire transfer).149
Commenters generally did not express a
view with respect to this
requirement.150
144 See,
e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34;
Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Financial Services
Institute Letter, supra note 41. See also Focus
Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 11; id. at 30–
31 (importance of fund managers); ICI Survey,
supra note 84, at 8 (61% of respondents believed
that the name of the portfolio manager was very
important or somewhat important).
145 See, e.g., Capital Research Letter, supra note
34; Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Ogg Letter, supra
note 75.
146 Instruction 2 to Item 5(b) of Form N–1A. In
addition, if more than five persons are jointly and
primarily responsible for the day-to-day
management of a fund’s portfolio, the fund need
only provide the required information for the five
persons with the most significant responsibility.
147 See Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Keil
Letter, supra note 62.
148 See discussion infra Part III.A.4. We are also
making a technical amendment to current Item 6(b)
of Form N–1A (which is being renumbered as Item
11(b)) to remove the requirement to disclose a
fund’s minimum initial or subsequent investment
requirements because we have added this
requirement to Item 6(a) of the summary section.
149 Item 6 of Form N–1A. We are modifying the
proposal to permit funds that are used as
investment options for retirement plans and
variable insurance contracts to modify or omit this
information. See supra note 68 and accompanying
text.
150 Three commenters supported the proposal.
See Letter of Alison W. Beirlein (Feb. 26, 2008);
Foreside Letter, supra note 74; Schnase Letter,
supra note 35. Three commenters opposed the
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h. Tax Information
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirements for tax information in the
summary section. A fund will be
required to state, as applicable, that it
intends to make distributions that may
be taxed as ordinary income or capital
gains or that the fund intends to
distribute tax-exempt income. A fund
that holds itself out as investing in
securities generating tax-exempt income
will be required to provide, as
applicable, a general statement to the
effect that a portion of the fund’s
distributions may be subject to federal
income tax.151 Commenters generally
expressed no views on these
requirements.152
i. Financial Intermediary Compensation
The Commission is adopting the
proposed requirement that the summary
section of the prospectus conclude with
disclosure regarding financial
intermediary compensation.
Commenters generally supported this
requirement,153 and we are modifying
the requirement in two ways to address
views expressed during investor focus
groups and the concerns of commenters.
Specifically, we are requiring the
following statement, which could be
modified provided that the modified
statement contains comparable
information: 154
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the Fund through a brokerdealer or other financial intermediary (such
as a bank), the Fund and its related
companies may pay the intermediary for the
sale of Fund shares and related services.
These payments may create a conflict of
interest by influencing the broker-dealer or
other intermediary and your salesperson to
recommend the Fund over another
investment. Ask your salesperson or visit
your financial intermediary’s Web site for
more information.
This disclosure will be new to fund
prospectuses and is intended to identify
proposal. See Bent Letter, supra note 74; Clarke
Letter, supra note 35; Letter of MFS Investment
Management (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘MFS Letter’’).
151 Item 7 of Form N–1A.
152 One commenter opposed mandating the tax
information. See Clarke Letter, supra note 35.
153 See, e.g., Data Communique Letter, supra note
´
35; Firehouse Letter, supra note 35; Fund
Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; Keil Letter, supra note 62; NAPFA
Letter, supra note 44; Schnase Letter, supra note 35;
SIFMA Letter, supra note 97; Letter of USAA
Investment Management Company (Feb. 28, 2008)
(‘‘USAA Letter’’); Vanguard Letter, supra note 42;
Letter of Wachovia Securities, LLC (Aug. 29, 2008).
But see Letter of Capital Research and Management
Company (Aug. 29, 2008) (opposing the financial
intermediary disclosure requirement).
154 Item 8 of Form N–1A.
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4557
the existence of compensation
arrangements with selling brokerdealers or other financial
intermediaries, alert investors to the
potential conflicts of interest arising
from these arrangements, and direct
investors to their salesperson or the
financial intermediary’s Web site for
further information. It is intended to
address, in part, concerns that mutual
fund investors lack adequate
information about certain distributionrelated costs that create conflicts for
broker-dealers and their associated
persons.155
We have added a provision permitting
a fund to omit the financial
intermediary disclosure if neither the
fund nor any of its related companies
pay financial intermediaries for the sale
of fund shares or related services.156
This addresses the concerns of a number
of commenters who expressed the view
that the Commission should not require
the narrative disclosure from funds to
which the disclosure does not apply.157
According to one commenter, such
funds include, for example, no-load
funds and funds sold directly to
investors.158
We have also modified the proposed
statement to clarify that payments to a
broker-dealer or other financial
intermediary may create a conflict of
interest by influencing the broker-dealer
or other intermediary to recommend a
155 The Commission has recognized these
concerns in a separate initiative in which the
Commission proposed to require, among other
things, disclosure of mutual fund distributionrelated costs and conflicts of interest by selling
broker-dealers and other financial intermediaries at
the point of sale. Securities Act Release No. 8544
(Feb. 28, 2005) [70 FR 10521 (Mar. 4, 2005)];
Securities Act Release No. 8358 (Jan. 29, 2004) [69
FR 6438 (Feb. 10, 2004)]. One commenter to that
proposal recommended use of a short-form ‘‘profile
plus’’ disclosure document that would include,
among other things, basic information about such
potential conflicts of interest. See Letter of NASD
(Mar. 31, 2005) available at https://www.sec.gov/
rules/proposed/s70604/nasd033005.pdf. We intend
to consider additional steps to enhance investor
access to information prior to making an investment
decision. See infra notes 200 and 201 and
accompanying text.
156 Item 8 of Form N–1A.
157 See, e.g., CAI Letter, supra note 67; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44;
T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49; USAA Letter, supra
note 153; Vanguard Letter, supra note 42. We note
that Item 8 permits a fund to modify the narrative
statement provided that the modified statement
contains comparable information. For example, a
fund that is offered as an underlying investment
option for a variable annuity contract could modify
the narrative statement to reflect payments made to
the sponsoring insurance company for distribution
and other services.
158 See ICI Letter, supra note 34. We note,
however, that no-load funds and directly-sold funds
will be required to include the narrative disclosure
in certain circumstances. For example, the
disclosure will be required if a no-load fund pays
servicing fees to a fund supermarket.
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fund over another investment. This
modification, made in response to
investor comments from our focus
groups, is intended to increase
awareness of potential conflicts of
interest.159 We are, therefore, revising
the narrative to expressly notify
investors that a conflict of interest may
exist with respect to the broker-dealer’s
recommendation.
We have determined not to add a
requirement that the disclosure include
standardized language enumerating the
types of compensation that may be
provided to financial intermediaries, as
suggested by one commenter.160 Rather,
we are adopting a statement that will
alert investors generally to the payment
of compensation and the potential
conflicts arising from that payment. An
investor could then obtain further detail
from his or her salesperson or the
intermediary’s Web site. As discussed
further below, we intend to consider
additional steps in the future that would
further enhance investors’ access to
information about broker and
intermediary compensation and
conflicts of interest.
4. Exchange-Traded Funds
In March of this year, the Commission
proposed several amendments to Form
N–1A to accommodate the use of the
form by ETFs.161 Most ETFs are
organized and registered as open-end
funds. Unlike traditional mutual funds,
however, they sell and redeem
individual shares (‘‘ETF shares’’) only in
large aggregations called ‘‘creation
units’’ to certain financial institutions.
ETFs register offerings and sales of ETF
shares under the Securities Act and list
their shares for trading under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’).162 As with any listed
159 See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 8
(stating that participants felt that new investors may
not be aware of the potential conflict of interest);
Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 16, 41.
160 160 See NAPFA Letter, supra note 44
(requesting standardized language describing
possible forms of compensation, such as surrender
fees, payment for shelf space, commissions paid for
fund transactions, principal mark-ups and markdowns, fees derived from bid-ask spreads, and
payments for marketing support and/or education
of registered representatives).
161 See ETF Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73
FR at 14618.
162 For a description of how ETFs operate, see id.
at 14620–21. ETFs currently operate pursuant to
exemptive orders granted by the Commission. The
final amendments define an ETF as a fund or class
of a fund, the shares of which are traded on a
national securities exchange, and that has formed
and operates pursuant to an exemptive order
granted by the Commission or in reliance on an
exemptive rule adopted by the Commission.
General Instruction A of Form N–1A. The final ETF
definition in Form N–1A eliminates from the
proposed definition the cross-reference to proposed
rule 6c–11, which, if adopted, would codify many
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security, investors trade ETF shares at
market prices.
The proposed amendments for ETF
prospectuses were designed to meet the
needs of investors (including retail
investors) who purchase ETF shares in
secondary market transactions rather
than financial institutions that purchase
creation units directly from the ETF.
The proposed amendments for ETF
prospectuses also addressed the need to
modify the summary section of ETF
prospectuses to include the amended
ETF disclosures. Today, we are adopting
the proposed amendments for ETF
prospectuses with changes to respond to
issues raised by commenters on the
summary prospectus proposing release
and the ETF proposing release.163
a. Purchasing and Redeeming Shares
We are amending Form N–1A to
eliminate the requirement that ETF
prospectuses disclose information on
how to buy and redeem shares directly
from the ETF because it is not relevant
to investors who are secondary market
purchasers of ETF shares.164 We
proposed to require ETF prospectuses to
state the number of shares contained in
a creation unit (i.e., the aggregate
number of shares an ETF will issue or
that is necessary to redeem from the
ETF), that individual shares can only be
bought and sold on the secondary
market through a broker-dealer, and that
shareholders may pay more than net
asset value (‘‘NAV’’) when they buy ETF
shares and receive less than NAV when
they sell shares because shares are
bought and sold at current market
prices.165 We also proposed to amend
the fee table disclosure in Form N–1A
to exclude fees and expenses for
purchases or redemptions of creation
units and instead to modify the
narrative explanation preceding the
example in the fee table to state that
of the exemptive orders granted to ETFs. See ETF
Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73 FR at 14621–
30. We have made this technical change to the ETF
definition because the Commission has not adopted
proposed rule 6c–11.
163 The amendments we proposed in the ETF
Proposing Release incorporated most of the
comments from Barclays Global Fund Advisors
(‘‘BGFA’’) in response to the Proposing Release. See
Letter of BGFA (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘BGFA Letter’’).
BGFA also requested guidance on how disclosure
requirements in future exemptive orders will be
integrated into the summary section of the
prospectus. We are unable to provide guidance in
this release because we do not know what
additional disclosure requirements, if any, would
be required for ETFs that form and operate pursuant
to future exemptive orders. Additional disclosure
requirements, if any, will be included in those
exemptive orders.
164 Item 6(c)(ii) of Form N–1A.
165 See proposed Item 6(h)(3) and (4) of current
Form N–1A; proposed Instruction 3 to Item 6(h) of
current Form N–1A.
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investors in ETF shares may pay
brokerage commissions that are not
reflected in the example.166
Commenters who addressed the
proposed amendments generally
supported this approach.167 We are
adopting the amendments largely as
proposed, with minor changes to
conform to the final amendments to the
summary section.168 ETFs still will be
required to include disclosure on how
creation units are offered to the public
in the SAI.169
Consistent with our proposal, the
alternative disclosures in Items 3 and 6
of Form N–1A will not be available to
ETFs with creation units of less than
25,000 shares.170 Although only certain
financial institutions purchase and
redeem creation units directly from an
ETF, individual or retail investors may
be more likely to transact in creation
units through one of these financial
institutions if the creation unit size is
less than 25,000 shares.171 Because
there is greater potential for retail
166 Proposed Instruction 1(e)(i) to current Item 3
of Form N–1A. One commenter to the ETF
Proposing Release requested that we require ETFs
to include spread costs in the fee table. See Letter
of BGFA (May 16, 2008) (File No. S7–07–08)
(‘‘BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing Release’’). This
information is required to be disclosed pursuant to
rule 11Ac1–5(b) of the Exchange Act [17 CFR
240.11Ac1–5(b)] and is publicly available to
investors and the market, which considers the effect
of spreads. We did not follow the commenter’s
suggestion because we believe that disclosure
regarding additional spreads in an ETF prospectus,
particularly in the summary section, would not be
meaningful to most investors and may be confusing.
167 See, e.g., BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing
Release, supra note 166, Letter of Investment
Company Institute (May 19, 2008) (File No. S7–07–
08) (‘‘ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release’’).
168 Item 6(c)(i) of Form N–1A; Instruction 1(e)(i)
to Item 3 of Form N–1A. Item 6(c)(i)(B) requires
disclosure that ETF shares may trade at a price
greater than NAV (premium) or less than NAV
(discount). The final amendments, like the
proposed amendments, also will require each ETF
to identify the exchange ticker symbol(s) and
principal U.S. market(s) on which the shares are
traded. Item 1(a)(2) of Form N–1A; rule 498(b)(1)(ii)
17 CFR 230.498(b)(1)(ii). We also are adopting a
conforming amendment to the expense example in
ETF annual and semi-annual reports. Instruction
1(e)(i) to Item 27(d) of Form N–1A.
169 Item 23(a) of Form N–1A. Consistent with our
proposal, we are not amending this disclosure to
include information on creation unit redemption,
which Item 11 requires and which we are
eliminating for ETFs. See Item 11(g) of Form N–1A.
170 Instruction (1)(e)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Item 6(c)(ii) of Form N–1A. We also are adopting
a conforming amendment to the expense example
in ETF annual and semi-annual reports. Instruction
1(e)(ii) to Item 27(d) of Form N–1A.
171 ETFs directly sell and redeem creation units
only to investors (‘‘authorized participants’’),
usually brokerage houses, with which the ETF has
a contractual agreement. See, e.g., Investment
Company Act Release No. 27963 (Aug. 31, 2007) [72
FR 51475 (Sept. 7, 2007)]. The authorized
participant may act as a principal in the transaction
or as agent for another, typically an institutional
investor.
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investors to transact (indirectly) in
creation units as they decrease in size,
we are requiring any ETF that sells and
redeems its shares in creation units of
25,000 or less to include in its
prospectus information on how to
purchase and redeem creation units and
the costs associated with those
transactions.172
b. Total Return
At the suggestion of commenters, we
are not adopting our proposal that ETFs
include disclosure of market price
returns in addition to returns based on
NAV.173 Like any other fund that files
Form N–1A, an ETF must disclose
returns based on NAV.174 All
commenters who addressed this
proposal opposed it.175 They disagreed
that these returns would be more
relevant to an investor’s experience in
the ETF than returns based on NAV
because market price (which we
proposed to define as closing price) is
not tied to an investor’s particular
purchase price.176 One commenter
suggested that while NAV also does not
represent any single investor’s
experience, it provides a better metric of
performance than market price.177 After
172 We have not, as one commenter to the ETF
Proposing Release suggested, used a dollar value of
a creation unit as the threshold for disclosure. See
ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra note
167. We do not want to establish a threshold that
may change (and as a consequence require amended
disclosure) as a result of fluctuations in portfolio
value rather than direct action by the ETF. We also
disagree with one commenter who opined that the
proposed threshold would create a de facto
minimum of 25,000 shares for creation units and
suggested that the threshold for exemptions from
disclosure be set at 1,000 shares. See Letter of James
J. Angel (May 16, 2008) (File No. S7–07–08). Other
commenters, including ETF sponsors, explained
they supported the proposed exemption from
disclosure on the purchase and redemption of
creation units because the information would
confuse retail investors rather than because the
disclosures were particularly costly or burdensome.
See BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra
note 166; ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release,
supra note 167; Letter of Xshares Advisors LLC
(May 20, 2008) (File No. S7–07–08) (‘‘Xshares
Letter’’). Thus, it seems unlikely that an exemption
from these disclosures would outweigh the other
factors an ETF considers in determining the
appropriate size of a creation unit, and we have not
reduced the threshold for the exemption. See ICI
Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra note 167
(‘‘[T]he appropriate size of a creation unit may vary
depending on a number of factors, such as the type
and availability of component securities, the
expected uses of the product, and the likely
Authorized Participants.’’).
173 See ETF Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73
FR at 14623 n. 163 and preceding, accompanying,
and following text.
174 See Item 13(a) of Form N–1A.
175 See ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra
note 167; BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing Release,
supra note 166; Xshares Letter, supra note 171.
176 See ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra
note 167; Xshares Letter, supra note 172.
177 ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra
note 167 (‘‘[NAV] provides a consistent metric
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consideration of these comments, we
agree with these commenters that
market price returns would not more
closely represent the experience of any
particular investor and may confuse
investors, particularly when disclosed
next to NAV returns.178 We therefore are
not requiring ETFs to disclose market
price returns in Form N–1A.179
We also are not adopting our proposal
that would have required an indexbased ETF to compare its performance
to its underlying index rather than a
benchmark index.180 Commenters on
the ETF proposing release stated that we
should not change the disclosure
requirement for index-based ETFs
without changing the requirement for all
index funds.181 We agree that the
proposed change should be considered
with respect to all index funds, not just
index-based ETFs, and therefore, we are
not adopting this amendment but may
consider future rulemaking.182
c. Premium/Discount Information
We are adopting, as proposed, the
amendments to the form to require each
ETF to disclose to investors information
about the extent and frequency with
which market prices of fund shares have
tracked the fund’s NAV.183 Each ETF
calculated as of the same time each day in
accordance with the fund’s valuation policies and
procedures, and is not subject to the influence of
outlier bids or offers.’’).
178 See id.; BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing
Release, supra note 166.
179 Similarly, we are not adopting our proposed
conforming amendments to the total return
information in ETF annual reports. See ETF
Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73 FR at 14633
nn. 171–172 and accompanying text.
180 See ETF Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73
FR 14633 at nn. 173–174.
181 See, e.g., ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release,
supra note 167; Xshares Letter, supra note 171.
182 We also are not, as one commenter suggested,
eliminating the required disclosure concerning
portfolio turnover information for index-based
ETFs. See BGFA Letter, supra note 166. Although
most ETFs may sell and redeem their creation units
in kind (i.e., for a basket of assets), they still engage
in portfolio transactions in order to conform the
portfolio to changes in the index. We believe that
information regarding portfolio turnover also may
be relevant to an investor who is comparing an
investment in an index-based ETF to an investment
in an open-end index fund.
183 Item 11(g)(2) of Form N–1A. See ETF
Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73 FR at 14632
nn. 166–169 and accompanying and following text.
ETFs currently are required to disclose on their
Internet Web sites the prior business day’s last
determined NAV, the market closing price of the
fund’s shares or the midpoint of the bid-ask spread
at the time of the calculation of NAV (‘‘bid-ask
price’’), and the premium/discount of that price to
NAV. See, e.g., WisdomTree Investments, Inc. et al.,
Investment Company Act Release Nos. 27324 (May
18, 2006) [71 FR 29995 (May 24, 2006)] (notice) and
27391 (June 12, 2006) (order); PowerShares
Exchange Traded Fund Trust et al., Investment
Company Act Release Nos. 25961 (Mar. 4, 2003) [68
FR 11598 (Mar. 11, 2003)] (notice) and 25985 (Mar.
28, 2003) (order).
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4559
will be required to disclose in its
prospectus the number of trading days
during the most recently completed
calendar year and quarters since that
year on which the market price of the
ETF shares was greater than the fund’s
NAV and the number of days it was less
than the fund’s NAV (premium/
discount information).184 This
disclosure is designed to alert investors
to the relationship between NAV and
the market price of the ETF’s shares,
and that investors may purchase or sell
ETF shares at prices that do not
correspond to NAV. In addition, this
disclosure will provide historical
information regarding the frequency of
these deviations.
Commenters on the ETF proposing
release were divided as to whether this
specific premium/discount information
would be useful to investors, although
all who commented suggested the
information need only be provided on
the ETF’s Web site.185 Based on these
comments, it appears that specific
premium/discount information may not
be generally useful to all ETF investors.
For that reason, an ETF may omit the
disclosure of specific premium/discount
information in its prospectus or annual
report if the fund provides the
information on its Internet Web site and
discloses in the prospectus or annual
report an Internet address where
184 Consistent with our proposal, the final
amendments require ETFs to present premiums or
discounts as a percentage of NAV. Instruction 2 to
Item 11(g)(2) of Form N–1A. See ETF Proposing
Release, supra note 14, 73 FR at 14632 nn. 166–169
and accompanying and following text. ETFs also
will have to explain that shareholders may pay
more than NAV when purchasing shares and
receive less than NAV when selling, because shares
are bought and sold at market prices. Instruction 3
to Item 11(g)(2) of Form N–1A. Consistent with the
proposal, the final amendments require ETFs to
include a table with premium/discount information
in their annual reports for the five recently
completed fiscal years. Item 27(b)(7)(iv) of Form N–
1A. We are including instructions similar to those
in Item 11 to assist funds in meeting this disclosure
obligation. Instructions to Item 27(b)(7)(iv) of Form
N–1A.
185 See Xshares Letter, supra note 172 (‘‘[W]e
believe that the disclosure of [premium/discount]
information is useful to investors and support this
requirement.’’); Letter of NYSE Arca (May 28, 2008)
(File No. S7–07–08) (asserting generally that
disclosure of premium/discount information
required on the Web site, together with other
available index or portfolio information provides
necessary information to investors to assess ETF
pricing against the underlying index or portfolio).
But see BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing Release,
supra note 166 (‘‘[T]he concept of premium/
discount may not be an instructive way of thinking
about ETF share prices in the secondary market
* * * BGFA’s Internet Web site experience suggests
investors do not value this information highly.’’);
ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra note 167
(premium/discount information is not particularly
useful and investors do not regularly seek it).
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investors can locate the information.186
Because ETFs may choose to provide
this disclosure on their Web sites
instead of in their prospectuses, we
have added a requirement that the
prospectus disclose that ETF shares may
trade at a premium or discount.187 This
approach is designed to require
disclosure of the information, but avoid
duplicative disclosures that may result
in additional regulatory burdens.
Commenters who addressed the issue
strongly supported permitting ETFs to
include historical premium/discount
information on their Web sites instead
of in their prospectuses and annual
reports.188 Our amendments allow ETFs
to choose the most cost-effective method
of providing this disclosure to their
investors.
For purposes of calculating premium/
discount information, we are adopting,
with a modification, the proposed
definition of ‘‘market price.’’ 189
Commenters objected to our proposed
definition of market price as the closing
price because of stale pricing
concerns.190 These commenters
suggested that ETFs instead be
permitted to use the mid-point between
the highest bid and the lowest offer at
the time the fund’s NAV is
calculated.191 To address these
186 Item 11(g)(2) of Form N–1A; Item 27(b)(7)(iv)
of Form N–1A. Although the time period required
in the disclosure is different in the prospectus and
annual report, ETFs will be able to omit both
disclosures by providing on their Internet Web sites
only the premium/discount information required by
Item 11(g)(2) (the most recently completed fiscal
year and quarters since that year). Id. In order to
rely on the exemptive orders that permit them to
operate, ETFs also must disclose on their Web sites
each day the premium and discount of the market
closing price or the bid/ask price against the NAV
as a percentage of NAV. See supra note 183.
Investors in ETFs that choose not to disclose the
required premium/discount information in their
prospectuses or annual reports would be able to
review historic and daily premium/discount
information on the ETF’s Web site.
187 Item 6(c)(i)(B) of Form N–1A.
188 See, e.g., BGFA Letter on ETF Proposing
Release, supra note 166 (‘‘Duplicative disclosure
strikes us as unnecessary and burdensome * * *.
Because data in a prospectus speaks of the
prospectus date and therefore does not include the
most recent information, we believe Internet Web
site disclosure is preferable to prospectus
disclosure. Accordingly, we believe that it would be
sufficient to reference the availability of the
information on the Internet Web site in a
prospectus.’’).
189 General Instruction A of Form N–1A. See ETF
Proposing Release, supra note 14, 73 FR at 14632
nn. 164–165 and accompanying text for a
discussion of the proposed definition of ‘‘market
price.’’
190 See, e.g., Letter of Chapman and Cutler LLP
(May 19, 2008) (File No. S7–07–08) (‘‘Chapman
Letter’’); ICI Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra
note 167 (noting that the closing price may be less
accurate because the last trade occurred at a much
earlier time than the NAV calculation).
191 See, e.g., Chapman Letter, supra note 190; ICI
Letter on ETF Proposing Release, supra note 167.
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concerns, the final amendments define
the term ‘‘market price’’ to mean the
closing price on the principal market on
which ETF shares trade or within the
range between the highest offer and the
lowest bid if that price more accurately
reflects the current market value of the
fund’s shares at the time the Fund
calculates its NAV.192
5. Conforming and Technical
Amendments to Form N–1A
The foregoing amendments to Form
N–1A require adding new items to the
form and revising and renumbering
certain existing items. We are adopting
conforming amendments to Form N–1A,
consistent with these revisions and
renumbering, in order to update the
table of contents and the various
references to Form N–1A items
contained within the form. We are also
adopting technical amendments to Form
N–1A to update the Commission’s
telephone number and address.193
See also, e.g., Claymore Exchange-Traded Fund
Trust, Investment Company Act Release No. 27469
(Aug. 28, 2006) [71 FR 51869 (Aug. 31, 2006)]
(exemptive order permitting ETF to operate in
which ETF has used the mid-point price, rather
than the closing price, in circumstances when
closing price may be less accurate because the last
trade occurred at a much earlier point in the day
than NAV calculation). One commenter also noted
that the principal trading market for an ETF may
shift during the trading day and, therefore, that the
rule should use the market price on the various
principal U.S. markets on which the ETF shares
trade during a regular trading session. See Chapman
Letter, supra note 190. We have not incorporated
this suggestion in our amendments. We note that
rules of the national securities exchanges use the
term ‘‘principal market.’’ See, e.g., NYSE Arca Rule
6.1(b)(27) (in its rule that applies to options trading
on the exchange, defining ‘‘primary market’’ in
respect of an underlying stock or ETF share to mean
‘‘the principal market in which the underlying
stock or [ETF share] is traded.’’). We have included
the term ‘‘trading’’ to be clear that the term does not
refer to the principal listing market. In addition,
expanding the rule to various principal trading
markets may be confusing and could create the
potential that funds will seek the market that
provides the best bid/offer.
192 Definition of ‘‘Market Price’’ in General
Instruction A of Form N–1A (‘‘Market Price’’ refers
to the last reported sale price at which ETF shares
trade on the principal U.S. market on which the
fund’s shares are traded during a regular trading
session or, if it more accurately reflects the current
market value of the fund’s shares at the time the
fund uses to calculate its NAV, a price within the
range of the highest bid and lowest offer on the
principal U.S. market on which the fund’s shares
are traded during a regular trading session.’’). See
Codification of Financial Reporting Policies,
Section 404.03.b.ii, ‘‘Valuation of Securities—
Securities Listed or Traded on a National Securities
Exchange,’’ reprinted in SEC Accounting Rules
(CCH) ¶ 38,221, at 38.424–25. See also Fair Value
Measurements, Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 157, § 24 (Fin. Accounting Standards
Bd. 2006).
193 Cover page to Form N–1A; Item 1(b)(3) of
Form N–1A.
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B. New Delivery Option for Mutual
Funds
1. Use of Summary Prospectus and
Satisfaction of Statutory Prospectus
Delivery Requirements
The Commission is adopting, with
modifications to address commenters’
concerns, the proposal to replace rule
498 194 with a new rule that permits the
obligation under the Securities Act to
deliver a statutory prospectus with
respect to mutual fund securities to be
satisfied by sending or giving a
Summary Prospectus and providing the
statutory prospectus online. In addition,
the new rule will require a fund to send
the statutory prospectus in paper or by
e-mail upon request. The Summary
Prospectus is required to contain the
key information that is included in the
new summary section of the statutory
prospectus in the same order that is
required in the statutory prospectus.
The new rule is intended to create a
disclosure regime that is tailored to the
unique needs of mutual fund investors
in a manner that provides ready access
to the information that investors need,
want, and choose to review in
connection with a mutual fund
purchase decision. The rule provides for
a layered approach to disclosure in
which key information is sent or given
to the investor and more detailed
information is provided online and,
upon request, is sent in paper or by
e-mail. This is intended to provide
investors with better ability to choose
the amount and type of information to
review, as well as the format in which
to review it (online or paper). In
addition, the provision of a Summary
Prospectus containing key information
about the fund, coupled with online
provision of more detailed information,
should aid investors in comparing
funds.195 In short, we believe that the
new rule will result in funds providing
investors with more useable information
than they receive today in a format that
investors are more likely to use and
194 As adopted in 1998, rule 498 permits mutual
funds to offer investors a disclosure document
called a ‘‘profile,’’ which summarizes key
information about the fund. An investor deciding to
purchase fund shares based on the information in
a profile is required to receive the fund’s statutory
prospectus with the security or confirmation of
purchase. Investment Company Act Release No.
23065 (Mar. 13, 1998) [63 FR 13968 (Mar. 23,
1998)]. The amendments we are adopting today
result in the elimination of the profile.
195 A recent survey indicated that 90% of
investors surveyed had access to the Internet. See
Telephone Survey Report, supra note 32, at 115. It
also indicated over half (56%) rely on the Internet
to some extent (ranging from ‘‘a little’’ to
‘‘completely’’) in making investment decisions. Id.
at 116. The survey report further indicated that 53%
of respondents who own mutual funds accessed
investment information via the Internet. Id. at 6.
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understand. Under the new rule, an
investor could choose to receive the
statutory prospectus in the same paper
format that would be provided under
our prior rules.
The new rule provides that any
obligation under Section 5(b)(2) of the
Securities Act 196 to have a statutory
prospectus precede or accompany the
carrying or delivery of a mutual fund
security in an offering registered on
Form N–1A is satisfied if (1) a Summary
Prospectus is sent or given no later than
the time of the carrying or delivery of
the fund security;197 (2) the Summary
Prospectus is not bound together with
any materials, except as described
below; (3) the Summary Prospectus that
is sent or given satisfies the rule’s
requirements at the time of the carrying
or delivery of the fund security; and (4)
the conditions set forth in the rule,
which require a fund to provide the
Summary Prospectus, statutory
prospectus, and other information on
the Internet in the manner specified in
the rule, are satisfied.198 As discussed in
more detail below, we have changed the
proposed condition that the Summary
Prospectus be given ‘‘greater
prominence’’ than accompanying
materials into a requirement of the rule,
rather than a condition to satisfaction of
delivery obligations under section
5(b)(2) of the Securities Act. We have
also clarified that any particular
Summary Prospectus is not required to
be given ‘‘greater prominence’’ than any
other Summary Prospectuses or
statutory prospectuses. As adopted, we
are also permitting the Summary
Prospectuses and statutory prospectuses
of multiple underlying funds of a
variable insurance contract to be bound
with each other and with the statutory
prospectus for the contract.
Section 5(b)(2) of the Securities Act
makes it unlawful to deliver a security
for purposes of sale or for delivery after
sale ‘‘unless accompanied or preceded’’
by a statutory prospectus. Under the
rule, delivery of the statutory prospectus
for purposes of section 5(b)(2) is
196 15
U.S.C. 77e(b)(2).
fund could rely upon existing Commission
guidance, which typically requires affirmative
consent from individual investors, to send or give
a Summary Prospectus by electronic means. See
Securities Act Release No. 7233 (Oct. 6, 1995) [60
FR 53458 (Oct. 13, 1995)]; Securities Act Release
No. 7856 (Apr. 28, 2000) [65 FR 25843 (May 4,
2000)]. If, prior to the effective date of this rule, an
investor had consented in accordance with existing
Commission guidance to receive future versions of
one or more funds’ statutory prospectuses by
electronic means, we would not object if a fund or
financial intermediary relies on that consent to send
or give the Summary Prospectuses of those funds
by electronic means to that investor, provided that
the consent is not otherwise revoked.
198 Rule 498(c).
197 A
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accomplished by sending or giving a
Summary Prospectus and by providing
the statutory prospectus and other
required information online. Failure to
comply with the rule’s requirements for
sending or giving a Summary
Prospectus and providing the statutory
prospectus and other information online
would mean that the rule could not be
relied on to meet the section 5(b)(2)
prospectus delivery obligation. Absent
satisfaction of the section 5(b)(2)
obligation by other available means,199
a Section 5(b)(2) violation would result.
The rule also requires a fund to send the
statutory prospectus upon request. This
requirement is not a condition to
reliance on the rule, and failure to send
the requested statutory prospectus will
result in a violation of the rule (as
opposed to a violation of section
5(b)(2)).
Section 5(b)(2) does not require
delivery of the statutory prospectus
prior to delivery of the security or
confirmation of the transaction. As a
result, mutual fund investors too often
receive the statutory prospectus after the
purchase transaction when the
investment decision is complete. The
rules we are adopting will, in practice,
require any fund that is relying on the
Summary Prospectus to meet its
obligations under section 5(b)(2) to post
both its Summary Prospectus and
statutory prospectus on the Internet at
all times. This will result in
significantly enhanced access by
investors to information about the fund
prior to the time of making an
investment decision. Several
commenters observed that it would be
helpful if investors could review a
Summary Prospectus prior to making an
investment decision.200 We intend to
consider additional steps in the future
that would further enhance investors’
199 These include paper delivery of a statutory
prospectus or electronic delivery of a statutory
prospectus in reliance upon existing Commission
guidance. See supra note 197 for existing
Commission guidance on electronic delivery. We
note that it would be permissible to satisfy Section
5(b)(2) obligations by relying on rule 498 to send
or give a Summary Prospectus to some investors,
while providing a statutory prospectus to others.
For example, it would be permissible to rely on rule
498 to send or give the Summary Prospectus to
existing investors who purchase additional shares
while providing the statutory prospectus to new
investors. It would also be permissible for a life
insurance company to satisfy Section 5(b)(2)
obligations with respect to a variable insurance
contract by relying on rule 498 to send or give a
Summary Prospectus with respect to some
underlying funds, while providing a statutory
prospectus with respect to other underlying funds,
for example, where some underlying funds
maintain a Summary Prospectus while others do
not.
200 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; Fund
Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34.
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4561
access to the Summary Prospectus,
other information about the fund, and
enhanced information about broker and
intermediary compensation and
conflicts of interest before the
investment decision. For example, we
continue to consider appropriate
disclosures at the point of sale by
financial intermediaries, including
whether there should be an obligation to
direct investors to the online availability
of the Summary Prospectus and offer
investors a copy of the Summary
Prospectus.201
The rule we are adopting also
provides that a communication relating
to an offering registered on Form N–1A
that is sent or given after the effective
date of a mutual fund’s registration
statement (other than a prospectus
permitted or required under Section 10
of the Securities Act) shall not be
deemed a prospectus under Section
2(a)(10) of the Securities Act if (1) it is
proved that prior to or at the same time
with the communication a Summary
Prospectus was sent or given to the
person to whom the communication
was made; (2) the Summary Prospectus
is not bound together with any
materials, except as described below; (3)
the Summary Prospectus that was sent
or given satisfies the rule’s requirements
at the time of the communication; and
(4) the conditions set forth in the rule,
which require a fund to provide the
Summary Prospectus, statutory
prospectus, and other information on
the Internet in the manner specified in
the rule, are satisfied.202 This provision
is similar to section 2(a)(10)(a) of the
Securities Act, which provides that a
communication sent or given after the
effective date of the registration
statement (other than a prospectus
permitted under subsection (b) of
Section 10) shall not be deemed a
prospectus if it is proved that prior to
or at the same time with the
communication a written prospectus
meeting the requirements for a statutory
prospectus at the time of the
communication was sent or given to the
person to whom the communication
was made.203 Pursuant to this provision,
communications that would otherwise
be considered ‘‘prospectuses’’ subject to
the liability provisions of section
12(a)(2) of the Securities Act are not
201 See supra note 155. To the extent that we
conclude that such an obligation on the part of
financial intermediaries is appropriate, we would
also consider similar obligations in the case of
funds that are sold directly to investors.
202 Rule 498(d). This provision is limited to a
mutual fund Summary Prospectus that satisfies the
terms of the proposed rule and does not apply in
the case of any issuer other than a mutual fund.
203 15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(10)(a).
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deemed prospectuses and are not
subject to section 12(a)(2) if they are
preceded or accompanied by the
statutory prospectus.204 Similarly,
under the new rule, communications
that are preceded or accompanied by a
Summary Prospectus are not deemed to
be prospectuses and are not subject to
section 12(a)(2) if all the conditions of
the rule are met. These communications
remain subject to the general antifraud
provisions of the federal securities
laws.205
Commenters generally supported the
proposal, noting that investors will be
more likely to read and understand the
Summary Prospectus than the statutory
prospectus and that use of the Summary
Prospectus will help investors to focus
on what is most important in making
investment decisions with respect to a
particular fund.206 One commenter
noted that its own research has shown
that most investors do not find the
statutory prospectus to be a particularly
useful document and do not rely heavily
on it in making a fund selection. The
commenter agreed that it makes little
sense to continue to require delivery of
a document to all investors that most
say they do not value.207 A second
commenter noted that the proposal
‘‘reflects the strikingly broad consensus
that investors would be best served by
simplified, streamlined disclosure of
essential fund information’’ and is
supported by research conducted by the
Commission and others.208 Similarly,
investors in our focus groups generally
expressed favorable views of the
Summary Prospectus, noting its
usefulness as a screening tool to identify
funds that they might wish to research
further.209 Commenters also approved of
204 15 U.S.C. 77l(a)(2). Section 12(a)(2) of the
Securities Act imposes liability for materially false
or misleading statements in a prospectus or oral
communication, subject to a reasonable care
defense.
205 See, e.g., Section 17(a) of the Securities Act
[15 U.S.C. 77q(a)]; Section 10(b) of the Exchange
Act [15 U.S.C. 78j(b)]; Section 34(b) of the
Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–33(b)].
206 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; CMFI
Letter, supra note 44; Fund Democracy et al. Letter,
supra note 34; ICI Letter, supra note 34; MFDF
Letter, supra note 34.
207 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34.
208 See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
209 Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 5–6
(quoting participants as stating, ‘‘I think it cuts to
the important factors of performance, cost,
objectives. I like it;’’ ‘‘It’s a two-minute read. If I
want more information, I can ask for it;’’ ‘‘I think
that this [short-form prospectus] you’d read and if
you’re interested and then you’ve got questions and
you want to go more in-depth and go to the long
one;’’ ‘‘I think both [the long and short-form
prospectuses] have their place. I think it would be
foolish to give up the long-form for (the
short[-]form) and I think it would be foolish not to
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the proposal’s use of the power of the
Internet and advances in technology to
deliver information to investors.210
Two commenters argued that use of
the Summary Prospectus should be
mandatory, including one who noted
that inconsistent use of the Summary
Prospectus could create confusion and
would make comparison of funds more
difficult for investors.211 We have
determined not to mandate use of the
Summary Prospectus at this time. We
believe that further public comment on
this important step is necessary, and we
intend to review the use of the
Summary Prospectus by investors in
funds that voluntarily adopt the
Summary Prospectus and reconsider
whether the Summary Prospectus
should be mandated in the future.
As noted above, we are modifying the
rule’s conditions in three respects to
address the concerns of commenters.
First, we have eliminated the condition
that the Summary Prospectus be given
greater prominence than any
accompanying materials 212 and instead
made it a rule requirement.213 Second,
we have modified this requirement to
clarify that a Summary Prospectus need
not be given ‘‘greater prominence’’ than
other Summary Prospectuses or
statutory prospectuses that accompany
the Summary Prospectus. Third, we
have revised the condition that would
have prohibited the Summary
Prospectus from being bound together
with any other materials 214 to permit a
Summary Prospectus for a fund that is
available as an investment option in a
variable annuity or variable life
insurance contract to be bound together
with the statutory prospectus for the
contract and Summary Prospectuses and
statutory prospectuses for other
investment options available under the
contract.215
We have made the ‘‘greater
prominence’’ standard a rule
requirement instead of a condition to
satisfaction of section 5(b)(2)
obligations.216 While we continue to
believe that the ‘‘greater prominence’’
requirement is important to prevent the
Summary Prospectus from being
obscured by accompanying sales and
other materials and to highlight for
have the short-form and insist on a long-form. They
both have their place.’’).
210 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; CMFI
Letter, supra note 44; ICI Letter, supra note 34;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44.
211 See Letter of Kevin Possin and Ann Lavine
(Feb. 7, 2008); Vanguard Letter, supra note 42.
212 Proposed rule 498(c)(1) and (d)(1).
213 Rule 498(f)(2).
214 Proposed rule 498(c)(1) and (d)(1).
215 Rule 498(c)(2) and (d)(2).
216 Rule 498(f)(2).
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investors the concise, balanced
presentation of the Summary
Prospectus,217 we are persuaded by
commenters that the consequences of
failure to meet the condition—a Section
5 violation—is not needed to achieve
our goal.218 Therefore, we are adopting
commenters’ suggestion that satisfaction
of the ‘‘greater prominence’’ standard be
a rule requirement.219 As adopted, the
‘‘greater prominence’’ requirement is
not a condition to reliance on the rule
to satisfy a fund’s or intermediary’s
delivery obligations under section
5(b)(2) of the Securities Act or the
provision that a communication shall
not be deemed a prospectus under
section 2(a)(10) of the Securities Act. A
person that complies with the
conditions to the rule will not violate
section 5(b)(2) if the ‘‘greater
prominence’’ standard is not satisfied.
This failure will, however, constitute a
violation of the Commission’s rules.
Generally, we believe that the ‘‘greater
prominence’’ requirement would be
satisfied if the placement of the
Summary Prospectus is more prominent
than accompanying materials, e.g., the
Summary Prospectus is on top of a
group of paper documents that are
provided together.220
We are adopting the condition that
prohibits a Summary Prospectus from
being bound together with any other
materials. Although commenters were
split on the proposed binding
prohibition, with some supporting the
requirement and others opposed or
seeking modifications,221 we continue
217 See, e.g., Pace Letter, supra note 125
(expressing support for the ‘‘greater prominence’’
requirement).
218 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; NYC Bar Letter, supra note 75.
219 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44.
220 In response to a commenter’s concerns, we are
making a technical change to the ‘‘greater
prominence’’ requirement to clarify that any
particular Summary Prospectus need not be given
‘‘greater prominence’’ than any other Summary
Prospectuses or statutory prospectuses that
accompany the Summary Prospectus. See ICI Letter,
supra note 34.
221 See, e.g., Pace Letter, supra note 125
(supporting binding prohibition); T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49 (supporting a binding prohibition
instead of a ‘‘greater prominence’’ requirement); ICI
Letter, supra note 34 (arguing that rule should
prohibit Summary Prospectuses from being bound
together with sales materials, or alternatively that
there be certain specific carve-outs to permit
binding of funds’ privacy notices and to permit the
binding together of Summary Prospectuses for
certain similar types of funds); Letter of Charles
Schwab & Co., Inc., and Charles Schwab Investment
Management, Inc. (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Schwab Letter’’)
(requesting carve-out to permit binding of funds’
´
privacy policies); Data Communique Letter, supra
note 35 (opposing binding prohibition); Dechert
Letter, supra note 50 (opposing binding
prohibition); Schnase Letter, supra note 35
(opposing binding prohibition).
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to believe that it is important to prevent
the Summary Prospectus from being
obscured by accompanying sales and
other materials and to highlight for
investors the concise, balanced
presentation of the Summary
Prospectus. We are, however, persuaded
that it is appropriate to permit binding
the statutory prospectus of a variable
insurance contract with the Summary
Prospectuses and statutory prospectuses
of its underlying funds.222 This will
permit satisfaction of prospectus
delivery requirements for both a
variable insurance contract and its
underlying funds in one consolidated
package and does not involve any risk
of the prospectuses being obscured by
sales or other materials. Specifically,
under rule 498, a Summary Prospectus
for a fund that is available as an
investment option in a variable annuity
or variable life insurance contract may
be bound together with the statutory
prospectus for the contract and
Summary Prospectuses and statutory
prospectuses for other investment
options available in the contract,
provided that: (i) All of the funds to
which the Summary Prospectuses and
statutory prospectuses that are bound
together relate are available to the
person to whom such documents are
sent or given; and (ii) a table of contents
identifying each Summary Prospectus
and statutory prospectus that is bound
together, and the page number on which
it is found, is included at the beginning
or immediately following a cover page
of the bound materials. These
conditions are intended to ensure that
investors are not inundated with
prospectuses that are not relevant to the
contract they are considering and to
ensure that investors can readily locate
the particular prospectuses in which
they are interested.
2. Content of Summary Prospectus
Rule 498 sets forth the content
requirements that a Summary
Prospectus must satisfy.223 A Summary
Prospectus meeting the requirements of
the rule will be deemed to be a
prospectus that is authorized under
section 10(b) of the Securities Act and
section 24(g) of the Investment
Company Act for the purposes of
section 5(b)(1) of the Securities Act.224
222 See, e.g., CAI Letter, supra note 67; Dechert
Letter, supra note 50; EQ/AXA Letter, supra note
67; Fidelity Letter, supra note 86; ICI Letter, supra
note 34; Vanguard Letter, supra note 42.
223 Rule 498(b). Rule 498(a) defines terms used in
the rule.
224 Rule 498(b). Section 10(b) of the Securities Act
[15 U.S.C. 77j(b)] authorizes the Commission to
adopt rules permitting the use of a prospectus for
the purposes of Section 5(b)(1) [15 U.S.C. 77e(b)(1)]
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A Summary Prospectus meeting these
content requirements could be used to
offer securities of the fund pursuant to
section 5(b)(1) even if the other
conditions of the rule were not satisfied.
The failure to satisfy these other
conditions will, however, preclude the
use of the Summary Prospectus for the
other purposes described in rule 498,
including for purposes of satisfying, in
part, a fund’s obligation under section
5(b)(2) to deliver a statutory prospectus.
In these circumstances, the section
5(b)(2) obligation to deliver a fund’s
statutory prospectus will have to be met
by means other than the new rule or a
section 5(b)(2) violation will result.
a. General
We are adopting, with one
clarification, the requirement that the
Summary Prospectus include the same
information as required in the summary
section of the statutory prospectus in
the same order required in the statutory
prospectus.225 This key information
about investment objectives, costs, and
risks forms the body of the Summary
Prospectus.
We are adopting a new requirement to
clarify that if a fund relies on rule 498
to meet its statutory prospectus delivery
obligations, the information contained
in the Summary Prospectus must be the
same as the information contained in
the summary section of the fund’s
statutory prospectus, except as
expressly permitted by rule 498.226 That
is, a fund may not provide different,
such as more or less expansive,
information in its Summary Prospectus
than it provides in its statutory
prospectus. If, pursuant to rule 497, a
mutual fund files a ‘‘sticker’’ to its
statutory prospectus that changes any
information in the summary section, the
Summary Prospectus should either be
‘‘stickered’’ or amended to reflect the
information in the statutory prospectus
that summarizes information contained in the
statutory prospectus. Section 24(g) of the
Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–24(g)]
authorizes the Commission to permit the use of a
prospectus under Section 10(b) of the Securities Act
to include information the substance of which is
not included in the statutory prospectus.
225 Rule 498(b)(2) (Summary Prospectus to
include information required or permitted by Items
2 through 8 of Form N–1A). We are adopting, as
proposed, the provision that permits a fund to omit
from the Summary Prospectus an explanation of the
reasons for any change in the securities market
index used for comparison purposes in the
performance presentation. Rule 498(b)(2). Cf.
Instruction 2(c) to Item 4(b)(2) of Form N–1A
(requiring this explanation in summary section of
statutory prospectus).
226 Rule 498(f)(4). Rule 498(b)(2) expressly
permits a Summary Prospectus to omit certain
information relating to a change in the securities
market index used for comparison purposes. See
supra note 225.
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4563
‘‘sticker.’’ This new requirement is
intended to clarify our intent in
adopting the same content requirements
for the Summary Prospectus and the
summary section of the statutory
prospectus.
The Summary Prospectus will not be
permitted to omit any of the required
information or to include additional
information except as described below.
A document that omits information
required in a Summary Prospectus or
includes additional information not
permitted by the rule will not be a
Summary Prospectus under the rule and
may not be used under the rule for any
purpose, including meeting the
obligation to deliver a fund’s statutory
prospectus.227 We are adopting these
requirements, as proposed, because we
believe that uniformity of content in
Summary Prospectuses will provide
better comparability, which will help
investors to make a more informed
investment decision, a conclusion
which was supported by a number of
commenters.228 While some
commenters argued that the rule should
provide funds with flexibility to
customize the content of the Summary
Prospectus,229 we are not persuaded
because customization would
significantly impair investors’ ability to
compare information across funds. We
note that, provided the content and
order requirements of the rule are met,
funds have almost complete flexibility
with respect to design issues, including
layout, graphics, and color.230
227 A Summary Prospectus that omits certain
information required by the rule or includes
additional information not permitted by the rule
could be deemed to be a prospectus under Section
10(b) of the Securities Act for purposes of Section
5(b)(1) of the Securities Act pursuant to rule 482
under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.482] if the
conditions of that rule are met.
228 See, e.g., Letter of Brown & Associates LLC
and Self Audit, Inc. (Feb. 27, 2008) (‘‘Self Audit
Letter’’); CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35; Evergreen
Letter, supra note 41; Firehouse Letter, supra note
35; Great-West Letter, supra note 42; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; Keil Letter, supra note 62; Letter of
NewRiver, Inc. (Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘NewRiver Letter’’);
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Pace Letter,
supra note 125; Schnase Letter, supra note 35.
229 See, e.g., Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Hastie
Letter, supra note 59; Letter of Stephen A. Keen
(Feb. 28, 2008); Ogg Letter, supra note 75.
230 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34
(Commission ‘‘should set broad parameters for
compliance with the required substance, format and
presentation of the summary prospectus, but also
allow funds to use their creativity in designing a
form that is truly investor friendly.’’); Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35 (favoring similar
content, but stating that the Commission should
allow for layout and graphical differences).
Summary Prospectuses are subject to the font size
and legibility requirements for prospectuses that are
set forth in rule 420 under the Securities Act [17
CFR 230.420]. Rule 420 generally requires, among
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We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that a Summary Prospectus
describe only one fund, but may
describe multiple classes of a single
fund.231 This requirement is similar to
the requirements for the summary
section of the statutory prospectus.232
Like those requirements, it is intended
to result in a presentation of key fund
information that is concise and easy to
read.
One commenter suggested that the
Commission permit funds to satisfy
their obligation to deliver a statutory
prospectus to their existing shareholders
by delivering a document directing
shareholders’ attention to material
changes that have occurred during the
covered period.233 The commenter
argued that such an approach would
focus shareholders’ attention on the
factors that are most likely to affect their
continuing evaluation of the fund and
impose lower costs than delivery of the
Summary Prospectus. We are not
adopting this suggestion at this time. We
are concerned that creation of an
additional document to be used only for
existing shareholders could impose
significant costs on funds and their
shareholders. Moreover, as noted
earlier, we recently proposed to require
mutual funds to submit in interactive
data format information contained in
the risk/return summary section of their
statutory prospectuses.234 We are
continuing to consider that proposal
and believe that, if adopted, this
requirement would help investors,
intermediaries, and others to readily
identify any changes in this
information.
b. Cover Page or Beginning of Summary
Prospectus
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirements for the cover page or
beginning of the Summary Prospectus,
other things, that printed prospectuses be in roman
type at least as large and as legible as 10-point
modern type.
231 Rule 498(b)(4).
232 See discussion supra introductory text to Part
III.A. and ‘‘Organizational Requirements’’ in Part
III.A.1.
233 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34. Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C.
77j(a)(3)] generally requires that when a prospectus
is used more than nine months after the effective
date of the registration statement, the information
in the prospectus must be as of a date not more than
sixteen months prior to such use. The effect of this
provision is to require mutual funds to update their
statutory prospectuses annually to reflect current
cost, performance, and other financial information.
Many funds deliver updated statutory prospectuses
annually to their existing shareholders in order to
meet their prospectus delivery obligations with
respect to additional purchases by those
shareholders.
234 Investment Company Act Release No. 28298,
supra note 28, 73 FR at 35443.
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Jkt 217001
with the addition of a requirement to
include the exchange ticker symbols of
the fund’s securities.235 The Summary
Prospectus will be required to include
the following information on the cover
page or at the beginning of the Summary
Prospectus:
• The fund’s name and the share
classes to which the Summary
Prospectus relates;
• The exchange ticker symbol of the
fund’s securities or, if the Summary
Prospectus relates to one or more classes
of the fund’s securities, adjacent to each
such class, the exchange ticker symbol
of such class of the fund’s securities;
• A statement identifying the
document as a ‘‘Summary Prospectus’’;
and
• The approximate date of the
Summary Prospectus’s first use.
In addition, the cover page or
beginning of the Summary Prospectus is
required to include the following
legend:
Before you invest, you may want to review
the Fund’s prospectus, which contains more
information about the Fund and its risks. You
can find the Fund’s prospectus and other
information about the Fund online at
[llll]. You can also get this information
at no cost by calling [llll] or by sending
an e-mail request to [llll].236
In addition, the legend may include a
statement to the effect that the Summary
Prospectus is intended for use in
connection with a defined contribution
plan that meets the requirements for
qualification under section 401(k) of the
Internal Revenue Code, a tax-deferred
arrangement under section 403(b) or 457
of the Internal Revenue Code, or a
variable contract as defined in section
817(d) of the Internal Revenue Code and
is not intended for use by other
investors.237
The legend is required to provide an
Internet address, toll free (or collect)
telephone number, and e-mail address
that investors can use to obtain the
statutory prospectus and other
information.238 The legend is also
permitted to indicate that the statutory
prospectus and other information are
available from a financial intermediary
(such as a broker-dealer or bank)
through which shares of the fund may
be purchased or sold.239 The Internet
address at which the statutory
prospectus and other information are
available is not permitted to be the
address of the Commission’s Electronic
235 This
requirement is discussed in Part III.A.2.
498(b)(1).
237 Rule 498(b)(1)(v)(B).
238 Rule 498(b)(1)(v)(A).
239 The Web site and other contact information
provided may be the Web site and contact
information of a financial intermediary.
236 Rule
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
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Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval
System (‘‘EDGAR’’).240 The address is
required to be specific enough to lead
investors directly to the statutory
prospectus and other required
information, rather than to the home
page or other section of the Web site on
which the materials are posted.241 The
Web site could be a central site with
prominent links to each required
document.242
We are not modifying the proposal in
response to commenters who suggested
that the legend provide more guidance
regarding the types of information
available,243 because we believe that
investors will be less likely to read a
longer legend describing multiple
documents and that the legend, as
adopted, is sufficient to alert investors
to the existence and location of
additional information about the fund.
Moreover, as discussed below in Part
III.B.4.a., a Summary Prospectus that
incorporates information by reference is
required to include more specific
disclosure identifying the documents
from which the information is
incorporated. We also are not modifying
the proposal in response to a commenter
who suggested that the legend make
clearer that the Summary Prospectus is
only a part of the full statutory
prospectus.244 We believe that the
240 Cf. rule 14a–16(b)(3) under the Exchange Act
[17 CFR 240.14a–16(b)(3)] (similar requirement in
rules relating to Internet availability of proxy
materials).
241 For a description of the information required
to be available at the Web site and a discussion of
the manner in which such information must be
available, see the discussion in Part III.B.3. below.
242 One commenter suggested removing the word
‘‘prominent’’ from the phrase ‘‘a central site with
prominent links’’ because it calls into question
whether a fund complex could have one Web page
with numerous links or a drop-down menu
allowing users to navigate to disclosure documents
for each of the funds. See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
We have decided to retain the prominence
requirement because we believe that it is important
to effective delivery that investors be able to easily
find the links to the particular documents in which
they are interested. Cf. Exchange Act Release No.
55146 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72 FR 4148, 4153–54 n. 79
(Jan. 29, 2007)] (use of central site with prominent
links in electronic delivery of proxy materials). We
note, however, that there is no requirement that the
links be more prominent than other information. In
addition, the requirement for prominent links to the
relevant documents could be satisfied by a central
site that lists each fund in alphabetical order with,
in table format, links to each fund’s Summary
Prospectus, statutory prospectus, SAI, and annual
and semi-annual shareholder report or similar
means, such as a drop-down menu allowing users
to easily navigate the documents for each of the
funds.
243 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Foreside
Letter, supra note 74; MFS Letter, supra note 150.
244 See, e.g., Schnase Letter, supra note 35 (state
that investors may want to review the fund’s ‘‘full
prospectus’’ or ‘‘complete prospectus’’ to
adequately distinguish it from the Summary
Prospectus).
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combination of the legend and the
requirement to identify the Summary
Prospectus as a ‘‘Summary Prospectus’’
will provide clear notice to investors
that more information is contained in
the statutory prospectus.
c. Updating Requirements
We are not adopting the proposed
requirement that performance
information in the Summary Prospectus
be updated quarterly and related
provisions of the proposed rule.245 We
are persuaded by commenters who
expressed concerns about potential
investor confusion, focus on short-term
performance, and the costs and
operational difficulties associated with
implementing quarterly updating.246 As
adopted, the rule will require a fund
that makes updated performance
information available on a Web site or
at a toll-free (or collect) telephone
number to include a statement
explaining this and providing the Web
site address and/or telephone
number.247
Some commenters noted that
investors may be confused if different
information is contained in the
summary section of the statutory
prospectus (which the proposal did not
require to be updated on a quarterly
basis) and the Summary Prospectus.248
245 Proposed rule 498(b)(2)(ii) (quarterly updating
requirement); proposed rule 498(e) (provisions
related to quarterly updating requirement). The
proposal also would have required quarterly
updating of a fund’s top 10 portfolio holdings.
Proposed rule 498(b)(2)(iii). As discussed above, we
have determined not to require inclusion of a fund’s
top 10 portfolio holdings in the summary section
of the statutory prospectus or in the Summary
Prospectus. See discussion supra Part III.A.3.a.
246 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; CAI Letter, supra
note 67; Capital Research Letter, supra note 34;
Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Dechert Letter, supra
note 50; EQ/AXA Letter, supra note 67; Evergreen
Letter, supra note 41; Fidelity Letter, supra note 86;
Financial Services Institute Letter, supra note 41;
Letter of Financial Services Roundtable (Feb. 28,
2008) (‘‘Financial Services Roundtable Letter’’);
Firehouse Letter, supra note 35; Letter of Fluent
Technologies (Mar. 14, 2008) (‘‘Fluent Letter’’);
Foreside Letter, supra note 74; Great-West Letter,
supra note 42; ICI Letter, supra note 34; IDC Letter,
supra note 61; MFS Letter, supra note 150; NYC Bar
Letter, supra note 75; Oppenheimer Letter, supra
note 44; Putnam Letter, supra note 48; Letter of
RiverSource Funds (Feb. 25, 2008) (‘‘RiverSource
Letter’’); Russell Letter, supra note 48; Schwab
Letter, supra note 221; SIFMA Letter, supra note 97;
Letter of Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP
(Feb. 28, 2008) (‘‘Stradley Letter’’); T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49; USAA Letter, supra note 153;
Vanguard Letter, supra note 42.
247 Item 4(b)(2)(i) of Form N–1A. This
requirement is discussed more fully in Part
III.A.3.e.
248 See, e.g., Capital Research Letter, supra note
34; Dechert Letter, supra note 50; ICI Letter, supra
note 34; NYC Bar Letter, supra note 75;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell Letter,
supra note 48; SIFMA Letter, supra note 97;
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A number of commenters also expressed
concern that the proposed quarterly
updating requirement signals a
troubling shift toward focusing on shortterm performance information, rather
than encouraging investors to consider
long-term performance.249 Commenters
also noted that updated performance
information is already widely available
on the Internet and from other
sources.250 Many commenters suggested
as an alternative that the Commission
require annual updating of the
Summary Prospectus, with prominent
disclosure in the document describing
how investors can access updated
performance information (i.e., through a
Web site address or toll-free telephone
number).251 Investors participating in
our focus groups also indicated that
they would be willing to obtain updated
fund information online.252
In addition, many commenters from
the fund industry also stated that the
costs and operational difficulties
associated with implementing the
quarterly updating requirement would
discourage funds from using the
Summary Prospectus.253 The
Stradley Letter, supra note 246; T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49.
249 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; Capital Research
Letter, supra note 34; Dechert Letter, supra note 50;
Fluent Letter, supra note 246; ICI Letter, supra note
34; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell
Letter, supra note 48.
250 See, e.g., ICI Letter, supra note 34, Vanguard
Letter, supra note 42.
251 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; Capital Research
Letter, supra note 34; Clarke Letter, supra note 35;
Fidelity Letter, supra note 86; Financial Services
Institute Letter, supra note 41; Firehouse Letter,
supra note 35; Financial Services Roundtable
Letter, supra note 246; IDC Letter, supra note 61;
Janus Letter, supra note 63; MFS Letter, supra note
150; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Putnam
Letter, supra note 48; Russell Letter, supra note 48;
Schwab Letter, supra note 221; T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49.
252 See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 11;
Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 25–26;
id. at 49 (‘‘I get my information from the Web
anyway. So, what the prospectus says is less
important in terms of recent performance. Because
there’s no way that they can tell me what’s been
going on that recently.’’); id. at 78 (‘‘You can go to
the library and be on the Web and it doesn’t cost
you anything, except 15 minutes.’’); id. (‘‘And if it
says, ‘This is not necessarily the latest, current, go
to this Web site and you’ll get the full comparison,’
that would be acceptable * * *.’’).
253 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American
Century Letter, supra note 48; Capital Research
Letter, supra note 34; Clarke Letter, supra note 35;
Dechert Letter, supra note 50; EQ/AXA Letter,
supra note 67; Evergreen Letter, supra note 41;
Financial Services Roundtable Letter, supra note
246; Fluent Letter, supra note 246; Great-West
Letter, supra note 42; ICI Letter, supra note 34; IDC
Letter, supra note 61; MFS Letter, supra note 150;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; RiverSource
Letter, supra note 246; Russell Letter, supra note 48;
Letter of Saturna Capital Corporation (Jan. 14,
2008); Schwab Letter, supra note 221; T. Rowe
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4565
commenters noted that updating of
Summary Prospectuses would likely
require an entirely new process that
would be more complex than the one
used for existing quarterly fund fact
sheets. Moreover, these commenters
noted that a quarterly updating
requirement would essentially require
them to move to an ‘‘on demand’’
printing model for distribution of
Summary Prospectuses, which would
entail changes in business practices,
new or amended vendor contracts, and,
for a few fund families, significant
initial outlays that could substantially
delay implementation of the Summary
Prospectus.254 Financial intermediaries
similarly expressed concern about ‘‘the
ability of even large intermediaries to
maintain and track a hard copy
inventory of prospectuses which change
multiple times per year.’’ 255 Some
commenters also noted that updated
performance information is already
widely available from other sources.256
On the other hand, a small number of
commenters supported the proposed
quarterly updating requirement.257 One
such commenter argued that quarterly
updating would enhance the public’s
perception of the Summary Prospectus
and the information provided. The
commenter noted that funds presently
provide such updated information in
their sales materials; that displaying
annually updated performance
information in the statutory prospectus
and quarterly updated information in
the Summary Prospectus would not
necessarily confuse investors; and that
although funds post updated
information online throughout the year,
investors without access to the Internet
would be greatly disadvantaged if the
Commission did not require quarterly
updating of the paper Summary
Prospectus.258
We have determined not to require
quarterly updating of performance
information in the Summary Prospectus
because we are persuaded that this
requirement could confuse investors
and would discourage funds from using
Letter, supra note 49. The Investment Company
Institute, a national association of United States
investment companies, conducted a survey of its
member firms and noted that up to 70 percent of
funds would face substantial cost and operational
burdens in complying with a quarterly updating
requirement and that these burdens would likely
lead funds to elect not to use the Summary
Prospectus. ICI Letter, supra note 34.
254 See, e.g., ICI Letter, supra note 34.
255 See, e.g., SIFMA Letter, supra note 97.
256 See, e.g., ICI Letter, supra note 34, Vanguard
Letter, supra note 42.
257 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35; Keil Letter,
supra note 62; NAPFA Letter, supra note 44.
258 See Data Communique Letter, supra note 35.
´
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the Summary Prospectus and thereby
undermine our goal of encouraging
concise, user-friendly disclosure to
investors. We have concluded that the
benefits to be derived from quarterly
updating do not outweigh this
significant disincentive to use of the
Summary Prospectus because updated
performance information is widely
available in fund sales materials, on
fund Web sites, and from third-party
sources. As noted above, investors in
our focus groups indicated that they
would be willing to obtain updated
information online. As a result, we are
requiring a fund that makes updated
performance information available on a
Web site or at a toll-free (or collect)
telephone number to include a
statement explaining this and providing
the Web site address and/or telephone
number.259 This approach will
eliminate any potential investor
confusion that could arise as a result of
a fund’s Summary Prospectus
containing more updated information
than the fund’s statutory prospectus.
3. Provision of Statutory Prospectus,
SAI, and Shareholder Reports
We are adopting, with certain
modifications to address the concerns of
commenters, the requirement that, in
addition to sending or giving a
Summary Prospectus, a person relying
on rule 498 to meet its statutory
prospectus delivery obligations must
provide the statutory prospectus on the
Internet, together with other
information, in the manner specified by
the rule.260 We are also adopting, as
proposed, the requirement to send the
statutory prospectus to any investor
requesting a copy. We believe that
requiring the statutory prospectus to be
provided in two ways, by posting on an
Internet Web site and by sending the
information directly to any investor
requesting a copy, maximizes both the
accessibility and usability of the
information, as indicated by the
preference of commenters and investors
participating in our focus groups for
access to both online and paper
resources.261 Sending the information
259 Item 4(b)(2)(i) of Form N–1A. This
requirement is discussed more fully in Part
III.A.3.e.
260 Rule 498(c)(4), (d)(4), and (e).
261 See AARP Letter, supra note 34 (supporting
the proposal and noting that ‘‘timely access to hard
copy, print disclosure must remain an option that
is easy to exercise for investors choosing to do so’’);
Miller Letter, supra note 110 (‘‘ensure a simple
process for obtaining mutual fund information in
paper format in order to maximize accessibility’’);
Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 12 (noting
that some participants preferred to read lengthy
documents on the computer screen, while others
indicated that they prefer paper documents); Focus
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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directly to an investor is not, however,
a condition of reliance on the rule.
a. Documents Required To Be Provided
on the Internet
to maintain updated versions of the
required documents online.
Several commenters argued that a
person relying on the rule should not be
required to provide the fund’s SAI on
the Web site.265 We have not adopted
this suggestion. As discussed above, the
rule provides for a layered approach to
disclosure in which key information is
sent or given to the investor and more
detailed information is provided online
and, upon request, is sent in paper or by
e-mail. The approach of rule 498 is twofold, both to encourage funds to provide
a concise, user-friendly Summary
Prospectus to investors and to enhance
investor access to more detailed
information. Requiring the SAI to be
provided online furthers the latter
goal.266
Under the rule, the statutory
prospectus and other information are
required to be provided through the
Internet as follows. The fund’s current
Summary Prospectus, statutory
prospectus, SAI, and most recent annual
and semi-annual reports to shareholders
are required to be accessible, free of
charge, at the Web site address specified
on the cover page or at the beginning of
the Summary Prospectus.262 These
documents are required to be accessible
on or before the time that the Summary
Prospectus is sent or given and current
versions of the documents are required
to remain on the Web site through the
date that is at least 90 days after (i) in
the case of reliance on the rule to satisfy
the obligation to have a statutory
prospectus precede or accompany the
carrying or delivery of a mutual fund
security, the date that the mutual fund
security is carried or delivered, or (ii) in
the case of reliance on the rule to deem
a communication with respect to a
mutual fund security not to be a
prospectus under Section 2(a)(10) of the
Securities Act, the date that the
communication is sent or given.263 This
requirement is designed to ensure
continuous access to the information
from the time the Summary Prospectus
is sent or given until at least 90 days
after the date of delivery of a security or
communication in reliance on rule 498.
A number of commenters expressed
concern regarding the meaning of the
term ‘‘current’’ and asked whether funds
would be required to maintain stale
information online.264 In response to
these commenters’ concerns, we note
that the ‘‘current’’ standard does not
require a fund to maintain online an
outdated version of a document that was
current at the time the Summary
Prospectus was sent or given, but that
has subsequently been updated. Rather,
the ‘‘current’’ standard requires a fund
b. Formatting Requirements for
Information Provided on the Internet
We are adopting, with modifications
to reflect commenters’ concerns, the
proposed formatting requirements for
the information that is required to be
provided online. The proposed rule
would have required, as a condition to
reliance on the rule to satisfy a person’s
delivery obligations under section
5(b)(2) of the Securities Act and the
provision that a communication shall
not be deemed a prospectus under
section 2(a)(10) of the Securities Act,
that the information on the Internet be
presented in a format that is convenient
for both reading online and printing on
paper.267 In lieu of this condition, we
are adopting a condition requiring that
the information on the Internet be
presented in a format that is humanreadable and capable of being printed
on paper in human-readable format.268
We are also adopting a requirement that
the information be in a format that is
convenient for both reading online and
printing on paper, but this requirement
is not a condition to reliance on the rule
to satisfy a person’s delivery obligations
under section 5(b)(2) of the Securities
Act or the provision that a
communication shall not be deemed a
prospectus under section 2(a)(10) of the
Securities Act. A person that complies
Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 28 (‘‘not
everybody has [a] computer, so there has to be
alternatives’’); id. at 50 and 78 (quoting most
investors as preferring to receive fund information
online but also quoting some investors who prefer
to obtain at least some fund information on paper).
262 The cost to access the Internet itself (e.g.,
monthly subscription to an Internet service
provider) and related costs, such as the cost of
printer ink, are not considered costs for purposes
of determining whether information is accessible,
free of charge.
263 Rule 498(e)(1).
264 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; ICI Letter,
supra note 34.
265 See, e.g., Fidelity Letter, supra note 86; USAA
Letter, supra note 153.
266 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44 (noting
that the proposal to require that the SAI be made
available through a Web site ‘‘will make it much
easier for investors to review this document and
become more knowledgeable about fund operations
and management’’).
267 Proposed rule 498(f)(2)(i). Cf. Rule 14a–16(c)
under the Exchange Act [17 CFR 240.14a–16(c)]
(requiring materials to be presented in a format
convenient for both reading online and printing in
paper when delivering proxy materials
electronically).
268 Rule 498(e)(2)(i).
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with the conditions to the rule will not
violate section 5(b)(2) if the ‘‘convenient
for both reading online and printing on
paper’’ standard is not satisfied, but this
failure will constitute a violation of the
Commission’s rules.269
The condition that we are adopting,
that information on the Internet be
presented in a format that is humanreadable and capable of being printed
on paper in human-readable format, is
a more objective standard than the
proposed ‘‘convenient’’ condition.
Commenters expressed concern about
applying the proposed standard as a
condition to satisfying section 5
obligations.270 The adopted condition
simply makes clear that posted
information must be presented in
human-readable text, rather than
machine-readable software code, when
accessed through an Internet browser
and that it must be printable in humanreadable text. This condition does not
impose any further requirements
relating to user-friendliness of the
presentation.
We are, however, retaining the
standard that posted information be
‘‘convenient for both reading online and
printing on paper’’ as a rule
requirement. This implements the
suggestion of commenters who
criticized the ‘‘convenient’’ standard as
a condition and suggested that it could,
instead, be made a rule requirement.271
This standard was designed to ensure
that the information provided over the
Internet is user-friendly, both online
and when printed. It imposes on the
online information a standard of
usability that is comparable to the
readability of a paper document. While
we continue to believe that this
standard is important to the enhanced
disclosure framework we are adopting,
we are persuaded by commenters that
the consequence of failure to meet a
condition—a Section 5 violation—is not
needed to achieve our goal.
We are not, at this time, specifying
that any particular format, such as
HTML or PDF, would constitute a
convenient format for both reading
online and printing on paper.272 We are
concerned that the Commission’s
endorsement of any particular format
could result in the use of that format to
269 Rule
498(f)(3) and (5). This is similar to the
‘‘greater prominence’’ requirement discussed in Part
III.B.1. above.
270 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; NYC Bar Letter, supra note 75.
271 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; ICI Letter,
supra note 34.
272 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37 (arguing
that the adopting release should state that a PDF
format would constitute a ‘‘convenient’’ format for
purposes of rule 498).
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the exclusion of other formats that are
in existence today or that may be
developed in the future and that are
more user-friendly. Moreover, whether a
particular format is convenient for
reading online and printing depends on
a number of factors and must be decided
on a case-by-case basis. These factors
include the manner in which the online
version renders charts, tables, and other
graphics; the extent to which the fund
utilizes search and other capabilities of
the Internet to enhance investors’ access
to information and provides access to
any software necessary to view the
online version; and the time required to
download the online materials.273
c. Technological Requirements for
Online Information
We are adopting the proposed
requirements for linking within the
statutory prospectus and SAI and for
linking between the Summary
Prospectus, on the one hand, and the
statutory prospectus and SAI, on the
other. These requirements are intended
to result in online information that is in
a better and more useable format than
the same information when provided in
paper. The requirements were generally
supported by commenters in concept,
although, as discussed below, many
expressed concern regarding specific
requirements under the proposal.274 We
are making several modifications to the
requirements to address technical
considerations raised by commenters.275
Linking Within the Statutory Prospectus
and SAI
We are adopting a requirement that
persons accessing the statutory
prospectus or SAI online be able to
move directly back and forth between
each section heading in a table of
contents of the document and the
section of the document referenced in
that section heading. In the case of the
statutory prospectus, the linked table of
273 See Investment Company Act Release No.
27671 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72 FR 4148, 4154 (Jan. 29,
2007)]; Exchange Act Release No. 56135, supra note
29, 72 FR at 42224 n. 35 (guidance concerning
‘‘convenient for both reading online and printing on
paper’’ standard in context of electronic delivery of
proxies).
274 See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35; ICI Letter, supra
note 34; MFDF Letter, supra note 34.
275 We are not adopting the suggestion of one
commenter that the Commission delay, or not
apply, linking requirements with respect to funds
that are offered through variable insurance
contracts. See CAI Letter, supra note 67. While we
recognize that there may be operational challenges
associated with the offering of multiple funds from
several fund families through a variable insurance
contract, the linking requirements are an essential
condition to permitting a person to satisfy its
prospectus delivery obligations by sending or giving
a Summary Prospectus.
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contents must be either the table of
contents required by rule 481(c) 276 or a
table of contents that contains the same
section headings as the required table of
contents.277 This requirement allows an
investor or other user to move directly
between a table of contents of the
prospectus or SAI and the related
sections of that document, by a single
mouse click and without the need to flip
through multiple pages of a paper
document.
This requirement includes two
modifications from the proposed
requirement. First, we are clarifying that
the linked table of contents may be
outside the document, e.g., in a separate
frame or panel of the computer screen
and need not be the table of contents
that is contained within the document
itself, as long as the linked table of
contents for the statutory prospectus
conforms to the table of contents that is
required by our rules to be contained
within the document itself. This
modification is intended to provide
flexibility to use linking technologies
other than hyperlinking within the
document itself. Permitted technologies
would include, for example, the use of
‘‘bookmarks’’ that replicate the
document’s table of contents, but are
displayed in a separate panel from the
document itself.278 We have
accomplished this clarification by
modifying the language of the proposed
requirement 279 to refer to ‘‘a table of
contents of ’’ the relevant document
rather than ‘‘the table of contents in’’ the
relevant document and by requiring
that, in the case of the statutory
prospectus, the linked table of contents
either be the table of contents required
by rule 481(c) or contain the same
section headings as the table of contents
required by that rule. Second, we are
revising the rule language to clarify that
the links must permit movement
directly back and forth between each
section heading in a table of contents
and the particular section of the
document referenced in that section
heading.280
Linking Between Documents
We are also adopting a requirement
for funds to comply with one of two
options: That persons accessing the
276 17
CFR 230.481(c).
498(e)(2)(ii).
278 See, e.g., ICI Letter, supra note 34 (arguing that
proposal should be revised to permit the use of
bookmarks); Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44
(same).
279 Proposed rule 498(f)(2)(ii).
280 See Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44 (noting
that the proposal could be read to require a viewer
to be able to move from each section heading in the
table of contents to each and every section of the
document referenced in the table).
277 Rule
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Summary Prospectus be able to move
directly back and forth between either
(i) each section of the Summary
Prospectus and any section of the
statutory prospectus and SAI that
provides additional detail concerning
that section of the Summary Prospectus;
or (ii) links located at both the
beginning and end of the Summary
Prospectus, or that remain continuously
visible to persons accessing the
Summary Prospectus, and tables of
contents of both the statutory
prospectus and the SAI that meet the
linking requirements described in the
preceding section.281 This requirement
allows an investor to move back and
forth between related sections of the
Summary Prospectus, on the one hand,
and the statutory prospectus and SAI,
on the other, either directly through a
single mouse click or indirectly by
means of a table of contents of the
prospectus or SAI, in which case two
mouse clicks would be required.
We are adopting, as proposed, the first
option, which permits movement
between related sections of the
Summary Prospectus, on the one hand,
and the statutory prospectus and SAI,
on the other, directly through a single
mouse click.282 Although a number of
commenters suggested that this option
is unlikely to be used as a result of the
number of links that would be required
to be maintained,283 we believe that the
option should remain available because
the ability to single-click between
related sections has the potential to
result in an extremely user-friendly
presentation.
We are, however, modifying the
second proposed option, which involves
linking between the Summary
Prospectus and tables of contents of the
statutory prospectus and SAI, in order
to reduce the number of links that
would be required.284 As proposed, this
281 Rule
498(e)(2)(iii). It is our intention that the
ability to move between multiple windows that
remain open simultaneously constitutes ‘‘back and
forth’’ movement under this provision.
282 Rule 498(e)(2)(iii)(A); proposed rule
498(f)(2)(iii)(A).
283 See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Capital
Research Letter, supra note 34; ICI Letter, supra
note 34; Janus Letter, supra note 63; MFS Letter,
supra note 150; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44;
T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
284 We are also making a technical modification
to the rule to clarify that a linked table of contents
must meet the requirements described in the
preceding section, i.e., it must permit direct
movement between each section heading in the
table of contents and the section of the document
referenced in that section heading and, in the case
of the statutory prospectus, it must be the table of
contents required by rule 481(c) or contain the same
section headings as that table of contents. See rule
498(e)(2)(iii)(B) (requiring linked table of contents
to meet requirements of paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of rule
498).
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option would have required links
between each section of the Summary
Prospectus and tables of contents in the
statutory prospectus and SAI. This
would potentially have required two
links in each section of the Summary
Prospectus (one for the statutory
prospectus and one for the SAI). As
adopted, this option will require either
links located at both the beginning and
end of the Summary Prospectus, or links
that remain continuously visible to
persons accessing the Summary
Prospectus, perhaps in a separate panel
or frame.285 The number of links will be
reduced, but their placement, either at
the beginning and end of the Summary
Prospectus or continuously visible, will
ensure that they are prominent and
readily accessible to investors. This
modification responds to commenters’
concerns that multiple links within the
Summary Prospectus could result in a
cluttered presentation, create mistaken
expectations that the Summary
Prospectus links would lead directly to
related information rather than to tables
of contents of the statutory prospectus
and SAI, and would be expensive to
maintain.286
Interactive Data
Some commenters urged the
Commission to make greater use of
technology to permit investors to access
the specific information they need and
to facilitate automated comparisons of
data across multiple funds.287 The
Commission agrees with these
commenters that technology holds great
promise for enabling mutual fund
investors to make better use of existing
information to understand and compare
funds. To that end, we note that the
Commission has already proposed to
require a significant portion of the
information that is contained in the
summary section of the statutory
prospectus and the Summary
Prospectus to be filed in interactive data
format, which is intended to facilitate
automated analysis and comparison of
this information.288 Accordingly, while
we are taking a number of steps in the
current rulemaking to make greater use
of technology, we are considering
additional steps, along the lines
suggested by the commenters, in the
context of the pending interactive data
285 Rule
498(e)(2)(iii)(B).
e.g., Financial Services Roundtable Letter,
supra note 246; ICI Letter, supra note 34; Janus
Letter, supra note 63; MFS Letter, supra note 150;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Self Audit
Letter, supra note 228.
287 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
note 34; Letter of Dominic Jones (Feb. 27, 2008)
(‘‘Jones Letter’’).
288 See Investment Company Act Release No.
28298, supra note 28, 73 FR at 35449.
286 See,
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rulemaking. In addition, we recently
undertook an initiative to
fundamentally reexamine how we can
make greater use of technology to
deliver information to investors more
effectively.289
d. Ability To Retain Documents
We are adopting the proposed
requirement that persons accessing the
Web site must be able to permanently
retain, through downloading or
otherwise, free of charge, an electronic
version of the Summary Prospectus,
statutory prospectus, SAI, and
shareholder reports in a format that, like
the online version, (i) is human-readable
and capable of being printed on paper
in human-readable format; and (ii)
permits persons accessing the
downloaded statutory prospectus or SAI
to move directly back and forth between
each section heading in a table of
contents of that document and the
section of the document referenced in
that section heading.290 The
permanently retained document is not
required to be in a format that allows an
investor to move back and forth between
the Summary Prospectus and the
statutory prospectus and SAI because of
technical difficulties associated with
maintaining links between multiple
downloaded documents.
Commenters generally expressed
support for this proposal.291 Two
commenters suggested that rule 498
expressly provide that once a user saves
a document, a fund is not responsible
for maintaining the links that it contains
to other documents and that failure to
maintain a link will not provide a basis
for liability.292 We have determined that
such a provision is unnecessary because
we are not requiring downloaded
documents to retain any links to other
documents. In addition, as described
289 See SEC Announces ‘21st Century Disclosure’
Initiative to Fundamentally Rethink the Way
Companies Report and Investors Acquire
Information, Securities and Exchange Commission
Press Release, June 24, 2008, available at https://
www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-119.htm.
290 Rule 498(e)(3). This requirement is identical to
our proposal, except that the standards of clauses
(i) and (ii) have been modified to reflect the parallel
modifications that we made with respect to
requirements for the online version. See discussion
supra Part III.B.3.b. and c. Persons accessing the
materials must also be able to permanently retain,
free of charge, an electronic version of the materials
in a format, or formats, that are convenient for both
reading online and printing on paper. This is a rule
requirement and not a condition to satisfy a
person’s statutory prospectus delivery obligations
under Section 5. Rule 498(f)(3)(ii). See discussion
supra Part III.B.3.b.
291 See, e.g., Data Communique Letter, supra note
´
35; ICI Letter, supra note 34; Jones Letter, supra
note 287; Schnase Letter, supra note 35; T. Rowe
Letter, supra note 49.
292 See ICI Letter, supra note 34; T. Rowe Letter,
supra note 49.
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above in Part III.B.3.c., we have revised
the requirements for online linking
between documents to permit the links
to be external to the documents, in
which case they would not even appear
in the online versions of the documents.
e. Safe Harbor for Temporary
Noncompliance
As discussed above, compliance with
all of the conditions in rule 498
regarding Internet posting (other than
the convenient for reading and printing
standard) is required in order to meet
prospectus delivery obligations under
section 5(b)(2) of the Securities Act.
Failure to comply with any of these
conditions will be a violation of section
5(b)(2) unless the fund’s statutory
prospectus is delivered by means other
than reliance on the rule. The
Commission recognizes, however, that
there may be times when, due to events
beyond a fund’s control, such as system
outages or other technological issues,
natural disasters, acts of terrorism, or
pandemic illnesses, a fund is
temporarily not in compliance with the
Internet posting requirements of the
rule. For that reason, we are adopting
the proposed safe harbor provision
stating that the conditions regarding
Internet availability of a fund’s
Summary Prospectus, statutory
prospectus, SAI, and shareholder
reports will be deemed to be met,
notwithstanding the fact that those
materials are not available for a time in
the manner required, provided that the
fund has reasonable procedures in place
to ensure that those materials are
available in the required manner. In
addition, a fund is required to take
prompt action to ensure that those
materials become available in the
manner required, as soon as practicable
following the earlier of the time at
which the fund knows or reasonably
should have known that the documents
are not available in the manner
required.293 The safe harbor, by its
terms, is expressly applicable to the
format, linking, and permanent
retention conditions of the rule, in
addition to the conditions requiring that
the documents be available online.294
f. Requirement To Send Documents
We are adopting the proposed
requirement that a fund (or financial
intermediary through which shares of
293 Rule 498(e)(4). This safe harbor is not
available to a fund that repeatedly fails to comply
with the rule’s Internet posting requirements or that
is not in compliance with the requirements over a
prolonged period.
294 Rule 498(e)(4) (safe harbor applies to
conditions set forth in paragraphs (e)(1), (2), and (3)
of rule 498).
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the fund may be purchased or sold)
send, at no cost to the requestor and by
U.S. first class mail or other reasonably
prompt means, a paper copy of the
fund’s statutory prospectus, SAI, and
most recent annual and semi-annual
shareholder report to any person
requesting such a copy within three
business days after receiving a request
for a paper copy. We are also adopting,
with one modification, the proposed
requirement that a fund (or financial
intermediary through which shares of
the fund may be purchased or sold)
send, at no cost to the requestor and by
e-mail, an electronic copy of the fund’s
statutory prospectus, SAI, and most
recent annual and semi-annual
shareholder report to any person
requesting such a copy within three
business days after receiving a request
for an electronic copy.295 These
requirements are intended to ensure that
every investor in a fund taking
advantage of the new prospectus
delivery framework is permitted to
choose whether to review a fund’s
information on the Internet or whether
to receive that information directly,
either in paper or through an e-mail. As
a result of these requirements, each
investor will have prompt access to the
required information in the form that he
or she prefers.
We are modifying the proposal, as
suggested by one commenter,296 to
clarify that the requirement to send an
electronic copy of a document by e-mail
may be satisfied by sending a direct link
to the document on the Internet,
provided that a current version of the
document is directly accessible through
the link from the time that the e-mail is
sent through the date that is six months
after the date that the e-mail is sent and
the e-mail explains both how long the
link will remain useable and that, if the
recipient desires to retain a copy of the
document, he or she should access and
save the document.297 We believe that
six months is a reasonable period of
time to require the documents to be
available and will provide sufficient
time for an investor who has requested
a copy to access and, if desired,
download the information. We also note
that an investor may at any time request
to receive a paper copy of the
documents.
As in the proposal, the requirement
that a fund send a paper or electronic
copy of the statutory prospectus, SAI,
295 Rule
498(f)(1).
ICI Letter, supra note 34.
297 Rule 498(f)(1). We intend that ‘‘current’’
means the updated version of a document, not an
outdated version that was current at the time the
e-mail was sent. This is similar to the meaning of
‘‘current’’ discussed above in Part III.B.3.a.
296 See
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4569
and most recent annual and semiannual shareholder reports to a person
requesting such a copy is not a
condition to reliance on the rule to
satisfy a fund’s delivery obligations
under section 5(b)(2) of the Securities
Act or the provision that a
communication shall not be deemed a
prospectus under section 2(a)(10) of the
Securities Act. A person that complies
with all other aspects of rule 498 will
not violate section 5(b)(2) of the
Securities Act if the fund (or financial
intermediary) fails to send the required
paper or electronic copy of the statutory
prospectus, SAI, and most recent
shareholder reports. This failure will,
however, constitute a violation of the
Commission’s rules.298
4. Incorporation by Reference
a. Permissible Incorporation by
Reference
We are adopting, with modifications,
the proposal to permit a fund to
incorporate by reference into the
Summary Prospectus information
contained in its statutory prospectus,
SAI, and shareholder reports.299 The
proposal would have permitted a fund
to incorporate by reference information
from the fund’s most recent report to
shareholders. As adopted, rule 498
permits a fund to incorporate by
reference any information from the
fund’s reports to shareholders that the
fund has incorporated by reference into
its statutory prospectus. This
modification addresses commenters’
concerns that the proposal was
overbroad 300 by limiting incorporation
from shareholder reports to information
that has been incorporated into the
fund’s statutory prospectus and, as a
result, is subject to liability under
section 11 of the Securities Act.301 The
modification also addresses other
commenters’ concerns that funds be
permitted to incorporate by reference
information from both the most recent
annual shareholder report and most
recent semi-annual shareholder
report 302 and will permit the Summary
Prospectus to incorporate from
shareholder reports precisely the same
information that the statutory
prospectus may incorporate today.
298 Rule
498(f)(5).
498(b)(3).
300 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34 (arguing there is no basis to extend incorporation
by reference to annual report); Letter of Prof. Joseph
A. Franco (Feb. 28, 2008) (incorporation by
reference should be limited to the statutory
prospectus).
301 15 U.S.C. 77k.
302 See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
299 Rule
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Incorporation by reference is subject to
the conditions described below.
A fund may not incorporate by
reference into a Summary Prospectus
information from any source other than
those described above.303 In addition, a
fund may not incorporate by reference
into the Summary Prospectus any of the
information described above that is
required to be included in the Summary
Prospectus.304 Information may be
incorporated by reference into the
Summary Prospectus only by reference
to the specific document that contains
the information, and not by reference to
another document that incorporates the
information by reference.305 Thus, if a
fund’s statutory prospectus incorporates
the fund’s SAI by reference, the fund’s
Summary Prospectus could not
incorporate information in the SAI
simply by referencing the statutory
prospectus but would be required to
reference the SAI directly.306
Incorporation by reference of
information from a fund’s statutory
prospectus, SAI, and shareholder
reports is permitted only if the fund
satisfies the conditions described above
in Part III.B.3., which prescribe the
means by which the incorporated
information is provided to investors.307
In addition, if a fund incorporates
information by reference, the Summary
Prospectus legend must specify the type
of document (e.g., statutory prospectus)
from which the information is
incorporated and the date of the
document. If a fund incorporates by
reference a part of a document, the
Summary Prospectus legend must
clearly identify the part by page,
paragraph, caption, or otherwise.308
303 Rule
498(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
304 Rule 498(b)(3)(ii)(B).
305 Rule 498(b)(3)(ii)(C).
306 Cf. Item 10(d) of Regulation S–K [17 CFR
229.10(d)] (‘‘Except where a registrant or issuer is
expressly required to incorporate a document or
documents by reference * * * reference may not be
made to any document which incorporates another
document by reference if the pertinent portion of
the document containing the information or
financial statements to be incorporated by reference
includes an incorporation by reference to another
document.’’). General Instruction D.2. of Form
N–1A makes Item 10(d) of Regulation S–K
applicable to incorporation by reference into a
fund’s statutory prospectus.
307 Rule 498(b)(3)(ii)(A) and (e). We note that the
safe harbor described in Part III.B.3.e. stating that,
under certain circumstances, the conditions
regarding Internet availability of a fund’s Summary
Prospectus, statutory prospectus, SAI, and
shareholder reports will be deemed to be met,
notwithstanding the fact that those materials are not
available for a time in the manner required, also
applies to permit incorporation by reference in
those circumstances. Rule 498(e)(4).
308 Rule 498(b)(1)(v)(B). This requirement is
similar to the requirements of rule 411(d) under the
Securities Act [17 CFR 230.411(d)], which requires
that information incorporated by reference ‘‘be
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These document identification
requirements have been modified from
the proposal, which would have
required that the legend clearly identify
documents that are incorporated by
reference, including the date of the
documents, in order to make the
requirements more precise.309 The
legend is also required to explain that
any information that is incorporated
from the SAI or shareholder reports may
be obtained, free of charge, in the same
manner as the statutory prospectus.310
A fund that fails to comply with any
of the above conditions may not
incorporate information by reference
into its Summary Prospectus. A fund
that provides the incorporated
information to investors by complying
with all of the conditions, including the
conditions for providing the
incorporated information through the
Internet, is not also required to send or
give the incorporated information
together with the Summary
Prospectus.311
A significant number of commenters
expressed support for the Commission’s
proposal to permit incorporation by
reference of information from other fund
documents into the Summary
Prospectus.312 Commenters stated that,
by permitting incorporation by
reference, the proposal significantly
addresses liability issues that resulted in
funds’ unwillingness to use the fund
profile and will encourage wider use of
the Summary Prospectus.313
A joint comment letter from three
consumer and investor groups, however,
stated that the Commission did not
adequately address serious questions
clearly identified in the reference by page,
paragraph, caption or otherwise.’’
309 See, e.g., ICI Letter, supra note 34; NYC Bar
Letter, supra note 75.
310 Rule 498(b)(1)(v)(B) and (b)(3)(ii)(A).
311 Rule 498(b)(3)(i). Cf. General Instruction
D.1.(b) of Form N–1A (permitting a fund to
incorporate by reference any or all of the SAI into
the statutory prospectus without delivering the SAI
with the prospectus).
312 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; Letter of Citigroup
Global Markets Inc. (Feb. 26, 2008) (‘‘Citigroup
Letter’’); Dechert Letter, supra note 50; ICI Letter,
supra note 34; MFDF Letter, supra note 34; NYC
Bar Letter, supra note 75; Oppenheimer Letter,
supra note 44; Schnase Letter, supra note 35;
SIFMA Letter, supra note 97; T. Rowe Letter, supra
note 49.
313 See, e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; Citigroup
Letter, supra note 312; ICI Letter, supra note 34;
MFDF Letter, supra note 34; SIFMA Letter, supra
note 97. See also AARP Letter, supra note 34
(‘‘Various explanations have emerged as to why the
fund profile did not take hold, including the rapid
development of the Internet as a resource for
mutual fund investors and liability concerns related
to the profile. The proposal under consideration
today addresses both issues, and as such, paves the
way for more widespread use of the summary
documents.’’).
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accompanying incorporation by
reference in the proposing release.314
These commenters argued, first, that the
Commission did not adequately explain
any purpose for permitting
incorporation by reference other than
the limitation of funds’ liability.
Second, the commenters argued that the
Commission’s proposal would relieve
issuers of legal responsibility for
misleading disclosure under sections
12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) of the Securities
Act and that the proposing release had
not discussed whether the benefits of
having a Summary Prospectus that
satisfies prospectus delivery obligations
is worth the cost of relieving funds of
this legal responsibility or whether such
a tradeoff is appropriate.
With respect to the commenters’ first
concern, our purpose in permitting
incorporation by reference into the
Summary Prospectus is to further our
goal of creating an improved mutual
fund disclosure framework for the
benefit of investors. We have concluded,
and the comments and recent investor
research support our conclusion, that
investors will benefit greatly from
receiving a shorter document, such as
the Summary Prospectus. We have also
concluded, based on both the comments
and our experience with the fund
profile that, to a significant extent,
investors will not realize these benefits
unless we permit incorporation by
reference because many funds are
unlikely to use the Summary Prospectus
if incorporation by reference is
prohibited. With respect to the
commenters’ second concern, we do not
agree that permitting incorporation by
reference will relieve funds of legal
responsibility for misleading disclosure.
Therefore, we believe that it is
appropriate to permit incorporation by
reference in order to realize for investors
the considerable benefits that the
Summary Prospectus will afford. We
discuss our analysis more fully below.
Incorporation by Reference Is Necessary
To Improve Disclosure Framework
We have concluded that investors will
benefit greatly from receiving the
Summary Prospectus containing key
information that they will be more
likely to read and understand than the
statutory prospectus, with the ability to
access more detailed information either
314 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34. Another commenter opposed incorporation by
reference into the Summary Prospectus, but noted
that if incorporation by reference is permitted, the
incorporated documents should be available on the
Internet, linked with other documents,
downloadable in printable form with retained links,
and distributed upon request, similar to our
´
proposal. See Data Communique Letter, supra note
35.
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immediately in a user-friendly format
online or, within a matter of days, in
paper. Nearly all of the commenters,
including those who opposed
incorporation by reference, agreed with
this conclusion.315 This conclusion is
also supported by our recent telephone
survey of investors, which found that
many mutual fund investors do not read
statutory prospectuses because they are
long, complicated, and hard to
understand.316
The views expressed by investors in
our focus groups also support our
conclusion that investors will derive
significant benefits from the Summary
Prospectus, coupled with ready access
to more detailed information in
whatever format they choose, paper or
electronic.317 By using multiple means
315 See AARP Letter, supra note 34 (stating that
it is AARP’s view that the Commission’s initiative
provides a real opportunity to deliver practical
disclosure that consumers can use to make
informed mutual fund purchase decisions); CMFI
Letter, supra note 44 (stating that the new
disclosure regime would help investors focus on
what is most important in making investment
decisions with respect to any particular fund and
that the Summary Prospectus is much more likely
´
to be reviewed by investors); Data Communique
Letter, supra note 35 (acknowledging the
improvements that will result from improved access
and ease of comparability of relevant information in
a concise format); Fund Democracy et al. Letter,
supra note 34 (supporting Summary Prospectus
proposal overall and agreeing that ‘‘a short form
alternative to a lengthy statutory prospectus can
both improve the quality and usefulness of fund
disclosure and reduce fund expenses’’); ICI Survey,
supra note 84 (stating that respondents to a survey
it conducted overwhelmingly agreed that the
Summary Prospectus is about the right length,
makes it easier to compare funds, contains enough
information (as long as more detailed information
is available online or upon request), and is a
document that they would be more likely to use
than the current long-form prospectus); Letter of
William D. McAllister (Nov. 27, 2007) (stating that
current disclosure statements are definitely
unreadable for the average citizen investor and that
the simplification proposed is needed and
appreciated); Letter of Kyle N. Orlowski (March 10,
2008) (stating that the proposal would make an
‘‘apples to apples’’ comparison between funds
much easier).
316 See Telephone Survey Report, supra note 32,
at 56, 58 (finding that nearly two-thirds of investors
rarely (28%), very rarely (15%), or never (21%) read
mutual fund statutory prospectuses that they
receive, and that of those two-thirds, over half said
that the reason they do not read them was because
statutory prospectuses are too complicated or hard
to understand (37%) or because statutory
prospectuses are too long and wordy (19%)).
317 See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 5–
6 (noting that participants made numerous negative
comments about the length of the long-form
prospectus and that many participants liked the
short-form prospectus and thought that it could be
used as a screening tool to identify mutual funds
in which they might be sufficiently interested to do
some additional review); Focus Group Transcripts,
supra note 32, at 63 (‘‘It’s a two-minute read. If I
want more information, I can ask for it.’’); id. at 38
(‘‘I think both [the long-form prospectus and shortform prospectus] have their place. I think it would
be foolish to give up the long-form for ‘this’ and I
think it would be foolish not to have the short-form
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to provide information and by using
technology to provide information in a
layered format that permits users to
move from key information to more
detailed information, the new rule is
intended to facilitate each investor’s
ability to effectively choose to review
the particular information in which he
or she is interested. Each investor in a
fund taking advantage of the new
prospectus delivery regime can choose
the particular means of receiving
information that he or she prefers
because all of the information is
required to be sent promptly to any
requesting investor in paper or
electronically. Thus, the Summary
Prospectus disclosure framework will
permit each and every investor to
choose both the information he or she
wants to review and the format in which
he or she wants to review it.
We also believe that significantly
more funds and intermediaries will
utilize the Summary Prospectus if we
permit funds to incorporate by reference
information from the funds’ statutory
prospectus, SAI, and shareholder
reports. Numerous commenters stated
that, by permitting incorporation by
reference, the proposal significantly
addresses liability issues that resulted in
funds’ unwillingness to use the fund
profile and will encourage wider use of
the Summary Prospectus.318 Our own
experience with the fund profile over
the past 10 years confirms that very few
funds have adopted it.319 We believe
that one of the principal reasons for the
profile’s low adoption rate is concern
about potential liability for omitting
facts from the profile that are contained
in the statutory prospectus or SAI.320
While we acknowledge that an
additional contributing factor was the
requirement that funds using the profile
also provide a statutory prospectus with
and insist on a long-form. They both have their
place.’’).
318 See letters cited supra note 313.
319 Profiles were filed for less than 200 funds
during calendar year 2007. During 2007, there were
almost 9,000 mutual funds in existence. See 2008
ICI Fact Book, supra note 16, at 15.
320 See letters cited supra note 313. See also Tom
Leswing, Profile Prospectus Rule Expected Soon,
Ignites (Mar. 28, 2007) (panelists at the ICI Mutual
Funds and Investment Management Conference
expressed concern about liability for using a shortform prospectus and noted that concern about
liability was the main reason that few funds use the
profile); NASD Mutual Fund Task Force Report,
supra note 19, at 5 (‘‘To date, few mutual funds
have used the fund profile in the retail market. One
concern that has been voiced about the fund profile
is that it could expose funds to unforeseen liability.
For example, by summarizing disclosure that
appeared in the full prospectus, some fear that the
fund profile could be deemed to have omitted
material information.’’).
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4571
the confirmation,321 we do not believe
that elimination of this requirement
alone, without permitting incorporation
by reference, would result in
widespread use of the Summary
Prospectus by funds.
Thus, permitting incorporation by
reference into the Summary Prospectus
is essential to accomplishing the
Commission’s important goal of
encouraging use of a disclosure
document that provides key information
that investors are more likely to read
and understand than the statutory
prospectus. Commenters and investor
testing consistently affirm the
importance of the goal and of the
Summary Prospectus in achieving the
goal. Commenters on the current
proposal, and our experience with the
profile, confirm that we cannot
accomplish the goal without permitting
incorporation by reference.
Investor Protection
We have also concluded that
permitting incorporation by reference
will not relieve funds of any legal
responsibility for misleading disclosure
under sections 12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) of
the Securities Act.322 As a result, we
have concluded that it is appropriate to
permit incorporation by reference in
order to realize for investors the
considerable benefits that the Summary
Prospectus will afford.
The Summary Prospectus, together
with information incorporated therein
by reference, is subject to liability under
sections 12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) of the
Securities Act, and nothing in rule 498
removes, or diminishes, that liability.
Under Section 12(a)(2) of the Securities
Act, sellers have liability to purchasers
for offers or sales by means of a
prospectus or oral communication that
includes an untrue statement of material
fact or omits to state a material fact that
makes the statements made, based on
the circumstances under which they
were made, not misleading. Section
17(a)(2) of the Securities Act is a general
antifraud provision which makes it
unlawful for any person in the offer and
sale of a security to obtain money or
property by means of any untrue
statement of a material fact or any
omission to state a material fact
necessary in order to make the
statements made, in light of the
circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading.
We are permitting incorporation by
reference of the statutory prospectus,
321 See
Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34.
322 We also note that rule 498 does not reduce,
or otherwise affect, liability under Section 11 of the
Securities Act. This is discussed in Part III.B.5.
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SAI, and information from the
shareholder reports that is incorporated
into the statutory prospectus in order to
reflect, as a legal matter, the practical
reality that, under the conditions of rule
498, the information incorporated into
the Summary Prospectus will be
provided at the same time as the
Summary Prospectus though by
different means.323 Funds and other
sellers will be liable under sections
12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) for information
incorporated by reference into the
statutory prospectus. Investors who
choose to review the statutory
prospectus, SAI, and shareholder
reports in paper will have the same
ability to do so that they do today. In
addition, rule 498 requires that all
information contained in the Summary
Prospectus, statutory prospectus, SAI,
and shareholder reports be immediately
available to investors online in a userfriendly format.324 By using multiple
means to provide this information and
using technology to provide information
in a layered format, the new rule is
intended to facilitate investors’ ability to
easily access and review the particular
information in which they are
interested. Indeed, each investor in a
fund taking advantage of the new
prospectus delivery regime can choose
the particular means of receiving
information because all of the
information is required to be promptly
sent to any requesting investor in paper
or electronically. The Summary
Prospectus disclosure regime enhances
the accessibility of the information that
is available to investors and increases
their options for how to receive the
information; it does not take away any
information or any option for the
method by which information is
received.
Our determination to permit
incorporation by reference of
information into the Summary
Prospectus is different from the
determination we made with respect to
the profile and is made in light of
technological advances that have
occurred during the intervening years.
When the Commission adopted the
profile more than 10 years ago, it did
not permit incorporation by reference of
323 Thus, rule 498(b)(3)(iii) expressly provides
that incorporated information is, for purposes of
rule 159 (and therefore for purposes of Sections
12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act),
conveyed not later than the time the Summary
Prospectus is received. See discussion infra Part
III.B.4.b.
324 The provisions that we are adopting requiring
linking within and between documents and that the
documents be in a format that is convenient for
both reading online and printing on paper are
intended to contribute to a user-friendly online
presentation. Rule 498(e)(2)(ii), (e)(2)(iii), and (f)(3).
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Jkt 217001
the statutory prospectus into the profile
and stated its belief that allowing this
incorporation would be inconsistent
with the purpose of the profile and not
in the public interest.325 The
Commission noted that the profile was
designed to provide summary
information about a fund in a selfcontained format and that permitting
incorporation by reference of the
statutory prospectus would be
inconsistent with the profile being a
self-contained document.326
By contrast, the Summary Prospectus
is not a self-contained document, but
rather one element in a layered
disclosure regime that is intended to
provide investors with better, more
useable access to the information in the
statutory prospectus, SAI, and
shareholder reports than they have
today. The expansion in Internet access
and the strides in the speed and quality
of Internet connections since the profile
rule was adopted in 1998 have made
this possible.327 As a result of these
considerations and for the other reasons
discussed above, we believe that it is
consistent with the purpose of the
Summary Prospectus and in the public
interest to permit incorporation by
reference of information from the
statutory prospectus, SAI, and
325 Investment Company Act Release No. 23065,
supra note 194, 63 FR at 13971.
326 Id.
327 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34 (noting
that ‘‘the growth of the Internet as an information
source has dramatically improved investors’ access
to mutual fund information’’); CFA Institute Letter,
supra note 37 (‘‘In a time of electronic accessibility,
this approach is in keeping with movement taken
by the SEC through other proposals to streamline
the process and reduce expenses to investment
companies, while preserving investor
protections.’’). In 1998, one study indicated that
over one-third of Americans over the age of 16 used
the Internet. Associated Press Online, One-Third of
Americans Use Internet (Aug. 25, 1998). As noted
above, our recent telephone survey indicates that
90% of investors have Internet access. Telephone
Survey Report, supra note 32, at 115. See also 2008
ICI Fact Book, supra note 16, at 80–81 (noting that
more than nine in 10 U.S. households owning
mutual funds have Internet access, up from twothirds in 2000; 69 percent of mutual fund
shareholders age 65 or older have Internet access,
up from 30 percent in 2000; and about eight in 10
mutual fund shareholders with Internet access go
online for financial purposes, such as to check their
bank or investment accounts, obtain investment
information, or buy or sell investments). Moreover,
very few American homes had broadband
connections in 1998. See Robert J. Samuelson,
Broadband’s Faded Promise, The Washington Post,
at A35 (Dec. 12, 2001) (noting that almost no
American homes had broadband in 1998). In
contrast, as of early 2007, nearly half of all adult
Americans had a broadband connection at home.
See supra note 26. See also Jesse Noyes, Broadband
signals death of dial-up, The Boston Herald, at 028
(Aug. 7, 2005) (noting that dial-up speeds have
remained constant at 56K since 1998 and cannot go
higher, while broadband speeds have grown from
1 megabyte per second to 100 megabytes a second
in the past six years).
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shareholder reports into the Summary
Prospectus, subject to the conditions to
incorporation by reference contained in
rule 498.
b. Effect of Incorporation by Reference
We are adopting, as proposed, the
provision of rule 498 stating that, for
purposes of rule 159 under the
Securities Act,328 information is
conveyed to a person not later than the
time that a Summary Prospectus is
received by the person if the
information is incorporated by reference
into the Summary Prospectus in
accordance with rule 498. This
provision addresses the question of
when information that is incorporated
into the Summary Prospectus under rule
498 is conveyed for purposes of sections
12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2) of the Securities
Act. Commenters who addressed this
provision generally supported the
position that all information that is
properly incorporated by reference into
the Summary Prospectus is conveyed to
an investor for purposes of these
sections.329
As we have previously stated, we
interpret section 12(a)(2) and section
17(a)(2) to mean that, for purposes of
assessing whether at the time of sale
(including a contract of sale) a
prospectus or oral communication or
statement includes or represents a
material misstatement or omits to state
a material fact necessary in order to
make the prospectus, oral
communication, or statement, in light of
the circumstances under which it was
made, not misleading, information
conveyed to the investor only after the
time of sale (including a contract of sale)
should not be taken into account.330 In
furtherance of this interpretation, we
adopted rule 159 under sections 12(a)(2)
and 17(a)(2). Consistent with our
interpretation, rule 159 provides that,
for purposes of sections 12(a)(2) and
17(a)(2) only, and without affecting any
other rights under those sections, for
purposes of determining at the time of
sale (including the time of the contract
of sale) whether a prospectus, oral
statement, or a statement 331 includes an
untrue statement of material fact or
omits to state a material fact necessary
328 17
CFR 230.159.
e.g., ABA Letter, supra note 37; Dechert
Letter, supra note 50; ICI Letter, supra note 34;
Schnase Letter, supra note 35; T. Rowe Letter, supra
note 49. As discussed more fully in Part III.B.4.a.,
several commenters disagreed with the
Commission’s determination to permit
incorporation by reference.
330 See Securities Act Release No. 8591 (Jul. 19,
2005) [70 FR 44722, 44766 (Aug. 3, 2005)].
331 These include a prospectus or oral statement
in the case of Section 12(a)(2), or a statement to
which Section 17(a)(2) is applicable.
329 See,
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in order to make the statements, in light
of the circumstances under which they
were made, not misleading,332 any
information conveyed to the purchaser
only after the time of sale will not be
taken into account.
Rule 498 provides that, for purposes
of rule 159 (and therefore for purposes
of sections 12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2)),
information is conveyed to a person not
later than the time that a Summary
Prospectus is received by the person if
the information is incorporated by
reference into the Summary Prospectus
in accordance with the rule.333 For
purposes of sections 12(a)(2) and
17(a)(2), whether or not information has
been conveyed to an investor at or prior
to the time of the contract of sale is a
facts and circumstances
determination.334 We have designed the
requirements of rule 498 specifically so
that the facts and circumstances
surrounding receipt by a person of the
Summary Prospectus will, in fact, result
in the effective conveyance to that
person of any information that is
incorporated by reference into the
Summary Prospectus in compliance
with the conditions of the rule. For that
reason, rule 498 expressly states that, for
purposes of rule 159, information
incorporated into a Summary
Prospectus is conveyed not later than
the time that the Summary Prospectus is
received.335 The relevant facts and
circumstances required by rule 498
include actual receipt of the Summary
Prospectus; incorporation by reference
of the information into the Summary
Prospectus and clear disclosure of how
the incorporated information may be
obtained free of charge; and continuous
Internet availability of the incorporated
information in formats that permit
permanent retention, are humanreadable and capable of being printed
on paper in human-readable format, and
meet the document linking
requirements of the rule.336
332 Or, in the case of Section 17(a)(2), any
omission to state a material fact necessary in order
to make the statements made, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading.
333 Rule 498(b)(3)(iii).
334 See Securities Act Release No. 8591, supra
note 330, 70 FR at 44766. Such information could
include information in the issuer’s registration
statement and prospectuses for the offering in
question, the issuer’s Exchange Act reports
incorporated by reference therein, or information
otherwise disseminated by means reasonably
designed to convey such information to investors.
Such information also could include information
directly communicated to investors.
335 Whether or not any or all of the incorporated
information was conveyed to an investor prior to
the time that the Summary Prospectus was received
will be a facts and circumstances determination.
336 Cf. Investment Company Act Release No.
13436 (Aug. 12, 1983) [48 FR 37928, 37930 (Aug.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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We are not adopting the suggestion of
two commenters that rule 498 state that
information is conveyed to a person not
later than the time that the Summary
Prospectus is conveyed to the person,
rather than received by the person.337
We are unable to conclude that, in all
circumstances, information
incorporated into a Summary
Prospectus has been conveyed to an
investor before the investor has received
the Summary Prospectus.
Rule 498 addresses one particular set
of facts and circumstances under rule
159 and does not address any other
situations. For purposes of sections
12(a)(2) and 17(a)(2), whether or not
information has been conveyed to an
investor at or prior to the time of the
contract of sale remains a facts and
circumstances determination. Rule 498
does not address any facts and
circumstances relating to operating
companies or any other issuers that are
not mutual funds, nor does it address
any information other than information
incorporated by reference into a mutual
fund Summary Prospectus in
accordance with the new rule.
The Commission believes that a
person that provides investors with a
mutual fund Summary Prospectus in
good faith compliance with rule 498
will be able to rely on section 19(a) of
the Securities Act 338 against a claim
that the Summary Prospectus did not
include information that is disclosed in
the fund’s statutory prospectus, whether
or not the fund incorporates the
statutory prospectus by reference into
the Summary Prospectus.339 Section
19(a) protects a defendant from liability
for actions taken in good faith in
conformity with any rule of the
Commission.340
5. Filing Requirements for the Summary
Prospectus
We are requiring each Summary
Prospectus to be filed with the
Commission on EDGAR no later than
the date that it is first used, rather than,
as proposed, the fifth business day after
the date that it is first used.341 We agree
22, 1983)] (discussing incorporation by reference of
the SAI into the statutory prospectus); see also
White v. Melton, 757 F. Supp. 267, 272 (S.D.N.Y.
1991) (addressing effect of incorporation by
reference of the SAI into the statutory prospectus).
337 See ICI Letter, supra note 34; Schnase Letter,
supra note 35.
338 15 U.S.C. 77s(a).
339 Cf. Investment Company Act Release No.
23065, supra note 194, 63 FR at 13972 (similar
Commission statement in context of profile).
340 See also Section 38(c) of the Investment
Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–37(c)] (similar
provision under Investment Company Act).
341 Rule 497(k). As proposed, we are deleting the
reference to the profile from rule 497(a) [17 CFR
230.497(a)].
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with commenters who suggested that
the Summary Prospectus should be filed
with the Commission and be available
on the Commission’s Web site earlier
than the fifth business day after it is first
used.342 In addition, we do not believe
that the proposed five-day lag between
first use of a Summary Prospectus and
filing is necessary, given that we are
requiring that the Summary Prospectus
be updated only once a year, at the same
time that a fund files its updated
statutory prospectus. A Summary
Prospectus that is filed on EDGAR will
be publicly available; however, a fund
may not rely on this availability to
satisfy the requirements to post the
document online discussed in Part
III.B.3. above.
Section 10(b) of the Securities Act
provides that a prospectus permitted
under that section shall, unless
provided otherwise by Commission
rule, be filed as part of the registration
statement but shall not be deemed part
of the registration statement for the
purposes of section 11 of the Securities
Act.343 In accordance with Section
10(b), a Summary Prospectus will be
filed as part of the registration
statement, but will not be deemed a part
of the registration statement for
purposes of section 11 of the Securities
Act.
A joint comment letter from three
consumer and investor groups
expressed concerns that the Summary
Prospectus would not be subject to
section 11 liability, suggesting that this
would result in a diminution of funds’
liability under that section.344 We
emphasize that the registration
statement of a fund that uses the
Summary Prospectus will remain
subject to liability under section 11, as
is the case today. All of the information
that may be included in, or incorporated
by reference into, a fund’s Summary
Prospectus is also required to be
included in the fund’s registration
statement. Thus, as described more fully
in the following paragraph, all
information included in, or
incorporated by reference into, the
Summary Prospectus will be subject to
342 See Bo Li Letter, supra note 35; NewRiver
Letter, supra note 228. Two commenters supported
the Commission’s proposal to require each
Summary Prospectus to be filed with the
Commission no later than the fifth business day
after first use. See ICI Letter, supra note 34; Schnase
Letter, supra note 35.
343 15 U.S.C. 77j(b) and 77k.
344 See Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34. Under Section 11 of the Securities Act [15
U.S.C. 77k], purchasers of an issuer’s securities
have private rights of action for untrue statements
of material facts or omissions of material facts
required to be included in the registration statement
or necessary to make the statements in the
registration statement not misleading.
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liability under section 11 of the
Securities Act.
As described in Part III.B.2.a., we are
adopting a new requirement to clarify
that the information contained in a
Summary Prospectus that is used to
satisfy prospectus delivery obligations
must be the same as the information
contained in the summary section of the
fund’s statutory prospectus. This
information is, and will remain, subject
to section 11 liability because the fund’s
prospectus, in its entirety, is subject to
Section 11 liability. In addition,
information may be incorporated by
reference into a Summary Prospectus
only if it is contained in the fund’s
statutory prospectus, SAI, or has been
incorporated into the statutory
prospectus from the shareholder reports.
That is, information that may be
incorporated by reference into the
Summary Prospectus is already a part of
the fund’s registration statement and, as
a result, is subject in its entirety to
liability under section 11. Thus, while
section 10(b) of the Securities Act
prescribes that the Summary Prospectus
will not itself be deemed a part of the
registration statement for purposes of
section 11, all of the information in the
Summary Prospectus will be subject to
liability under section 11, either because
the information is the same as
information contained in the statutory
prospectus or because the information is
incorporated by reference from the
registration statement.
We also note that a Summary
Prospectus is subject to the stop order
and other administrative provisions of
section 8 of the Securities Act.345 This
is in addition to the Commission’s
power under section 10(b) of the
Securities Act to prevent or suspend the
use of the Summary Prospectus,
regardless of whether or not it has been
filed.346
C. Technical and Conforming
Amendments
We are adopting the following
conforming amendments to rule 482
under the Securities Act, the investment
company advertising rule, to reflect the
Summary Prospectus and the
elimination of the voluntary profile.
• The scope section of rule 482 is
revised to clarify that the rule does not
apply to a Summary Prospectus or to a
communication that, pursuant to rule
498, is not deemed a ‘‘prospectus’’
345 15 U.S.C. 77h; H.R. Rep. 1542, 83d Cong., 2d
Sess., 1954 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2973, 2982 (1954) (noting
that the Commission’s authority to suspend the use
of a defective summary prospectus under Section
10(b) ‘‘is intended to supplement the stop-order
powers of the Commission under [S]ection 8’’).
346 15 U.S.C. 77j(b).
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under section 2(a)(10) of the Securities
Act.347
• For funds using the Summary
Prospectus, the legend required in a rule
482 advertisement regarding the
availability of the statutory prospectus
will be required to include references to
the Summary Prospectus.348
• The provision addressing the use of
rule 482 advertisements together with a
profile that includes an application to
purchase shares is deleted as
unnecessary.349
We are also adopting amendments to
various cross-references to Form N–1A
in our rules and forms to reflect changes
that we are adopting to Form N–1A.
These include cross-references in rule
485 under the Securities Act, rules 304
and 401 of Regulation S–T, Form N–4
under the Securities Act and the
Investment Company Act, and Form N–
14 under the Securities Act. We are also
revising rule 159A under the Securities
Act to refer to a Summary Prospectus
rather than a profile.
D. Compliance Date
As discussed in the proposing release,
the Commission is providing for a
transition period after the effective date
of the amendments to Form N–1A that
gives funds sufficient time to update
their prospectuses or to prepare new
registration statements under the
revised Form N–1A requirements. The
effective date of the amendments is
March 31, 2009.
All initial registration statements on
Form N–1A, and all post-effective
amendments that are annual updates to
effective registration statements on this
form, filed on or after January 1, 2010,
must comply with the amendments to
Form N–1A. All post-effective
amendments that add a new series, filed
on or after January 1, 2010, must comply
with the amendments with respect to
the new series. The final compliance
date for filing amendments to effective
registration statements to comply with
the new Form N–1A requirements is
January 1, 2011. Based on the
comments, we believe that this will
provide adequate time for funds to
compile and review the information that
must be disclosed.350 A fund may, at its
option, prepare documents in
accordance with the requirements of
347 Rule
482(a).
482(b)(1).
349 Rule 482(c).
350 A number of commenters expressed the view
that a one-year transition period was needed to
make the required disclosure changes and
implement the business process changes associated
with use of the Summary Prospectus. See e.g., ICI
Letter, supra note 34; Janus Letter, supra note 63;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44.
348 Rule
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Form N–1A, as amended, at any time
after the effective date of the
amendments. A person may not rely on
rule 498 to satisfy its obligations to
deliver a mutual fund’s statutory
prospectus unless the fund is also in
compliance with the amendments to
Form N–1A.
Post-effective amendments to existing
registration statements filed to comply
with the amendments to Form N–1A
should be filed under Securities Act
rule 485(a).351 However, in appropriate
circumstances, we will consider
requests by existing funds to file these
post-effective amendments pursuant to
Securities Act rule 485(b)(1)(vii).352
Appropriate circumstances may
include, for example, situations where a
fund complex has previously filed
under rule 485(a) post-effective
amendments for a number of funds that
implement the new requirements, and
the staff determines not to review
additional such filings by the fund
complex in light of the staff’s experience
with the previously filed amendments.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the amendments
contain ‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).353 The titles for the collections
of information are: (1) ‘‘Form N–1A
under the Investment Company Act of
1940 and Securities Act of 1933,
Registration Statement of Open-End
Management Investment Companies’’
(OMB Control No. 3235–0307) and (2)
‘‘Summary Prospectus for Open-End
Management Investment Companies’’
(OMB Control No. 3235–0637). We
published notice soliciting comments
on the collection of information
requirements in the release proposing
the amendments 354 and submitted the
proposed collections of information to
the Office of Management and Budget
351 A post-effective amendment filed under rule
485(a) [17 CFR 230.485(a)] generally becomes
effective either 60 days or 75 days after filing,
unless the effective date is accelerated by the
Commission. A post-effective amendment filed
under rule 485(b) may become effective
immediately upon filing. A post-effective
amendment may be filed under rule 485(b) if it is
filed for one or more specified purposes, including
to make non-material changes to the registration
statement. A post-effective amendment filed for any
purpose not specified in rule 485(b) generally must
be filed pursuant to rule 485(a).
352 Under rule 485(b)(1)(vii), the Commission may
approve the filing of a post-effective amendment to
a registration statement under rule 485(b) for a
purpose other than those specifically enumerated in
the rule. The Commission’s staff has been delegated
the authority to approve registrants’ requests under
rule 485(b)(1)(vii). 17 CFR 200.30–5(b–3)(1).
353 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
354 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67809.
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(‘‘OMB’’) for review and approval in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and
5 CFR 1320.11. Four commenters
specifically addressed the collection of
information requirements and we have
revised the proposed rule amendments
in response to those comments.355 We
have also revised the estimated
reporting and cost burdens of the rule
amendments to address these
comments, as discussed below.
Form N–1A under the Securities Act
and the Investment Company Act 356 is
used by mutual funds to register under
the Investment Company Act and to
offer their securities under the
Securities Act. Rule 498 under the
Securities Act will be used by mutual
funds that choose to send or give a
Summary Prospectus to investors.357 An
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and
a person is not required to respond to
a collection of information, unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. Because we have modified our
proposals as described above, we are
revising the burden estimate for Form
N–1A and rule 498. We have submitted
a revised request for both to OMB.
We are adopting an improved mutual
fund disclosure framework that we
originally proposed in November
2007.358 This improved disclosure
framework is intended to provide
investors with information that is easier
to use and more readily accessible,
while retaining the comprehensive
quality of the information that is
available today. The foundation of the
improved disclosure framework is the
provision to all investors of streamlined
and user-friendly information that is key
to an investment decision.
To implement the new disclosure
framework, we are adopting
amendments to Form N–1A that will
require every prospectus to include a
summary section at the front of the
prospectus, consisting of key
information about the fund, including
investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance. We are
also adopting a new option for satisfying
prospectus delivery obligations with
respect to mutual fund securities under
the Securities Act. Under the option,
key information will be sent or given to
investors in the form of a Summary
Prospectus, and the statutory prospectus
355 See American Century Letter, supra note 48;
Capital Research Letter, supra note 34; Janus Letter,
supra note 63; ICI Letter, supra note 34.
356 17 CFR 239.15A; 17 CFR 274.11A.
357 A request has been submitted to OMB to
remove the collection of information for the fund
profile, which is being eliminated, under current
rule 498.
358 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67990.
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will be provided on an Internet Web
site. Funds that select this option will
also be required to send the statutory
prospectus to the investor upon request.
We are also adopting technical and
conforming amendments to rules 159A
and 482 under the Securities Act that
reflect the Summary Prospectus and the
elimination of the voluntary profile,
along with amendments that update the
cross references to Form N–1A
contained in rule 485 under the
Securities Act, rules 304 and 401 of
Regulation S–T, Form N–4 under the
Securities Act and the Investment
Company Act, and Form N–14 under
the Securities Act. These technical and
conforming amendments do not
constitute a collection of information
because we are not altering the legal
requirements of these rules and forms.
Finally, amendments to rule 497
provide the requirements for filing
Summary Prospectuses with the
Commission. These amendments do not
constitute a separate collection of
information under rule 497 because the
burden required by these amendments
is part of the collection of information
under rule 498.
A. Form N–1A
Form N–1A, including the
amendments, contains collection of
information requirements. The likely
respondents to this information
collection are open-end management
investment companies registered or
registering with the Commission.
Compliance with the disclosure
requirements of Form N–1A is
mandatory. Responses to the disclosure
requirements are not confidential.
Much of the information that is
required in the summary section of the
prospectus under the amendments has
previously been required in a fund’s
prospectus. However, the amendments
require new information regarding the
exchange ticker symbol and the
compensation received by financial
intermediaries. In addition, except for
some information common to multiple
funds, the summary section must be
presented separately for each fund
covered by a multiple fund prospectus.
As a result, the amendments to Form N–
1A may require additional burden hours
to compile, review, and present the
required information in a separate
summary section for each fund. We
estimate that the amendments will
increase the hour burden per portfolio
per filing of an initial registration
statement or the initial creation of a
post-effective amendment to a
registration statement by approximately
17 hours.
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4575
In the proposing release, we estimated
that the proposed amendments would
increase the hour burden per portfolio
per filing of an initial registration
statement or the initial creation of a
post-effective amendment to a
registration statement by approximately
16 hours.359 We received two comments
on this estimate.360 One commenter
anticipated approximately 19,000 hours
for its 75 funds, or over 253 hours per
portfolio, to initially comply with the
proposed amendments.361 Another
commenter, who conducted a survey of
mutual fund complexes, estimated that
the amendments would increase the
hour burden per portfolio by 17
hours.362 Recognizing that the
commenter surveyed a broad crosssection of the mutual fund industry, and
having reviewed the specific questions
it asked respondents, we have
incorporated this estimate in our
analysis.363
We estimate, as we did in the
proposing release, that subsequent posteffective amendments to a registration
statement will require, on average,
approximately 4 burden hours per
portfolio to update and review the
information.364 We received one
comment, which estimated that ongoing
compliance with the proposed
amendments to Form N–1A would
require an average of 9 hours per
fund.365 However, we believe that the
commenter based this estimate on
responses to an ambiguous survey
question.366 We believe that
respondents may have interpreted this
question to ask how many hours it
would take them to update and review
all information each year to comply
with Form N–1A rather than only how
many additional hours it would take
359 Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR at
67808.
360 See Janus Letter, supra note 63; ICI Letter,
supra note 34.
361 Janus Letter, supra note 63. The commenter
did not, however, indicate what percentage of the
19,000 hours it would dedicate to compliance with
the proposed amendments to Form N–1A and what
percentage it would dedicate to compliance with
proposed rule 498.
362 ICI Letter, supra note 34. The commenter
estimated that the 42 fund complexes it surveyed
offer 3,122 funds, accounting for nearly 60 percent
of total mutual fund industry assets as of December
2007.
363 Although the final rule eliminates disclosure
of portfolio holdings in the summary section, we
believe that the 17 hours estimated by the
commenter based on its survey remains reasonable.
364 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67808.
365 See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
366 See id. (asking survey respondents, ‘‘How
much time (in hours) would you estimate that it
would take to update and review the information
each year for Form N–1A on an on-going basis for
all of your funds?’’ (bold in original)).
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them each year to update and review
information to comply with the
amended items in Form N–1A.367 For
this reason, we are not adjusting our
original burden hour estimate.
Because the PRA estimates represent
the average burden over a three-year
period, we estimate the average hour
burden for one portfolio to comply with
the amendments to be approximately 8
hours.368 We estimate that 8,752
portfolios file initial registration
statements and post-effective
amendments on Form N–1A.369 Thus,
the incremental hour burden resulting
from the amendments relating to the
summary section disclosure would be
70,016 hours.370 The total annual hour
burden for all funds for preparation and
filing of registration statements and
post-effective amendments to Form N–
1A would be approximately 1,645,200
hours.371
B. Rule 498
Rule 498 contains collection of
information requirements. The likely
respondents to this information
collection are open-end management
investment companies registered or
registering with the Commission. Under
rule 498, use of the Summary
Prospectus is voluntary, but the rule’s
requirements regarding provision of the
statutory prospectus are mandatory for
funds that elect to send or give a
Summary Prospectus in reliance upon
rule 498. The information provided
under rule 498 will not be kept
confidential.
We estimate that for those funds that
choose to use the Summary Prospectus,
initial compliance with the
requirements for the Summary
Prospectus will require approximately
23 burden hours per portfolio. We
originally assumed in the proposing
367 The respondents estimated that initial
compliance with the Form N–1A amendments,
including the creation of separate summaries for
funds in a multiple fund prospectus, would require
an average of 17 hours per fund, whereas ongoing
compliance would average 9 hours per fund. See ICI
Letter, supra note 34. Once such summary sections
have been created, we do not believe that an update
of such information on an annual basis should
require more than half the time it takes to initially
compile, review, and present that information in
the summary section.
368 (17 hours in the first year + 4 hours in the
second year + 4 hours in the third year) ÷ 3 years
= approximately 8 hours.
369 See 2008 ICI Fact Book, supra note 16, at 15.
In the Proposing Release, based on information in
the 2007 version of the ICI Fact Book, we assumed
that there were 8,726 portfolios. See Proposing
Release, supra note 12, 72 FR at 67990 n. 14.
370 8 hours × 8,752 portfolios.
371 70,016 hours + 1,575,184 hours. Currently, the
approved annual hour burden for preparing and
filing registration statements on Form N–1A is
1,575,184 hours.
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release that rule 498 would not impose
any substantial new information
collection requirements with respect to
the initial preparation of a Summary
Prospectus beyond those discussed
above in connection with the collection
of information for Form N–1A.372 One
commenter suggested that initial
compliance with requirements for the
Summary Prospectus and the other
provisions of rule 498 would require
approximately 23 burden hours per
portfolio.373 The commenter pointed out
that initial compliance with the
requirements for the Summary
Prospectus would include, among other
things, a document design process to
create the Summary Prospectus;
technology requirements for posting
documents on funds’ Web sites and
providing hyperlinks within and
between certain documents; and
communication with distribution
channels regarding the use of the
Summary Prospectus.374 Recognizing
that we may have underestimated the
costs associated with initial compliance
with rule 498 and that the commenter
based its estimate on a survey of a broad
cross-section of the mutual fund
industry, we have added an estimate of
23 burden hours necessary for initial
compliance with rule 498.
In addition to initial compliance, we
estimate, as we did in the proposing
release, that rule 498 will impose a 1⁄2
hour burden per portfolio annually
associated with the compilation of the
additional information required on a
cover page or at the beginning of the
Summary Prospectus.375 Rule 498 also
imposes annual hour burdens associated
with the posting of a fund’s Summary
Prospectus, statutory prospectus, SAI,
and most recent report to shareholders
on an Internet Web site.376 We estimate
that the average hour burden for one
portfolio to comply with the Internet
Web site posting requirements will be
approximately one hour annually.377
372 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67809.
373 See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
374 See id.
375 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67809.
376 Rule 498, as proposed, also would have
imposed an annual hour burden associated with
updating the Summary Prospectus every quarter. In
the Proposing Release, we estimated that quarterly
updating would impose approximately 3 burden
hours per quarter per portfolio, or 9 hours annually
for each of the three subsequent quarters. See
Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR at 67809.
However, we are not including quarterly updating
requirements in the final rule.
377 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67809. We have reduced this figure from the 4
hour estimate we made in the Proposing Release
because we have not included quarterly updating
requirements in the final rule. We originally
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Because the PRA estimates represent
the average burden over a three-year
period, we estimate the average hour
burden for one portfolio to comply with
the amendments to be approximately 9
hours.378 The Summary Prospectus is
voluntary, so the percentage of funds
that will choose to provide it is
uncertain. Given the potential benefits
of the amendments to funds, we assume
that 80% of all funds will choose to
send or give the Summary
Prospectus.379 Assuming 80% of all
funds file a Summary Prospectus, the
total annual hour burden for filing and
updating Summary Prospectuses and
posting the required disclosure
documents to an Internet Web site
pursuant to rule 498 would be
approximately 63,014 hours.380
C. ETF-Related Amendments
We are amending Form N–1A to
provide more useful information to
investors who purchase and sell ETF
shares on national securities exchanges.
The amendments permit an ETF to
exclude certain information from its
estimated that Internet Web site posting would
require approximately 1 hour per quarter, but
without quarterly updating, we estimate that it will
require 1 hour annually.
We received four comments on our original
estimates of the burden of ongoing compliance. See
American Century Letter, supra note 48; Capital
Research Letter, supra note 34; Janus Letter, supra
note 63; ICI Letter, supra note 34. One commenter
estimated that filing Summary Prospectuses for its
funds would require approximately 1150 hours per
quarter, or 11 hours per fund. See American
Century Letter, supra note 48. The second
commenter estimated that the proposed quarterly
updating requirement would require its 75 funds to
spend approximately 5,300 burden hours. See Janus
Letter, supra note 63. The third commenter
estimated that it would spend an additional 4,400
hours per year to comply with the proposed
quarterly updating requirements. See Capital
Research Letter, supra note 34. Based on a survey
of mutual funds, the fourth commenter stated that
ongoing compliance with rule 498, as proposed,
would require approximately 10 hours per fund per
update. See ICI Letter, supra note 34. All three
commenters, however, based their estimates on the
proposal’s requirement of quarterly updating of top
10 portfolio holdings and performance information.
Because we are not requiring quarterly updating of
performance information and we are not requiring
any disclosure of top 10 portfolio holdings, we are
not making further adjustments to our estimates.
378 (23 hours in the first year + 1.5 hours in the
second year + 1.5 hours in the third year) ÷ 3 years
= approximately 9 hours.
379 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67809. In the Proposing Release, we assumed that
75% of all funds would choose to send or give a
Summary Prospectus. However, one commenter
estimated that 80% of funds would elect to use the
Summary Prospectus if the Commission eliminated
quarterly updating requirements from the final rule.
See ICI Letter, supra note 34. Having eliminated
quarterly updating from the final rule and
recognizing that the commenter had surveyed a
major cross-section of the mutual fund industry, we
have adopted the commenter’s estimate that 80% of
funds will likely choose to send or give a Summary
Prospectus.
380 9 hours × 8,752 portfolios × .80.
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prospectus that is not pertinent to
investors purchasing individual ETF
shares on secondary markets.
Specifically, an ETF that has creation
units of 25,000 shares or more may
exclude from its prospectus: (i)
Information on how to purchase and
redeem shares of the ETF; 381 and (ii) fee
table fees and expenses for purchases
and redemptions of creation units.382
Based on conversations with industry
representatives, Commission staff
estimated in the ETF proposing release
that these amendments would decrease
the information collection burdens of an
ETF that has creation units of 25,000
shares or more by an average of 1.4
hours per fund per filing of an initial
registration statement or post-effective
amendment to a registration statement.
We requested comment on this estimate
in the ETF proposing release. No
commenters addressed this estimate and
we continue to believe that it is
appropriate.
The amendments also require
disclosures designed to include
important information for purchasers of
individual ETF shares, as described
below. An ETF will have to modify the
narrative explanation preceding the
example in the fee table in its
prospectus and periodic reports to state
that fund shares are sold on the
secondary market rather than redeemed
at the end of the periods indicated, and
that investors in ETF shares may be
required to pay brokerage commissions
that are not reflected in the fee table.383
We believe that the added information
collection burdens associated with this
statement, if any, would be negligible.
The proposed amendments would
have required each ETF to include a
separate line item for returns based on
the market price of ETF shares in the
average annual total returns table in
Item 2 of the Form,384 and to calculate
total return at market prices in addition
to returns at NAV for their financial
highlights tables.385 At the suggestion of
commenters, we have not adopted these
requirements.
The proposed amendments would
have required ETFs to include
381 Item
6(c)(2) of Form N–1A.
1(e)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
383 Instruction 1(e)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Instruction 1(e)(i) to Item 27(d) of Form N–1A. The
amendments also require each ETF to identify the
principal U.S. market on which its shares are traded
and include a statement to the effect that ETF
shares are bought and sold on national securities
exchanges. We believe that the added information
collection burdens associated with these very brief
and specific statements, if any, would be negligible.
384 Proposed Instruction 5(a) to Item 2(c)(2) of
Form N–1A.
385 Proposed Instruction 3(f) to Item 8(a) of Form
N–1A.
382 Instruction
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
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premium/discount information in both
the prospectus and annual report of
each ETF. Based on commenters’
suggestions, the final amendments
permit ETFs to omit the historical
premium/discount disclosure in those
documents if the ETF includes
premium/discount information on its
Internet Web site and discloses in the
prospectus and annual report an
Internet address where investors can
locate the information.386 Commission
staff estimated in the ETF proposing
release that each ETF currently spends
an average of 0.5 hours per filing of an
initial registration statement or a posteffective amendment to a registration
statement to include this disclosure.387
The staff further estimated that each
ETF also would spend 0.5 hours per
annual report to include this disclosure.
We requested comment on these
estimates in the ETF proposing release.
No commenters addressed these
estimates and we continue to believe
that they are appropriate for ETFs that
choose to include the information in the
prospectus and annual report.
Based on Commission filings,
Commission staff estimates that on an
annual basis, ETFs file initial
registration statements covering 98 ETF
portfolios, and post-effective
amendments covering 1,441 ETF
portfolios on Form N–1A. Based on staff
estimates, we estimate that the
amendments will not increase the hour
burden per ETF per filing on an initial
registration or post-effective amendment
to a registration statement. We estimate
that the amendments will add
approximately 0.5 hours, which staff
estimates will be offset by a reduction
of 1.4 hours (elimination of description
of creation units and associated fees).
Although the total annual hour burden
for ETFs to prepare and file initial
registration statements and posteffective amendments may decrease
slightly, we are not decreasing our
overall estimates to reflect the
incremental decrease in order to be
conservative in our estimates of the
collection of information burdens.
V. Cost/Benefit Analysis
The Commission is sensitive to the
costs and benefits imposed by its rules.
386 Item 11(g)(2) of Form N–1A; Item 27(b)(7)(iv)
of Form N–1A. Although the time period required
in the disclosure is different in the prospectus and
annual report, ETFs will be able to omit both
disclosures by providing on their Internet Web site
only the premium/discount information required by
Item 11(g)(2) (the most recently completed fiscal
year and quarters since that year). Id.
387 This estimate is based on discussions with
representatives of ETFs, which include premium/
discount information as required by their exemptive
orders.
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4577
We are adopting amendments to Form
N–1A that will require every prospectus
to include a summary section at the
front of the prospectus, consisting of key
information about the fund, including
investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance. The key
information is required to be presented
in plain English in a standardized order.
Our intent is that this information will
be presented succinctly, in three or four
pages, at the front of the prospectus.
We are also adopting a new option for
satisfying prospectus delivery
obligations with respect to mutual fund
securities under the Securities Act.
Under the option, key information will
be sent or given to investors in the form
of a Summary Prospectus, and the
statutory prospectus will be provided on
an Internet Web site. Upon an investor’s
request, funds will also be required to
send the statutory prospectus to the
investor. Our intent in providing this
option is that funds take full advantage
of the Internet’s search and retrieval
capabilities in order to enhance the
provision of information to mutual fund
investors.
The disclosure framework that we are
adopting has the potential to
revolutionize the provision of
information to the millions of investors
who rely on mutual funds for their most
basic financial needs. It is intended to
help investors who are overwhelmed by
the choices among thousands of
available funds described in lengthy and
legalistic documents to readily access
key information that is important to an
informed investment decision. At the
same time, by harnessing the power of
technology to deliver information in
better, more useable formats, the
disclosure framework can help those
investors, their intermediaries, thirdparty analysts, the financial press, and
others to locate and compare facts and
data from the wealth of more detailed
disclosures that are available.
In the proposing release, we requested
public comment and specific data
regarding the costs and benefits of the
amendments. As discussed below, we
received five comments directly
addressing our quantitative cost/benefit
analysis.388 We also received numerous
comments pertinent to qualitative
aspects of our analysis.389
388 See Data Communique Letter, supra note 35;
´
ICI Letter, supra note 34; MFS Letter, supra note
150; NewRiver Letter, supra note 228;
Memorandum from the Division of Investment
Management regarding August 25, 2008 meeting
with representatives of RR Donnelley & Sons Co.
and Prospectus Central, LLC (Aug. 26, 2008) (‘‘RR
Donnelley Memorandum’’).
389 See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; CMFI Letter, supra
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
A. Benefits
1. Form N–1A
Possible benefits of the amendments
include enhanced disclosure of
information needed to make informed
investment decisions about mutual
funds, more rapid dissemination of
information over the Internet, and
reduced printing and mailing costs.
Millions of individual Americans
invest in shares of mutual funds, relying
on mutual funds for their retirements,
their children’s educations, and their
other basic financial needs.390 These
investors face a difficult task in
choosing among the more than 8,000
available mutual funds.391 Fund
prospectuses, which have been
criticized by investor advocates,
representatives of the fund industry,
and others as long and complicated,
often prove difficult for investors to use
efficiently in comparing their many
choices. Current Commission rules
require mutual fund prospectuses to
contain key information about
investment objectives, risks, and
expenses that, while important to
investors, can be difficult for investors
to extract. Prospectuses are often long,
both because they contain a wealth of
detailed information and because
prospectuses for multiple funds are
often combined in a single document.
Too frequently, the language of
prospectuses is complex and legalistic,
and the presentation formats make little
use of graphic design techniques that
would contribute to readability.
The amendments require investment
information that is key to an investment
decision to be provided in a streamlined
document with other more detailed
information provided elsewhere. The
provision of this information to
investors in concise, user-friendly
formats will allow investors to compare
information across funds and may assist
them in making better informed
portfolio allocation decisions in line
with their investment goals.
The amendments also will provide
the additional benefits of increased
Internet availability of fund information,
by providing layered disclosure that
allows investors to move back and forth
between the information within the
Summary Prospectus and more detailed
information within other disclosure
documents. These benefits include,
among other things, facilitating
comparisons among funds and replacing
note 44; Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note
34; ICI Letter, supra note 34; MFDF Letter, supra
note 34; NAPFA Letter, supra note 44.
390 See supra note 16.
391 See 2008 ICI Fact Book, supra note 16, at 15.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
one-size-fits-all disclosure with
disclosure that each investor can tailor
to his or her own needs. In recent years,
access to the Internet has greatly
expanded, 392 and significant strides
have been made in the speed and
quality of Internet connections.393
Advances in technology offer a
promising means to address the length
and complexity of mutual fund
prospectuses by streamlining the key
information that is provided to
investors, ensuring that access to the
full wealth of information about a fund
is immediately and easily accessible,
and providing the means to present all
information about a fund online in a
format that facilitates comparisons of
key information, such as expenses,
across different funds and different
share classes of the same fund.
Technology has the potential to replace
the current one-size-fits-all mutual fund
prospectus with an approach that allows
investors, their financial intermediaries,
third-party analysts, and others to tailor
the wealth of available information to
their particular needs and
circumstances.
Significant technological advances
have increased both the market’s
demand for more timely disclosure and
the ability of funds to capture, process,
and disseminate information. The
amendments will enable funds to take
greater advantage of the Internet to more
rapidly communicate and deliver
information to investors. Accordingly,
investor demand for information could
be satisfied through relatively
inexpensive mass dissemination of the
information through electronic means.
We anticipate that demand for the
information in the statutory prospectus
and SAI will increase as access to that
information becomes easier through the
use of layered disclosure that allows
investors, their financial intermediaries,
third-party analysts, and others to tailor
the wealth of available information to
their particular needs and
circumstances.
Nearly all of the comments we
received, including comments from
consumer groups and industry
representatives, agreed with our
conclusion that investors will benefit
greatly from receiving the Summary
Prospectus containing key information
that investors will be more likely to read
and understand, with the ability to
access more detailed information either
immediately in a user-friendly format
online or, within a matter of days, in
392 See
393 See
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supra note 26.
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
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paper.394 This conclusion is also
supported by our recent telephone
survey of investors, which found that
many mutual fund investors do not read
statutory prospectuses because they are
long, complicated, and hard to
understand.395 In addition, the views
expressed by investors in our focus
groups also support our conclusion that
investors will derive significant benefits
from the Summary Prospectus, coupled
with ready access to more detailed
information in whatever format they
choose.396
In addition to benefiting investors, the
Summary Prospectus also will provide
quantifiable cost savings to funds. We
believe that funds will benefit from
being able to send or give a Summary
Prospectus rather than having to print
and send statutory prospectuses to all
investors and prospective investors. We
expect that funds will experience cost
savings with respect to both annual
mailings to their current shareholders
and mailings made in connection with
a purchase of fund shares. We estimate
that funds distribute approximately
300,000,000 statutory prospectuses
annually to their current
shareholders 397 and another 64,500,000
in connection with fund purchases.398
394 See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra
note 34; ICI Letter, supra note 34; see also supra
notes 315–317 and accompanying text (discussing
the qualitative benefits of the amendments).
395 Telephone Survey Report, supra note 32, at
56, 58.
396 See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 5–
6. See also Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32,
at 63 (‘‘It’s a two-minute read. If I want more
information, I can ask for it.’’); Id. at 38 (‘‘I think
both [the long-form prospectus and short-form
prospectus] have their place. I think it would be
foolish to give up the long-form for ‘this’ and I think
it would be foolish not to have the short-form and
insist on a long-form. They both have their place.’’).
397 See 2008 ICI Fact Book, supra note 16, at 110
(estimating 298,966,000 shareholder accounts at the
end of 2007). In the Proposing Release, we used an
estimate of 290,000,000 statutory prospectuses,
which was based on the 2007 version of the ICI Fact
Book estimate of the number of shareholder
accounts at the end of 2006. See Proposing Release,
supra note 12, 72 FR at 67810.
Often, a fund will mail a statutory prospectus to
each of its shareholders annually in addition to
mailing a statutory prospectus in connection with
a purchase of fund shares. We recognize that: some
shareholders may currently receive their fund
documents electronically; some households where
more than one fund investor resides will only
receive one copy of the statutory prospectus per
household; some accounts may hold more than one
fund; and not all funds send out statutory
prospectuses annually. Therefore, the actual
number of prospectuses mailed annually may be
higher or lower than our estimate.
398 Our estimate of the number of statutory
prospectuses sent out to fulfill a fund’s prospectus
delivery obligation upon purchase is based on
information provided by Broadridge Financial
Solutions, Inc. (‘‘Broadridge’’) prior to issuing the
Proposing Release. See Memorandum from the
Division of Investment Management regarding
October 25, 2007 meeting with Broadridge
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We received two comments related to
the estimated number of statutory
prospectuses that are distributed.399
We estimate that the cost savings for
annual mailings will be approximately
$126,000,000 400 and that the cost
savings for purchase mailings will be
approximately $80,496,000.401 These
cost savings would be reduced by the
costs of sending the statutory prospectus
to those investors who request it. We
estimate that approximately 2% of the
investors who own shares in the 80% of
funds that likely will choose to send or
give the Summary Prospectus will
request that a statutory prospectus be
mailed to them.402 We estimate that the
representatives (Nov. 28, 2007) (‘‘Broadridge
Memorandum’’).
399 One commenter stated that our estimates of
the numbers of statutory prospectuses distributed to
existing shareholders and investors purchasing
shares in the Proposing Release are reasonable
because they fall within the range between the
commenter’s lowest possible estimates (230,000,000
for annual fulfillment and 58,000,000 for purchase
fulfillment) and the commenter’s highest possible
estimates (373,000,000 for annual fulfillment and
95,000,000 for purchase fulfillment). See ICI Letter,
supra note 34. A second commenter estimated that
the number of statutory prospectuses distributed to
existing shareholders is 231,981,600 and the
number distributed to investors purchasing fund
shares is 72,494,250, based on its experience
preparing distributions of statutory prospectuses
and shareholder reports for mutual funds. See Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35.
400 Our annual estimates are derived from
information we received from Broadridge. See
Broadridge Memorandum, supra note 398.
Broadridge estimated that the average cost of a
statutory prospectus printed in a full production
run is $0.27 and that the average cost to mail a
statutory prospectus by bulk mail is $0.255. Id. The
cost savings with respect to annual mailings were
calculated by multiplying the costs of printing and
mailing a statutory prospectus by the 300,000,000
statutory prospectuses mailed annually reduced to
reflect our estimate that 80% of funds will elect to
send Summary Prospectuses (($0.27 for the printing
of a statutory prospectus + $0.255 for the mailing
of a statutory prospectus) × 300,000,000 statutory
prospectuses × 80% of funds).
401 For purposes of our estimate, we used
Broadridge’s printing cost estimate of $0.35 that is
blended to reflect full production printing runs and
digital print on demand documents. Id. This
blended rate reflects the fact that a fund may run
out of statutory prospectuses produced in a full
production run and may have to print additional
statutory prospectuses on demand. Broadridge also
estimated that the average cost to mail a statutory
prospectus by first class mail is $1.21. Id. The cost
savings with respect to purchase mailings were
calculated by multiplying the costs of printing and
mailing a statutory prospectus by 64,500,000
statutory prospectuses mailed in connection with a
fund purchase reduced to reflect our estimate that
80% of funds will elect to send Summary
Prospectuses (($0.35 for the printing of a statutory
prospectus + $1.21 for the mailing of a statutory
prospectus) × 64,500,000 statutory prospectuses ×
80% of funds).
402 We originally did not project that existing
investors would request hard copies of the statutory
prospectus. However, one commenter stated that at
most 2% of existing investors would likely request
hard copies, based on information from Broadridge
indicating investor requests for written materials
under the Commission’s notice and access e-proxy
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
cost of mailing statutory prospectuses to
existing investors would be
$12,288,000.403 We further estimate that
approximately 3% investors purchasing
shares in the 80% of funds that likely
will choose to send or give the
Summary Prospectus will request that a
statutory prospectus be sent to them.404
We estimate that the cost of sending
statutory prospectuses requested by
investors making purchases of fund
shares would be approximately
$3,962,880.405 Therefore, we estimate
the annual cost savings will be
model have averaged around 2%. See ICI Letter,
supra note 34. We believe that it is reasonable to
estimate a similar percentage of existing investors
will request hard copies of the statutory prospectus.
403 For purposes of this estimate, we used the
digital print on demand rate of $1.35 and the
average first class mail rate of $1.21. See Broadridge
Memorandum, supra note 398 (estimating postage
costs of $1.21); ICI Letter, supra note 34 (estimating
a digital print on demand rate of $1.35). In the
Proposing Release, we estimated a blended print
rate of $0.35 for prospectuses sent to requesting
investors. See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72
FR at 67810 n. 162. However, one commenter stated
that this estimate is too low because it largely
reflects economies of scale from high volume offset
printing that are not realistic given the likely low
number of investor requests for hard copies of the
statutory prospectus. See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
Therefore, we have adopted the commenter’s digital
print rate estimate of $1.35.
The costs were calculated by multiplying the
costs of printing and mailing a statutory prospectus
by the 300,000,000 prospectuses sent out annually
to existing shareholders reduced to reflect our
estimate that 80% of funds will elect to adopt the
new disclosure option and 2% of investors will
request a statutory prospectus be mailed to them
(($1.35 for the printing of a statutory prospectus +
$1.21 for the mailing of a statutory prospectus) ×
300,000,000 statutory prospectuses × 80% of funds
× 2% of investors).
404 In the Proposing Release, we originally
estimated that 10% of such investors would likely
request hard copies of the statutory prospectus.
However, one commenter stated that 2% of both
existing investors and investors purchasing fund
shares would request hard copies of the statutory
prospectus. See ICI Letter, supra note 34. While we
agree with the commenter that we may have
initially underestimated the percentage of existing
investors and overestimated the percentage of
purchasing investors that would request hard
copies, we do not believe that the same percentage
of both groups would request hard copies. Investors
making initial fund purchases would potentially
have a greater interest in receiving hard copies of
statutory prospectuses than investors that have
owned fund shares for some time. For this reason,
we have lowered our original estimate that 10% of
investors purchasing fund shares would request
hard copies, but have lowered it less than the
commenter suggested.
405 For purposes of this estimate, we used the
digital print on demand rate of $1.35 and the
average first class mail rate of $1.21. See supra note
403. The costs were calculated by multiplying the
costs of printing and mailing a statutory prospectus
by the 64,500,000 prospectuses sent out in response
to fund purchases reduced to reflect our estimate
that 80% of funds will elect to send Summary
Prospectuses and 3% of investors will request a
statutory prospectus be mailed to them (($1.35 for
the printing of a statutory prospectus + $1.21 for the
mailing of a statutory prospectus) × 64,500,000
statutory prospectuses × 80% of funds × 3% of
investors).
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4579
approximately $190,245,120,406 or
approximately $21,737 per portfolio.407
We received four comments bearing
on the cost savings of the new delivery
option.408 Of those, only two
commenters provided actual estimates
of the total savings that would be
generated by the new delivery option.409
Insofar as these two commenters’ total
savings estimates differed from our
$190,245,120 figure, they did so largely
because the commenters assumed
different per unit printing and postage
costs. However, assuming (1) that 80%
of funds will choose to send or give the
Summary Prospectus, (2) that funds
distribute approximately 300,000,000
406 ($126,000,000 cost savings for annual mailings
+ $80,496,000 cost savings for purchase mailings)
¥ ($12,288,000 cost of sending requested statutory
prospectuses to existing investors + $3,962,880 cost
of sending requested statutory prospectuses to
investors purchasing funds).
A study of industry participants estimated cost
savings of approximately $300,000,000 per year.
See Forrester Consulting Study commissioned on
behalf of NewRiver, Inc., The Short-Form
Prospectus, at 6 (Oct. 2007), available at https://
www1.newriver.com/upload_files/
ForresterConsulting_NewRiver_ShortForm_
Prospectus_10_25_2007.pdf.
407 $190,245,120 ÷ 8,752 portfolios.
Although we believe that not all funds will
choose to use the Summary Prospectus, we believe
it is appropriate to estimate the amendments’ effect
across the entire mutual fund industry. Therefore,
we have estimated the average cost savings per
portfolio industry-wide rather than estimate the
cost savings per portfolio only for those portfolios
using the Summary Prospectus.
408 See Data Communique Letter, supra note 35;
´
ICI letter, supra note 34; MFS Letter, supra note
150; RR Donnelley Memorandum, supra note 388.
409 See Data Communique Letter, supra note 35
´
(estimating $220,254,203 in annual cost savings) ICI
Letter, supra note 34 (estimating $236,000,000 in
annual cost savings).
The two commenters also provided the printing
and postage cost estimates they used to arrive at
their total cost savings estimates. See Data
´
Communique Letter, supra note 35 (estimating per
unit printing and postage costs for annual
fulfillment of $0.25 and $0.392 respectively, per
unit printing and postage costs for purchase
fulfillment of $0.25 and $0.654 respectively, and a
blended per unit printing and postage cost for
delivery of hard copies of the statutory prospectus
to requesting investors of $0.50); ICI Letter, supra
note 34 (estimating per unit printing and postage
costs for annual fulfillment of $0.26 and $0.255
respectively, per unit printing and postage costs for
purchase fulfillment of $0.26 and $1.39
respectively, and per unit printing and postage
costs for delivery of hard copies of the statutory
prospectus to requesting investors of $1.35 and
$1.39 respectively).
Of the two commenters that did not provide total
cost savings estimates, one commenter estimated
that it currently pays an average of $0.15 per piece
for offset printing of a statutory prospectus. MFS
Letter, supra note 150. The other commenter
estimated that a fund with a print volume of 30,000
64-page statutory prospectuses could save 6.3% by
using a four-page Summary Prospectus and that a
fund with a print volume of 100,000 64-page
statutory prospectuses could save 22.2%, assuming
that 10% of investors still request hard copies of the
statutory prospectus. RR Donnelley Memorandum,
supra note 388.
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statutory prospectuses to existing
investors annually and distribute
approximately 64,500,000 statutory
prospectuses to purchasing investors
annually, and (3) that 2% of existing
investors in funds using the new
delivery option and 3% of investors
purchasing shares in such funds request
hard copies of the statutory prospectus,
the commenters’ differing per unit
printing and postage cost estimates
would not produce total cost savings
estimates that differ significantly from
our estimate.410
We expect that funds will face the
highest level of uncertainty about the
extent of investors’ continued use of
printed statutory prospectuses in the
first year after adoption of the
amendments. We expect that, as funds
gain familiarity with the extent of
continued use of printed prospectuses
and as shareholders increasingly turn to
the Internet for fund information, the
number of requested paper copies will
decline, as will funds’ tendency to print
more copies than ultimately are
requested.
2. ETF-Related Disclosures
As noted above, in March of this year,
the Commission proposed several
amendments to Form N–1A to
accommodate the use of the form by
ETFs, and we are adopting those
amendments today, with some changes
to respond to issues raised by
commenters. As noted in the ETF
proposing release, many of the
exemptive orders that permit an ETF to
operate exempt broker-dealers from the
obligation to deliver prospectuses in
secondary market transactions. The
exemptive orders permit a broker-dealer
instead to deliver a product description
containing basic information about the
ETF and its shares. We understand that
many, if not most, broker-dealers
transmit a prospectus to purchasers and
do not rely on the exemption in our
orders. In light of this practice, we are
adopting amendments to Form N–1A
designed to meet the needs of investors
(including retail investors) who
purchase ETF shares in the secondary
market rather than financial institutions
that purchase creation units directly
from the ETF.
We expect that one benefit of the
amendments will be to provide ETF
investors purchasing shares in the
secondary market with information on
the investment that they currently may
not receive in a product description,
such as the fund’s fee table and the
name and length of service of the
portfolio manager. Another benefit of
the amendments will be to provide ETF
investors purchasing shares in the
secondary market with prospectus
disclosure that is specifically tailored to
ETFs. We expect this would provide
ETF investors with information that will
allow them to understand more easily
an investment in an ETF. This
information also may be helpful to
investors in making portfolio allocation
decisions.
Our amendments are designed to
simplify prospectus and periodic report
disclosure in two ways. First, the
amendments allow ETFs to exclude
from the prospectus information on how
to purchase and redeem creation units,
including information on fees and
expenses associated with creation unit
sales or purchases. Current ETF
prospectuses and periodic reports
include detailed information on how to
purchase and redeem creation units.
The fee table and example include
information on transaction fees payable
only by creation unit purchasers. Our
amendments permit ETFs with creation
units of at least 25,000 shares to exclude
this information because it is not
relevant (and may be potentially
confusing) to investors purchasing in
secondary market transactions.411 This
provision should simplify ETF
prospectuses without compromising the
disclosure provided to investors who
purchase ETF shares in secondary
market transactions.
Second, our exemptive orders require
ETFs to include in their prospectuses
and annual reports premium/discount
information to alert investors of the
extent and frequency with which market
prices deviated from the fund’s NAV.
ETFs may omit this disclosure if they
provide the information on their
Internet Web sites and provide an
Internet address where investors may
locate the information. ETFs have
generally included this information in a
supplemental section of the prospectus
and annual report.412 The amendments
incorporate this disclosure in the
shareholder information section (Item
11 of Form N–1A) of the prospectus and
the management’s discussion of fund
performance in the annual reports (Item
27(b)(7) of Form N–1A). We anticipate
that this may benefit ETF investors by
simplifying the prospectuses and annual
reports of ETFs while codifying
411 See
410 One
commenter also did not account for the
fact that less than 100% of funds would adopt the
new delivery option in its calculation of quantified
benefits. See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
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16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
supra Part III.A.4.
e.g., iShares MSCI Series, Prospectus 62–
65 (Jan. 1, 2007); iShares MSCI Series, 2006
Shareholders Annual Report 130–136 (Aug. 31,
2006).
412 See,
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
important disclosures mandated by our
ETF exemptive orders. ETFs also may
benefit because they may choose to
disclose this information in the most
cost efficient way—either in the
prospectus and the annual report, or on
their Web sites.
B. Costs
1. Form N–1A
While the amendments will result in
significant cost savings for funds, we
believe that there will be costs
associated with them. These include the
costs for funds to compile and review
the new information required by our
amendments and to post the required
disclosure documents on an Internet
Web site. These costs may include both
internal costs (for attorneys and other
non-legal staff, such as computer
programmers, to prepare and review the
required disclosure) and external costs
(for printing and mailing of the
Summary Prospectus). We estimate that
the external costs for printing and
mailing of the Summary Prospectus will
be approximately $106,200,000 413 or
approximately $12,134 per portfolio.414
413 This estimate assumes printing and postage
costs for annual fulfillment of $0.08 and $0.255 per
unit respectively and printing and postage costs for
purchase fulfillment of $0.08 and $0.42 per unit
respectively. We increased our estimate of postage
costs for purchase fulfillment from $0.41 in the
Proposing Release to $0.42 to reflect the current rate
for first class mail. Our estimate is derived as
follows: [(($0.08 to offset print a Summary
Prospectus + $0.255 for bulk mail) × 300,000,000
prospectuses estimated to be sent out annually) +
(($0.08 to offset print a Summary Prospectus +
$0.42 for first class mail) × 64,500,000 prospectuses
estimated to be sent out in response to a fund
purchase)] × 80% of funds.
In the Proposing Release, we estimated printing
costs of $0.11 per unit for on-demand printing in
black and white. See Proposing Release, supra note
12, 72 FR at 67811 n. 168. However, we have
changed our estimate of per unit printing costs
based on comments we received and based on our
decision not to include a quarterly updating
requirement in the final rule. Instead of using the
original $0.11 per unit figure for on-demand
printing in black and white, we now estimate
printing costs of $0.08 per unit, a figure
representing offset printing of a blend of color and
black and white. See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
414 $106,200,000 ÷ 8,752 portfolios.
Our new cost/benefit analysis retains our original
postage costs of $0.255 per unit for annual
fulfillment and $0.41 per unit for purchase
fulfillment. Two commenters assumed the same
postage costs in their cost/benefit analyses. See ICI
Letter, supra note 34; NewRiver Letter, supra note
228. Another commenter’s estimates of postage
costs were close to ours ($0.233 per unit for annual
fulfillment and $0.484 per unit for purchase
´
fulfillment). See Data Communique Letter, supra
note 35. By contrast, a fourth commenter estimated
postage costs of $0.241 per Summary Prospectus,
without differentiating between annual and
purchase fulfillment costs. See RR Donnelley
Memorandum, supra note 388. However, we did
not adjust our postage cost estimates based on this
comment because the other three commenters
largely agreed with our original postage cost
estimates.
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We received four comments regarding
our estimates of per unit print costs for
the Summary Prospectus.415 Of the four
commenters, only one accounted for the
likelihood that some funds would print
Summary Prospectuses in color.416 In
discussing its estimates, the commenter
reported that 47% of funds it surveyed
expected to use color for the Summary
Prospectus. Therefore the commenter’s
per unit print cost estimates represent a
blend of 47% color and 53% black and
white. Assuming that the Commission
would require quarterly updating of the
Summary Prospectus, the commenter
estimated a per unit printing cost of
$0.17 for annual fulfillment and $0.26
for purchase fulfillment.417 However,
the commenter also estimated that
without quarterly updating, most funds
would print Summary Prospectuses by
offset methods, and therefore estimated
a per unit print cost of $0.08 per unit
for both annual and purchase
fulfillment.418
We accept the commenter’s assertion
that roughly half of funds will print
their Summary Prospectuses in color
and half will print in black and white
because their estimate was based on a
survey of a broad cross-section of the
mutual fund industry. Additionally,
Although we believe that not all funds will
choose to use the Summary Prospectus, we believe
it is appropriate to estimate the amendments’ effect
across the entire mutual fund industry. Therefore,
we have estimated the average external costs per
portfolio industry-wide rather than estimate the
costs per portfolio only for those portfolios using
the Summary Prospectus.
415 Data Communique Letter, supra note 35
´
(estimating $0.07 per unit for offset printing in
black and white); ICI Letter, supra note 34
(estimating $0.17 per unit for annual fulfillment
and $0.26 per unit for purchase fulfillment, with
both figures representing a blend of offset printing
and print on demand as well as a blend of color
and black and white printing); MFS Letter, supra
note 150 (estimating $0.10 per unit for print on
demand, but not indicating whether that figure
includes any color printing); NewRiver Letter,
supra note 228 (estimating $0.10 per unit for print
on demand, but not indicating whether that figure
includes any color printing).
416 See ICI Letter, supra note 34.
417 Given our assumptions that 80% of funds will
adopt the Summary Prospectus, that funds
distribute 300 million prospectuses for purposes of
annual fulfillment, and that they distribute 64.5
million prospectuses for purchase fulfillment each
year, the commenter’s per unit postage and mailing
cost estimates would lead to total postage and
mailing costs of $136,572,000 annually [(($0.17 for
a blend of offset/print on demand and color/black
and white printing + $0.255 for bulk mail) ×
300,000,000 prospectuses estimated to be sent out
annually) + (($0.26 for print on demand of a blend
of color/black and white printing + $0.41 for first
class mail) × 64,500,000 prospectuses estimated to
be sent out in response to a fund purchase)] × 80%
of funds.
418 See Memorandum from the Division of
Investment Management regarding September 29,
2008 telephone conversation with representatives of
the Investment Company Institute (October 6,
2008).
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4581
with the elimination of quarterly
updating requirements in the final rule,
we believe that most funds will likely
print Summary Prospectuses for annual
and purchase fulfillment at the same
time, giving most funds sufficient print
volume to make offset printing methods
economical.419 Therefore, we have
revised our estimates of per unit print
costs for annual and purchase
fulfillment to $0.08 per unit.
For purposes of the PRA, we have
estimated that the new disclosure
requirements, assuming 80% of funds
choose to send or give a Summary
Prospectus, would add: (1) 70,016 hours
to the annual burden of preparing Form
N–1A; and (2) 63,014 hours to the
annual burden of preparing and using a
Summary Prospectus, including
complying with Internet posting
requirements, under rule 498. We
estimate that this additional burden
would equal total internal costs of
$37,248,400 annually 420 or
approximately $4,256 per portfolio.421
The amendments also may result in
costs associated with investors printing
fund documents posted online. We
estimate that approximately 1⁄2% of
existing investors and 3% of investors
purchasing shares will print statutory
prospectuses at an estimated cost of
$2.03 per statutory prospectus.422 Based
2. ETF-Related Disclosures
The primary goal of our amendments
relating to ETF disclosures is to provide
investors in ETF shares with more
valuable information regarding an
investment in an ETF. We do not expect
that the amendments will result in
significant additional costs to ETFs.425
As noted above, the N–1A amendments
generally codify disclosure
requirements in existing ETF exemptive
orders.
In addition to codifying disclosure
requirements of existing exemptive
orders, we are adopting a few new
disclosure requirements in Form N–1A.
The disclosure amendments require
each ETF to identify the principal U.S.
market on which its shares are traded 426
and include statements to the effect that
(i) ETF shares are bought and sold on
419 We recognize that some funds may not have
sufficient numbers of investors and purchasers to
warrant printing Summary Prospectuses by offset
method. ICI, however, estimated that absent a
quarterly updating requirement, nearly 90% of
funds would print Summary Prospectuses by offset
methods. See id.
420 This cost increase is estimated by multiplying
the total annual hour burden (133,030 hours) by the
rounded estimated hourly wage rate of $280. 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 $270 and $289,
respectively. See Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association’s Report on Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2007. The estimated wage rate is further based on
the estimate that attorneys and programmers would
divide time equally, resulting in a rounded
weighted wage rate of $280 (($270 × .50) + ($289
× .50)).
In the Proposing Release, we estimated an hourly
wage rate of $252.50, which was based on the
Report on Management & Professional Earnings in
the Securities Industry 2006. See Proposing Release,
supra note 12, 72 FR at 67811 n. 170.
421 $37,248,400 ÷ 8,752 portfolios.
In the Proposing Release, we estimated the costs
per fund choosing to use the Summary Prospectus.
See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR 67811
n. 166. We have revised this calculation to produce
an average cost per portfolio industry-wide.
422 Our estimate of potential printing costs is
based on data provided by Lexecon Inc. in response
to Investment Company Act Release No. 27182
(Dec. 8, 2005) [70 FR 74598 (Dec. 15, 2005)]. See
Lexecon Inc. Letter (Feb. 13, 2006). To calculate
printing costs, we estimate that 100% of
prospectuses are printed in black and white at a
cost of $0.035 per page for ink and that the average
prospectus length is approximately 45 pages at a
cost of $0.010 per page for the paper (($0.035 for
ink + $0.010 for paper) × 45 pages).
In the Proposing Release, we estimated that
approximately 5% of investors making fund
purchases would print statutory prospectuses. See
Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR at 67811.
However, we received a comment estimating that
2% of both existing investors and investors
purchasing fund shares would print the statutory
prospectus. See ICI Letter, supra note 34. While we
agree with the commenter that we may have
initially underestimated the percentage of existing
investors and overestimated the percentage of
investors purchasing fund shares that would print
the statutory prospectus, we do not believe that the
same percentage of both groups of investors would
print statutory prospectuses. Rather, we believe that
investors making initial fund purchases would have
greater interest in printing statutory prospectuses
than investors who already own fund shares. Thus,
we have lowered our original estimate of investors
purchasing shares who print the statutory
prospectus to 3% and estimate that approximately
1⁄2% of existing investors will print statutory
prospectuses.
423 (300,000,000 × 1⁄2% of printing investors) +
(64,500,000 × 3% of printing investors) × 80% of
funds × $2.03.
424 Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34.
425 Existing ETFs would face a one-time ‘‘learning
cost’’ to determine the difference between the
current Form N–1A requirements as modified by
their exemptive orders and the amendments we are
adopting today. We do not anticipate that this cost
will be significant given the similarity of the
amendments to the conditions in existing
exemptive orders.
426 Item 1(a)(2) of Form N–1A.; rule 498(b)(1)(ii).
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on these assumptions, the amendments
are estimated to produce annual
investor printing costs of $5,578,440.423
We received one comment letter
arguing that the use of the Summary
Prospectus under rule 498 may impose
costs on investors by relieving funds of
liability for misleading disclosure.424
For the reasons discussed in Parts
III.B.4.a. and III.B.5., we do not believe
that the amendments, as adopted, will
entail such costs.
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national securities exchanges; 427 (ii)
because the price of shares is based on
market price, shares may trade at a
premium or discount to NAV; 428 and
(iii) ETF investors may be required to
pay brokerage commissions.429
Including these additional statements
should present minimal, if any, printing
costs. Any additional costs incurred by
an ETF in complying with these
additional disclosures should be offset
by the cost-savings of the amendments,
which would allow most, if not all,
ETFs to exclude creation unit purchase
and redemption information in their
prospectuses.430
VI. Consideration of Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 2(c) of the Investment
Company Act 431 and section 2(b) of the
Securities Act 432 require the
Commission, when engaging in
rulemaking that requires it to consider
or determine whether an action is
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, to consider, in addition to the
protection of investors, whether the
action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. We
requested, but did not receive, any
comments directly addressing whether
the proposed amendments, if adopted,
would promote efficiency, competition,
and capital formation, or comments on
any anti-competitive effects of the
proposed amendments.433
The amendments we are adopting are
intended to provide enhanced
disclosure regarding mutual funds.
These changes may improve efficiency.
The enhanced disclosure requirements
may enable shareholders to make more
informed investment decisions by
focusing attention on key information,
which could promote efficiency. We
anticipate that the amendments will
increase efficiency at mutual funds by
providing an alternative to the printing
and mailing of paper copies of statutory
prospectuses.
We anticipate that improving
investors’ ability to make informed
427 Item
6(c)(i)(A) of Form N–1A.
6(c)(i)(B) of Form N–1A.
1(e)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. We
also are adopting a conforming amendment to the
expense example in ETF annual and semi-annual
reports. Instruction 1(e)(i) to Item 27(d) of Form N–
1A.
430 See Instruction 1(e)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–
1A; Items 6(c)(ii); 11(g)(1) of Form N–1A. For
purposes of our Paperwork Reduction Act analysis,
we have estimated that these amendments will not
change the current Form N–1A compliance costs.
See supra Part IV.C.
431 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(c).
432 15 U.S.C. 77b(b).
433 See Proposing Release, supra note 12, 72 FR
at 67812.
428 Item
429 Instruction
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investment decisions may also lead to
increased competitiveness of the U.S.
capital markets. The ability of investors
to directly locate the information they
seek regarding a fund or funds through
the use of the Internet may result in
more investment in the U.S. capital
markets. In addition, we believe that the
amendments may enhance competition
and efficiency because they will reduce
fund printing and mailing costs. Funds
could, for example, use these savings to
conduct additional investment research
or to pass cost savings on to investors.
We also believe that the amendments
will enhance competition among funds
because they will facilitate investor
comparisons of mutual fund
information, including important cost
and fee disclosures.
We anticipate that this increased
market efficiency also may promote
capital formation by improving the flow
of information between funds and their
investors. Specifically, we believe that
the amendments will: (1) Facilitate
greater availability of information to
investors and the market with regard to
all funds; (2) build upon the increased
importance of electronic dissemination
of information, including the use of the
Internet; and (3) promote the capital
formation process.
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
This Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis has been prepared in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.434 It relates to the
Commission’s amendments to Form
N–1A under the Securities Act and the
Investment Company Act and to new
rule 498 under the Securities Act.
A. Need for the Rule
We are adopting an improved mutual
fund disclosure framework that is
intended to provide investors with
information that is easier to use and
more readily accessible, while retaining
the comprehensive quality of the
information that is available today. The
foundation of the improved disclosure
framework is the provision to all
investors of streamlined and userfriendly information that is key to an
investment decision.
In addition, the amendments to Form
N–1A that specifically apply to ETFs are
intended to accommodate the form for
use by ETFs and are designed to provide
more useful information to investors
who purchase and sell ETF shares on
national securities exchanges.
434 5
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B. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comment
In the proposing release, we requested
comment on the number of small entity
issuers that may be affected, the
existence or nature of the potential
impact and how to quantify the impact
of the amendments. Commenters
generally supported the proposal.435
One commenter, however, stated that
the proposal would simply add another
costly burden to small fund families.436
While we believe there will be some
costs associated with the amendments,
we have tried to minimize those costs.
Nearly all of the information that is
required in the summary section of the
prospectus under the amendments has
previously been required in a fund’s
prospectus. We eliminated the proposed
quarterly updating requirement in
response to commenters’ concerns. In
addition, we have made use of the
Summary Prospectus voluntary,
meaning that a fund can choose whether
or not to adopt it considering its costs
and benefits to the fund and its
investors.
In the initial regulatory flexibility
analysis for the ETF proposing release,
we requested comment on any aspect of
the IRFA, including the number of small
entities likely to rely on the proposed
amendments to Form N–1A, the likely
impact of the proposed amendments on
small entities, and the nature of any
impact on small entities. We also
requested empirical data supporting the
extent of any impact on small entities.
We received no comments on that
analysis.
C. Small Entities Subject to the Rule
For purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, an investment company
is a small entity if it, together with other
investment companies in the same
group of related investment companies,
has net assets of $50 million or less as
of the end of its most recent fiscal
year.437 Approximately 127 mutual
funds registered on Form N–1A meet
this definition.438 Of the approximately
593 registered open-end investment
companies that are ETFs, only one is a
small entity.439
435 See
supra note 206 and accompanying text.
McCormick Letter, supra note 74. The
commenter made specific suggestions for improving
mutual fund disclosure, such as consolidating the
statutory prospectus and SAI and eliminating the
semi-annual reports and quarterly filings on Form
N–Q, that were beyond the scope of this particular
rulemaking.
437 17 CFR 270.0–10.
438 This estimate is based on analysis by the
Division of Investment Management staff of
publicly available data.
439 For purposes of this analysis, any series or
portfolio of an ETF is considered a separate ETF.
436 See
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D. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
The amendments we are adopting
require all funds, including funds that
are small entities, to provide key
information in a summary section of
their statutory prospectuses. In addition,
the amendments provide a new option
that will permit a person to satisfy its
mutual fund prospectus delivery
obligations under the Securities Act.
Under the option, key information will
be sent or given to investors in the form
of a Summary Prospectus, and the
statutory prospectus will be provided on
an Internet Web site. Upon an investor’s
request, funds are required to send the
statutory prospectus to the investor. No
funds are required to send or give a
Summary Prospectus. However, for
purposes of the PRA, we estimate that
80% of all funds will choose to send or
give a Summary Prospectus pursuant to
rule 498 both to enhance investor access
to information about a fund and to take
advantage of the cost savings that a fund
may realize. If a fund elects the new
delivery regime for prospectuses, it is
required to prepare, file, and send or
give a Summary Prospectus to investors.
The required disclosure in the Summary
Prospectus is information that generally
is readily available to funds. A fund is
required to post the statutory prospectus
along with other required documents to
an Internet Web site and provide either
a paper or an e-mail copy of its statutory
prospectus to requesting shareholders.
For purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, we have estimated that
the new disclosure requirements would
increase the hour burden of filings on
Form N–1A by 70,016 hours annually
and for rule 498 by 63,014 hours
annually. We estimate that this
additional burden would increase total
internal costs per portfolio, including
those that are small entities, by
approximately $4,256 per portfolio
annually.440 We also estimate that the
external costs for printing and mailing
of the Summary Prospectus will be
approximately $12,075 per portfolio.441
However, we estimate that the benefit of
decreased printing and other costs will
Therefore, there are 593 portfolios or series of
registered open-end investment companies
operating as ETFs. For purposes of determining
whether a fund is a small entity under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, however, the assets of
funds (including each portfolio and series of a fund)
in the same group of related investment companies
are aggregated.
440 These figures are based on an estimated hourly
wage rate of $280. See supra note 420. We note that
this estimate includes a one-time burden of 17
hours to create the summary section of the statutory
prospectus and a one-time burden of 23 hours to
create the Summary Prospectus.
441 See supra note 414 and accompanying text.
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decrease total external costs per
portfolio, including those that are small
entities, by approximately $21,737 per
portfolio annually.442
The amendments to Form N–1A that
specifically apply to ETFs will impose
reporting requirements on open-end
funds that operate as ETFs. The
amendments require an ETF to disclose
in its prospectus and annual reports the
number of trading days on which the
market price of an ETF’s shares was
greater than its NAV and the number of
days it was less than its NAV (premium/
discount information) unless the ETF
discloses this information on its Web
site and provides an Internet address
where an investor can locate the
information.443 The amendments also
require the ETF to disclose in its
prospectus (in addition to its exchange
ticker trading symbol), the principal
U.S. market(s) on which its shares are
traded.444
The amendments to Form N–1A also
eliminate some disclosure requirements
for ETFs with creation units of 25,000
or more shares and replace them with
fewer disclosures. Under the
amendments, those ETFs do not have to:
(i) Disclose information on how to buy
and redeem shares of ETF; 445 (ii)
include in its fee table in its prospectus
or annual and semi-annual reports fees
and expenses for purchases or sales of
creation units; 446 or (iii) disclose
procedures for the purchase and
redemption of fund shares.447
The amendments to Form N–1A are
designed to accommodate the form for
use by ETFs and to meet the needs of
investors (including retail investors)
who purchase ETF shares in secondary
market transactions rather than
442 See
supra note 407 and accompanying text.
11(g)(2) of Form N–1A (requiring
premium/discount information in the prospectus to
span the most recently completed calendar year and
quarters since that year); Item 27(b)(7)(iv) of Form
N–1A (requiring premium/discount information
disclosed in annual reports to span five fiscal
years). The ETF is required to present premiums or
discounts as a percentage of NAV and to explain
that shareholders may pay more than NAV when
purchasing shares and receive less than NAV when
selling, because shares are bought and sold at
market prices. Instructions 2, 3 to Item 11(g)(2) of
Form N–1A; Instructions 2, 3 to Item 27(b)(7)(iv).
444 Item 1(a)(2) of Form N–1A; rule 498(b)(1)(ii).
445 Item 6(c)(ii) of Form N–1A. Instead ETF
prospectuses could simply state that individual
fund shares can only be bought and sold on the
secondary market through a broker-dealer. Item
6(c)(i)(A) of Form N–1A.
446 Instruction 1(e)(ii) to Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Instruction 1(e)(ii) to Item 27(d) of Form N–1A. An
ETF will instead modify the narrative explanation
preceding the example in the fee table to state that
investors may be required to pay brokerage
commissions that are not reflected in the fee table.
Instruction 1(e)(i) to Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Instruction 1(e)(i) to Item 27(d) of Form N–1A.
447 Item 11(g)(1) of Form N–1A.
443 Item
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4583
institutional investors purchasing
creation units directly from the ETF. We
anticipate that the amendments will
have a negligible impact (if any) on the
disclosure burdens on ETFs while
providing necessary information to ETF
investors. We do not believe that the
amendments to Form N–1A will
disproportionately impact small funds.
E. Agency Action To Minimize the Effect
on Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs
us to consider significant alternatives
that would accomplish our stated
objective, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small
issuers. In connection with the
amendments, the Commission
considered the following alternatives:
(1) The establishment of differing
compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the
resources available to small entities; (2)
the clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the
amendments for small entities; (3) the
use of performance rather than design
standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the amendments, or any part
thereof, for small entities.
The Commission believes at the
present time that special compliance or
reporting requirements for small
entities, or an exemption from coverage
for small entities, would not be
appropriate or consistent with investor
protection. We believe that the
amendments to Form N–1A will provide
investors with enhanced disclosure
regarding funds. This enhanced
disclosure will allow investors to better
assess their investment decisions. The
ETF amendments to Form N–1A are
designed to accommodate the form for
use by ETFs and to meet the needs of
investors (including retail investors)
who purchase ETF shares in secondary
market transactions rather than financial
institutions purchasing creation units
directly from the ETF. Different
disclosure requirements for funds that
are small entities may create the risk
that investors in these funds would be
less able to evaluate funds and less able
to compare different funds, thereby
lessening the ability of investors to
make informed choices among funds.
We believe it is important for the
disclosure that is required by the
amendments to Form N–1A to be
provided to investors in all funds, not
just funds that are not considered small
entities.
Rule 498 provides a new option that
permits a person to satisfy its mutual
fund prospectus delivery obligations
under the Securities Act. Under the
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option, key information is to be sent or
given to investors in the form of a
Summary Prospectus, and the statutory
prospectus is to be provided on an
Internet Web site. Upon an investor’s
request, funds are required to send the
statutory prospectus to the investor.
Because the rule is optional, an
exemption from the rule for small
entities would deprive small entities of
the potential benefits of the rule.
We have endeavored through the
amendments to minimize the regulatory
burden on all funds, including small
entities, while meeting our regulatory
objectives. Small entities should benefit
from the Commission’s reasoned
approach to the amendments to the
same degree as other funds. We also
have endeavored to clarify, consolidate,
and simplify disclosure for all funds,
including those that are small entities.
Finally, we do not consider using
performance rather than design
standards to be consistent with our
statutory mandate of investor protection
in the present context. Based on our
past experience, we believe that the
disclosure required by the amendments
will be more useful to investors if there
are enumerated informational
requirements.
VIII. Statutory Authority
The Commission is adopting
amendments to Form N–1A and Form
N–4 pursuant to authority set forth in
sections 5, 6, 7, 10, and 19(a) of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g,
77j, and 77s(a)] and sections 8, 24(a),
24(g), 30, and 38 of the Investment
Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–8, 80a–
24(a), 80a–24(g), 80a–29, and 80a–37].
The Commission is adopting
amendments to Form N–14 pursuant to
authority set forth in sections 5, 6, 7, 10,
and 19(a) of the Securities Act [15
U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g, 77j, and 77s(a)].
The Commission is adopting
amendments to rules 159A, 482, 485,
497, and 498 under the Securities Act
and to rules 304 and 401 of Regulation
S–T pursuant to authority set forth in
sections 5, 6, 7, 10, 19, and 28 of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g,
77j, 77s, and 77z–3] and sections 8,
24(a), 24(g), 30, and 38 of the
Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C.
80a–8, 80a–24(a), 80a–24(g), 80a–29,
and 80a–37].
List of Subjects
17 CFR Parts 230 and 274
Investment companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
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17 CFR Parts 232 and 239
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
Text of Final Rule and Form
Amendments
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Commission amends Title
17, Chapter II, of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows.
■
PART 230—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF
1933
1. The authority citation for part 230
continues to read in part as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77c, 77d, 77f,
77g, 77h, 77j, 77r, 77s, 77z–3, 77sss, 78c, 78d,
78j, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78t, 78w, 78ll(d),
78mm, 80a–8, 80a–24, 80a–28, 80a–29, 80a–
30, and 80a–37, unless otherwise noted.
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2. Section 230.159A is amended by
removing the word ‘‘profile’’ in
paragraph (a)(2) and adding in its place
‘‘summary prospectus’’.
■ 3. Section 230.482 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a) before the
note; and
■ b. Revising paragraphs (b)(1) and (c).
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 230.482 Advertising by an investment
company as satisfying requirements of
section 10.
(a) Scope of rule. This section applies
to an advertisement or other sales
material (advertisement) with respect to
securities of an investment company
registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a–1
et seq.) (1940 Act), or a business
development company, that is selling or
proposing to sell its securities pursuant
to a registration statement that has been
filed under the Act. This section does
not apply to an advertisement that is
excepted from the definition of
prospectus by section 2(a)(10) of the Act
(15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(10)) or § 230.498(d) or
to a summary prospectus under
§ 230.498. An advertisement that
complies with this section, which may
include information the substance of
which is not included in the prospectus
specified in section 10(a) of the Act (15
U.S.C 77j(a)), will be deemed to be a
prospectus under section 10(b) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 77j(b)) for the purposes
of section 5(b)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
77e(b)(1)).
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(b) * * *
(1) Availability of additional
information. An advertisement must
include a statement that advises an
investor to consider the investment
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objectives, risks, and charges and
expenses of the investment company
carefully before investing; explains that
the prospectus and, if available, the
summary prospectus contain this and
other information about the investment
company; identifies a source from
which an investor may obtain a
prospectus and, if available, a summary
prospectus; and states that the
prospectus and, if available, the
summary prospectus should be read
carefully before investing.
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(c) Use of applications. An
advertisement that complies with this
section may not contain or be
accompanied by any application by
which a prospective investor may invest
in the investment company, except that
a prospectus meeting the requirements
of section 10(a) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
77j(a)) by which a unit investment trust
offers variable annuity or variable life
insurance contracts may contain a
contract application although the
prospectus includes, or is accompanied
by, information about an investment
company in which the unit investment
trust invests that, pursuant to this
section, is deemed a prospectus under
section 10(b) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
77j(b)).
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■ 4. Section 230.485 is amended by
removing the reference ‘‘Items 5 or
6(a)(2) of Form N–1A’’ in paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) and adding in its place ‘‘Item
5(b) or 10(a)(2) of Form N–1A’’.
■ 5. Section 230.497 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a) and (k) to read
as follows:
§ 230.497 Filing of investment company
prospectuses—number of copies.
(a) Five copies of every form of
prospectus sent or given to any person
prior to the effective date of the
registration statement that varies from
the form or forms of prospectus
included in the registration statement
filed pursuant to § 230.402(a) shall be
filed as part of the registration statement
not later than the date that form of
prospectus is first sent or given to any
person, except that an investment
company advertisement under § 230.482
shall be filed under this paragraph (a)
(but not as part of the registration
statement) unless filed under paragraph
(i) of this section.
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(k) Summary Prospectus filing
requirements. This paragraph (k), and
not the other provisions of § 230.497,
shall govern the filing of summary
prospectuses under § 230.498. Each
definitive form of a summary prospectus
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under § 230.498 shall be filed with the
Commission no later than the date that
it is first used.
■ 6. Revise § 230.498 to read as follows:
§ 230.498 Summary Prospectuses for
open-end management investment
companies.
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Class means a class of shares
issued by a Fund that has more than one
class that represent interests in the same
portfolio of securities under § 270.18f–3
of this chapter or under an order
exempting the Fund from sections 18(f),
18(g), and 18(i) of the Investment
Company Act (15 U.S.C. 80a–18(f), 80a–
18(g), and 80a–18(i)).
(2) Exchange-Traded Fund means a
Fund or a Class, the shares of which are
traded on a national securities
exchange, and that has formed and
operates pursuant to an exemptive order
granted by the Commission or in
reliance on an exemptive rule adopted
by the Commission.
(3) Fund means an open-end
management investment company, or
any Series of such a company, that has,
or is included in, an effective
registration statement on Form N–1A
(§§ 239.15A and 274.11A of this
chapter) and that has a current
prospectus that satisfies the
requirements of section 10(a) of the Act
(15 U.S.C. 77j(a)).
(4) Series means shares offered by a
Fund that represent undivided interests
in a portfolio of investments and that
are preferred over all other series of
shares for assets specifically allocated to
that series in accordance with § 270.18f–
2(a) of this chapter.
(5) Statement of Additional
Information means the statement of
additional information required by Part
B of Form N–1A.
(6) Statutory Prospectus means a
prospectus that satisfies the
requirements of section 10(a) of the Act.
(7) Summary Prospectus means the
summary prospectus described in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) General requirements for
Summary Prospectus. This paragraph
describes the requirements for a Fund’s
Summary Prospectus. A Summary
Prospectus that complies with this
paragraph (b) will be deemed to be a
prospectus that is authorized under
section 10(b) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
77j(b)) and section 24(g) of the
Investment Company Act (15 U.S.C.
80a–24(g)) for the purposes of section
5(b)(1) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 77e(b)(1)).
(1) Cover page or beginning of
Summary Prospectus. Include on the
cover page of the Summary Prospectus
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or at the beginning of the Summary
Prospectus:
(i) The Fund’s name and the Class or
Classes, if any, to which the Summary
Prospectus relates.
(ii) The exchange ticker symbol of the
Fund’s shares or, if the Summary
Prospectus relates to one or more
Classes of the Fund’s shares, adjacent to
each such Class, the exchange ticker
symbol of such Class of the Fund’s
shares. If the Fund is an ExchangeTraded Fund, also identify the principal
U.S. market or markets on which the
Fund shares are traded.
(iii) A statement identifying the
document as a ‘‘Summary Prospectus.’’
(iv) The approximate date of the
Summary Prospectus’s first use.
(v) The following legend:
Before you invest, you may want to
review the Fund’s prospectus, which
contains more information about the
Fund and its risks. You can find the
Fund’s prospectus and other
information about the Fund online at
[llll]. You can also get this
information at no cost by calling
[llll] or by sending an e-mail
request to [llll].
(A) The legend must provide an
Internet address, other than the address
of the Commission’s electronic filing
system; toll free (or collect) telephone
number; and e-mail address that
investors can use to obtain the Statutory
Prospectus and other information. The
Internet Web site address must be
specific enough to lead investors
directly to the Statutory Prospectus and
other materials that are required to be
accessible under paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, rather than to the home page or
other section of the Web site on which
the materials are posted. The Web site
could be a central site with prominent
links to each document. The legend may
indicate, if applicable, that the Statutory
Prospectus and other information are
available from a financial intermediary
(such as a broker-dealer or bank)
through which shares of the Fund may
be purchased or sold.
(B) If a Fund incorporates any
information by reference into the
Summary Prospectus, the legend must
identify the type of document (e.g.,
Statutory Prospectus) from which the
information is incorporated and the date
of the document. If a Fund incorporates
by reference a part of a document, the
legend must clearly identify the part by
page, paragraph, caption, or otherwise.
If information is incorporated from a
source other than the Statutory
Prospectus, the legend must explain that
the incorporated information may be
obtained, free of charge, in the same
manner as the Statutory Prospectus. A
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Fund may modify the legend to include
a statement to the effect that the
Summary Prospectus is intended for use
in connection with a defined
contribution plan that meets the
requirements for qualification under
section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue
Code (26 U.S.C. 401(k)), a tax-deferred
arrangement under section 403(b) or 457
of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.
403(b) or 457), or a variable contract as
defined in section 817(d) of the Internal
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 817(d)), as
applicable, and is not intended for use
by other investors.
(2) Contents of the Summary
Prospectus. Except as otherwise
provided in this paragraph (b), provide
the information required or permitted
by Items 2 through 8 of Form N–1A, and
only that information, in the order
required by the form. A Summary
Prospectus may omit the explanation
and information required by Instruction
2(c) to Item 4(b)(2) of Form N–1A.
(3) Incorporation by reference.
(i) Except as provided by paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) of this section, information
may not be incorporated by reference
into a Summary Prospectus. Information
that is incorporated by reference into a
Summary Prospectus in accordance
with paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section
need not be sent or given with the
Summary Prospectus.
(ii) A Fund may incorporate by
reference into a Summary Prospectus
any or all of the information contained
in the Fund’s Statutory Prospectus and
Statement of Additional Information,
and any information from the Fund’s
reports to shareholders under § 270.30e–
1 that the Fund has incorporated by
reference into the Fund’s Statutory
Prospectus, provided that:
(A) The conditions of paragraphs
(b)(1)(v)(B) and (e) of this section are
met;
(B) A Fund may not incorporate by
reference into a Summary Prospectus
information that paragraphs (b)(1) and
(2) of this section require to be included
in the Summary Prospectus; and
(C) Information that is permitted to be
incorporated by reference into the
Summary Prospectus may be
incorporated by reference into the
Summary Prospectus only by reference
to the specific document that contains
the information, not by reference to
another document that incorporates
such information by reference.
(iii) For purposes of § 230.159,
information is conveyed to a person not
later than the time that a Summary
Prospectus is received by the person if
the information is incorporated by
reference into the Summary Prospectus
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in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(ii)
of this section.
(4) Multiple Funds and Classes. A
Summary Prospectus may describe only
one Fund, but may describe more than
one Class of a Fund.
(c) Transfer of the security. Any
obligation under section 5(b)(2) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 77e(b)(2)) to have a
Statutory Prospectus precede or
accompany the carrying or delivery of a
Fund security in an offering registered
on Form N–1A is satisfied if:
(1) A Summary Prospectus is sent or
given no later than the time of the
carrying or delivery of the Fund
security;
(2) The Summary Prospectus is not
bound together with any materials,
except that a Summary Prospectus for a
Fund that is available as an investment
option in a variable annuity or variable
life insurance contract may be bound
together with the Statutory Prospectus
for the contract and Summary
Prospectuses and Statutory Prospectuses
for other investment options available in
the contract, provided that:
(i) All of the Funds to which the
Summary Prospectuses and Statutory
Prospectuses that are bound together
relate are available to the person to
whom such documents are sent or
given; and
(ii) A table of contents identifying
each Summary Prospectus and Statutory
Prospectus that is bound together, and
the page number on which it is found,
is included at the beginning or
immediately following a cover page of
the bound materials;
(3) The Summary Prospectus that is
sent or given satisfies the requirements
of paragraph (b) of this section at the
time of the carrying or delivery of the
Fund security; and
(4) The conditions set forth in
paragraph (e) of this section are
satisfied.
(d) Sending communications. A
communication relating to an offering
registered on Form N–1A sent or given
after the effective date of a Fund’s
registration statement (other than a
prospectus permitted or required under
section 10 of the Act) shall not be
deemed a prospectus under section
2(a)(10) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(10))
if:
(1) It is proved that prior to or at the
same time with such communication a
Summary Prospectus was sent or given
to the person to whom the
communication was made;
(2) The Summary Prospectus is not
bound together with any materials,
except as permitted by paragraph (c)(2)
of this section;
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(3) The Summary Prospectus that was
sent or given satisfies the requirements
of paragraph (b) of this section at the
time of such communication; and
(4) The conditions set forth in
paragraph (e) of this section are
satisfied.
(e) Availability of Fund’s Statutory
Prospectus and certain other Fund
documents.
(1) The Fund’s current Summary
Prospectus, Statutory Prospectus,
Statement of Additional Information,
and most recent annual and semiannual reports to shareholders under
§ 270.30e–1 are publicly accessible, free
of charge, at the Web site address
specified on the cover page or at the
beginning of the Summary Prospectus
on or before the time that the Summary
Prospectus is sent or given and current
versions of those documents remain on
the Web site through the date that is at
least 90 days after:
(i) In the case of reliance on paragraph
(c) of this section, the date that the Fund
security is carried or delivered; or
(ii) In the case of reliance on
paragraph (d) of this section, the date
that the communication is sent or given.
(2) The materials that are accessible in
accordance with paragraph (e)(1) of this
section must be presented on the Web
site in a format, or formats, that:
(i) Are human-readable and capable of
being printed on paper in humanreadable format;
(ii) Permit persons accessing the
Statutory Prospectus or Statement of
Additional Information to move directly
back and forth between each section
heading in a table of contents of such
document and the section of the
document referenced in that section
heading; provided that, in the case of
the Statutory Prospectus, the table of
contents is either required by
§ 230.481(c) or contains the same
section headings as the table of contents
required by § 230.481(c); and
(iii) Permit persons accessing the
Summary Prospectus to move directly
back and forth between:
(A) Each section of the Summary
Prospectus and any section of the
Statutory Prospectus and Statement of
Additional Information that provides
additional detail concerning that section
of the Summary Prospectus; or
(B) Links located at both the
beginning and end of the Summary
Prospectus, or that remain continuously
visible to persons accessing the
Summary Prospectus, and tables of
contents of both the Statutory
Prospectus and the Statement of
Additional Information that meet the
requirements of paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of
this section.
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(3) Persons accessing the materials
specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this
section must be able to permanently
retain, free of charge, an electronic
version of such materials in a format, or
formats, that meet each of the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and
(ii) of this section.
(4) The conditions set forth in
paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2), and (e)(3) of
this section shall be deemed to be met,
notwithstanding the fact that the
materials specified in paragraph (e)(1) of
this section are not available for a time
in the manner required by paragraphs
(e)(1), (e)(2), and (e)(3) of this section,
provided that:
(i) The Fund has reasonable
procedures in place to ensure that the
specified materials are available in the
manner required by paragraphs (e)(1),
(e)(2), and (e)(3) of this section; and
(ii) The Fund takes prompt action to
ensure that the specified documents
become available in the manner
required by paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2), and
(e)(3) of this section, as soon as
practicable following the earlier of the
time at which it knows or reasonably
should have known that the documents
are not available in the manner required
by paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2), and (e)(3) of
this section.
(f) Other requirements.
(1) Delivery upon request. If paragraph
(c) or (d) of this section is relied on with
respect to a Fund, the Fund (or a
financial intermediary through which
shares of the Fund may be purchased or
sold) must send, at no cost to the
requestor and by U.S. first class mail or
other reasonably prompt means, a paper
copy of the Fund’s Statutory Prospectus,
Statement of Additional Information,
and most recent annual and semiannual reports to shareholders to any
person requesting such a copy within
three business days after receiving a
request for a paper copy. If paragraph (c)
or (d) of this section is relied on with
respect to a Fund, the Fund (or a
financial intermediary through which
shares of the Fund may be purchased or
sold) must send, at no cost to the
requestor and by e-mail, an electronic
copy of the Fund’s Statutory Prospectus,
Statement of Additional Information,
and most recent annual and semiannual reports to shareholders to any
person requesting such a copy within
three business days after receiving a
request for an electronic copy. The
requirement to send an electronic copy
of a document by e-mail may be
satisfied by sending a direct link to the
document on the Internet; provided that
a current version of the document is
directly accessible through the link from
the time that the e-mail is sent through
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the date that is six months after the date
that the e-mail is sent and the e-mail
explains both how long the link will
remain useable and that, if the recipient
desires to retain a copy of the document,
he or she should access and save the
document.
(2) Greater prominence. If paragraph
(c) or (d) of this section is relied on with
respect to a Fund, the Fund’s Summary
Prospectus shall be given greater
prominence than any materials, with the
exception of other Summary
Prospectuses or Statutory Prospectuses,
that accompany the Fund’s Summary
Prospectus.
(3) Convenient for reading and
printing. If paragraph (c) or (d) of this
section is relied on with respect to a
Fund:
(i) The materials that are accessible in
accordance with paragraph (e)(1) of this
section must be presented on the Web
site in a format, or formats, that are
convenient for both reading online and
printing on paper; and
(ii) Persons accessing the materials
that are accessible in accordance with
paragraph (e)(1) of this section must be
able to permanently retain, free of
charge, an electronic version of such
materials in a format, or formats, that
are convenient for both reading online
and printing on paper.
(4) Information in Summary
Prospectus must be the same as
information in Statutory Prospectus. If
paragraph (c) or (d) of this section is
relied on with respect to a Fund, the
information provided in response to
Items 2 through 8 of Form N–1A in the
Fund’s Summary Prospectus must be
the same as the information provided in
response to Items 2 through 8 of Form
N–1A in the Fund’s Statutory
Prospectus except as expressly
permitted by paragraph (b)(2) of this
section.
(5) Compliance with paragraph (f) not
a condition to reliance on paragraphs
(c) and (d). Compliance with this
paragraph (f) is not a condition to the
ability to rely on paragraph (c) or (d) of
this section with respect to a Fund, and
failure to comply with paragraph (f)
does not negate the ability to rely on
paragraph (c) or (d).
PART 232—REGULATION S–T—
GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS
FOR ELECTRONIC FILINGS
80a–30, 80a–37, and 7201 et seq.; and 18
U.S.C. 1350.
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8. Section 232.304 is amended by
removing the references ‘‘Item 22 of
Form N–1A’’ in paragraphs (d) and (e)
and adding in their place ‘‘Item 27 of
Form N–1A’’.
■ 9. Section 232.401 is amended by:
■
a. Removing the reference ‘‘Item 8(a)
of Form N–1A’’ in paragraph (b)(1)(iii)
and adding in its place ‘‘Item 13(a) of
Form N–1A’’; and
■ b. Removing the reference ‘‘Items 2
and 3 of Form N–1A’’ in paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) and adding in its place ‘‘Items
2, 3, and 4 of Form N–1A’’.
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PART 239—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
10. The general authority citation for
part 239 is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s,
77z–2, 77z–3, 77sss, 78c, 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78u–5, 78w(a), 78ll, 78mm, 80a–2(a),
80a–3, 80a–8, 80a–9, 80a–10, 80a–13, 80a–
24, 80a–26, 80a–29, 80a–30, and 80a–37,
unless otherwise noted.
11. Form N–14 (referenced in
§ 239.23) is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a) in Item 5;
■ b. Revising the reference ‘‘Items 10
through 22 of Form N–1A’’ in Item 12(a)
to read ‘‘Items 14 through 27 of Form N–
1A’’; and
■ c. Revising the reference ‘‘Items 10
through 13 and 15 through 22 of Form
N–1A’’ in Item 13(a) to read ‘‘Items 14
through 17 and 19 through 27 of Form
N–1A’’.
The revision to paragraph (a) of Item
5 reads as follows:
■
Note: The text of Form N–14 does not, and
these amendments will not, appear in the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Form N–14
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Item 5. Information About the Registrant
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(a) If the registrant is an open-end
management investment company,
furnish the information required by
Items 2 through 8, 9(a), 9(b), and 10
through 13 of Form N–1A under the
1940 Act;
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7. The authority citation for part 232
continues to read in part as follows:
PART 274—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
ACT OF 1940
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j,
77s(a), 77z–3, 77sss(a), 78c(b), 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78w(a), 78ll, 80a–6(c), 80a–8, 80a–29,
■
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12. The authority citation for part 274
continues to read in part as follows:
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s,
78c(b), 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 80a–8, 80a–24,
80a–26, and 80a–29, unless otherwise noted.
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13. Form N–1A (referenced in
§§ 239.15A and 274.11A) is amended
by:
■ a. Revising the Cover Page by
replacing the address reference ‘‘450 5th
Street, NW., Washington, D.C. 20549–
6009’’ with ‘‘100 F Street, NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090’’;
■ b. Revising the Table of Contents;
■ c. Revising the General Instructions as
follows:
■ i. Adding the definitions ‘‘ExchangeTraded Fund’’ and ‘‘Market Price’’ in
alphabetical order to paragraph A;
■ ii. Revising the phrase ‘‘(except Items
1, 2, 3, and 8), B, and C (except Items
23(e) and (i)–(k))’’ in paragraph B.2.(b)
to read ‘‘(except Items 1, 2, 3, 4, and 13),
B, and C (except Items 28(e) and (i)–
(k))’’;
■ iii. Revising paragraphs B.4.(c),
C.3.(a), C.3.(b), and C.3.(c);
■ iv. Revising the reference ‘‘Items 6(b)–
(d) and 7(a)(2)–(5)’’ in paragraph
C.3.(d)(i) to read ‘‘Items 6, 11(b)–(d), and
12(a)(2)–(5)’’; and
■ v. Revising the reference ‘‘Items
2(c)(2)(iii)(B) and (C) and 2(c)(2)(iv)’’ in
paragraph C.3.(d)(iii) to read ‘‘Items
4(b)(2)(iii)(B) and (C) and 4(b)(2)(iv)’’;
■ d. Revising Item 1 as follows:
■ i. Revising paragraph (a)(1);
■ ii. Adding new paragraph (a)(2) and
redesignating paragraphs (a)(2) and
(a)(3) as paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4);
■ iii. Removing Instruction 6 to Item
1(b)(1);
■ iv. In Item 1(b)(3), revising the
telephone number ‘‘1–202–942–8090’’
to read ‘‘1–202–551–8090’’; and
■ v. In Item 1(b)(3), revising the zip code
‘‘20549–0102’’ to read ‘‘20549–1520’’;
■ e. Redesignating Items 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,
20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, and
30 as Items 4, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,
16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26,
27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, and 35,
respectively;
■ f. Adding new Item 2;
■ g. Revising Item 3 as follows:
■ i. Adding a sentence after the sentence
following the heading ‘‘Fees and
expenses of the Fund’’;
■ ii. Revising the heading ‘‘Annual
Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that
are deducted from Fund assets)’’;
■ iii. Adding a new paragraph after the
‘‘Example’’ with the heading ‘‘Portfolio
Turnover’’;
■ iv. Revising Instruction 1(b);
■ v. Adding new Instruction 1(e);
■ vi. In Instruction 2(a)(i), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 7(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item
12(a)’’;
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
vii. Revising Instruction 3(e);
viii. In Instruction 3(f)(iii), revising
the references ‘‘Item 8(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item
13(a)’’;
■ ix. In Instruction 3(f)(vii), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 8’’ to read ‘‘Item 13’’;
■ x. Revising Instruction 4(a);
■ xi. Redesignating Instruction 5 as
Instruction 6 and adding new
Instruction 5; and
■ xii. In newly redesignated Instruction
6, removing paragraph (b) and
redesignating paragraph (c) as paragraph
(b);
■ h. Revising newly redesignated Item 4
as follows:
■ i. Removing paragraph (a) and
redesignating paragraphs (b) and (c) as
paragraphs (a) and (b);
■ ii. In newly redesignated Item 4(a),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 4(b)’’ to
read ‘‘Item 9(b)’’;
■ iii. In newly redesignated Item
4(b)(1)(i), revising the reference ‘‘Item
4(c)’’ to read ‘‘Item 9(c)’’;
■ iv. In the Instruction to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(1)(iii), revising
the reference ‘‘Items 2(c)(1)(ii) and (iii)’’
to read ‘‘Items 4(b)(1)(ii) and (iii)’’;
■ v. Revising newly redesignated Item
4(b)(2)(i);
■ vi. In newly redesignated Item
4(b)(2)(iii), revising the reference ‘‘Item
22(b)(7)’’ to read ‘‘Item 27(b)(7)’’;
■ vii. In newly redesignated Item
4(b)(2)(iv), revising the reference
‘‘paragraph 2(c)(2)(iii)’’ to read
‘‘paragraph 4(b)(2)(iii)’’;
■ viii. In Instruction 1(a) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 8(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item
13(a)’’;
■ ix. In Instruction 1(b) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘paragraph (c)(2)(i)’’ to read
‘‘paragraph (b)(2)(i)’’;
■ x. In Instruction 2(a) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
references ‘‘Item 21(a)’’, ‘‘Item 21(b)(1)’’,
and ‘‘Items 21(b)(2) and (3)’’ to read
‘‘Item 26(a)’’, ‘‘Item 26(b)(1)’’, and
‘‘Items 26(b)(2) and (3)’’, respectively;
■ xi. In Instruction 2(b) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 22(b)(7)’’ to read ‘‘Item
27(b)(7)’’;
■ xii. In Instruction 2(d) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
references ‘‘Item 21(b)(2)’’ and ‘‘Item
21’’ to read ‘‘Item 26(b)(2)’’ and ‘‘Item
26’’, respectively;
■ xiii. In newly redesignated Item
4(b)(2), revising Instructions 2(e), 3(a),
3(b), and 3(c);
■ xiv. In Instruction 3(c)(ii)(D) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘paragraphs 2(c)(2)(iii)(B) and
(C)’’ to read ‘‘paragraphs 4(b)(2)(iii)(B)
and (C)’’;
■
■
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
xv. In Instruction 3(c)(iii) to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘paragraphs 2(c)(2)(iii)(A), (B),
and (C)’’ to read ‘‘paragraphs
4(b)(2)(iii)(A), (B), and (C)’’; and
■ xvi. In Instruction 4 to newly
redesignated Item 4(b)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 22(b)(7)’’ to read ‘‘Item
27(b)(7)’’;
■ i. Adding new Items 5, 6, 7, and 8;
■ j. In Instruction 5 to newly
redesignated Item 9(b)(1), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 11(c)(1)’’ to read ‘‘Item
16(c)(1)’’;
■ k. Revising newly redesignated Item
10 as follows:
■ i. Revising paragraph (a)(1)(i);
■ ii. Revising paragraph (a)(2); and
■ iii. Removing the Instructions to
newly redesignated Item 10(a)(2);
■ l. Revising newly redesignated Item
11 as follows:
■ i. Revising paragraph (a)(1);
■ ii Revising paragraph (b); and
■ iii. Revising paragraph (g);
■ m. Revising newly redesignated Item
12 as follows:
■ i. In Instruction 1 to newly
redesignated Item 12(a)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 7’’ to read ‘‘Item 12’’;
■ ii. In Instruction 2 to newly
redesignated Item 12(a)(2), revising the
references ‘‘Item 7’’ and ‘‘Items 12(d)
and 17(b)’’ to read ‘‘Item 12’’ and ‘‘Items
17(d) and 22(b)’’, respectively;
■ iii. In newly redesignated Item
12(a)(5), revising the reference ‘‘Item
17(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item 22(a)’’; and
■ iv. In the Instruction to newly
redesignated Item 12(a)(5), revising the
references ‘‘Item 7’’ to read ‘‘Item 12’’;
■ n. Revising newly redesignated Item
14 as follows:
■ i. Revising paragraph (a)(1); and
■ ii. Adding new paragraph (a)(2) and
redesignating paragraphs (a)(2) and
(a)(3) as paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4);
■ o. Revising newly redesignated Item
16 as follows:
■ i. In newly redesignated Item 16(d),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 4(b)’’ to
read ‘‘Item 9(b)’’;
■ ii. In newly redesignated Item 16(e),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 8’’ to read
‘‘Item 13’’; and
■ iii. In Instruction 1 to newly
redesignated Item 16(f)(2), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 11(f)(2)’’ to read ‘‘Item
16(f)(2)’’;
■ p. In newly redesignated Item 17,
revising the references ‘‘Item 12’’ to read
‘‘Item 17’’;
■ q. In newly redesignated Items 20(a),
20(b), and 20(c), revising the references
‘‘Item 5(a)(2)’’ to read ‘‘Item 5(b)’’;
■ r. Revising newly redesignated Item
23 as follows:
■ i. Removing the Instruction to newly
redesignated Item 23(a);
■
PO 00000
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ii. In Instruction 4 to newly
redesignated Item 23(c), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 22’’ to read ‘‘Item 27’’;
and
■ iii. In Instruction 1 to newly
redesignated Item 23(e), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 17(e)’’ to read ‘‘Item
23(e)’’;
■ s. In Instruction 1 to newly
redesignated Item 25(c), revising the
references ‘‘Item 7(b)(2)’’, ‘‘Item 14(d)’’,
and ‘‘Item 30’’ to read ‘‘Item 12(b)(2)’’,
‘‘Item 19(d)’’, and ‘‘Item 34’’,
respectively;
■ t. Revising newly redesignated Item
27 as follows:
■ i. In newly redesignated Item 27(a),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 17(c)’’ to
read ‘‘Item 23(c)’’;
■ ii. In newly redesignated Item
27(b)(2), revising the reference ‘‘Item
8(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item 13(a)’’;
■ iii. In newly redesignated Item
27(b)(5), revising the reference ‘‘Item
12(a)(1)’’ to read ‘‘Item 17(a)(1)’’;
■ iv. In newly redesignated Item
27(b)(7)(ii)(B), revising the reference
‘‘Item 21(b)(1)’’ to read ‘‘Item 26(b)(1)’’;
■ v. In newly redesignated Item 27(b)(7),
adding new paragraph (iv);
■ vi. In Instruction 10 to newly
redesignated Item 27(b)(7), revising the
reference ‘‘Instruction 5 to Item 3’’ to
read ‘‘Instruction 6 to Item 3’’;
■ vii. In the Instruction to newly
redesignated Item 27(c)(1), revising the
references ‘‘Item 22(b)(1)’’ and ‘‘Item
22(c)(1)’’ to read ‘‘Item 27(b)(1)’’ and
‘‘Item 27(c)(1)’’, respectively;
■ viii. In newly redesignated Item
27(c)(2), revising the reference ‘‘Item
8(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item 13(a)’’;
■ ix. In Instruction 1(c) to newly
redesignated Item 27(d)(1), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 8(a)’’ to read ‘‘Item
13(a)’’;
■ x. In newly redesignated Item
27(d)(1), adding Instruction 1(e);
■ xi. In Instruction 2(a)(ii) to newly
redesignated Item 27(d)(1), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 22(d)(1)’’ to read ‘‘Item
27(d)(1)’’; and
■ xii. In the Instruction to newly
redesignated Item 27(d)(4), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 12(f)’’ to read ‘‘Item
17(f)’’;
■ u. In newly redesignated Item 28(k),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 22’’ to read
‘‘Item 27’’;
■ v. Revising newly redesignated Item
32 as follows:
■ i. In newly redesignated Item 32(b),
revising the reference ‘‘Item 20’’ to read
‘‘Item 25’’;
■ ii. In Instruction 2 to newly
redesignated Item 32(c), revising the
reference ‘‘Item 20(c)’’ to read ‘‘Item
25(c)’’; and
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
w. In Instruction 1 to newly
redesignated Item 34, revising the
reference ‘‘Item 14’’ to read ‘‘Item 19’’.
The additions and revisions are to
read as follows:
■
Note: The text of Form N–1A does not, and
these amendments will not, appear in the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Form N–1A
*
*
*
*
*
Contents of Form N–1A
General Instructions
A. Definitions
B. Filing and Use of Form N–1A
C. Preparation of the Registration Statement
D. Incorporation by Reference
Part A: Information Required in a
Prospectus
Item 1. Front and Back Cover Pages
Item 2. Risk/Return Summary: Investment
Objectives/Goals
Item 3. Risk/Return Summary: Fee Table
Item 4. Risk/Return Summary:
Investments, Risks, and Performance
Item 5. Management
Item 6. Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares
Item 7. Tax Information
Item 8. Financial Intermediary
Compensation
Item 9. Investment Objectives, Principal
Investment Strategies, Related Risks, and
Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings
Item 10. Management, Organization, and
Capital Structure
Item 11. Shareholder Information
Item 12. Distribution Arrangements
Item 13. Financial Highlights Information
Part B: Information Required in a
Statement of Additional Information
Item 14. Cover Page and Table of Contents
Item 15. Fund History
Item 16. Description of the Fund and Its
Investments and Risks
Item 17. Management of the Fund
Item 18. Control Persons and Principal
Holders of Securities
Item 19. Investment Advisory and Other
Services
Item 20. Portfolio Managers
Item 21. Brokerage Allocation and Other
Practices
Item 22. Capital Stock and Other Securities
Item 23. Purchase, Redemption, and
Pricing of Shares
Item 24. Taxation of the Fund
Item 25. Underwriters
Item 26. Calculation of Performance Data
Item 27. Financial Statements
Part C: Other Information
Item 28. Exhibits
Item 29. Persons Controlled by or Under
Common Control With the Fund
Item 30. Indemnification
Item 31. Business and Other Connections
of the Investment Adviser
Item 32. Principal Underwriters
Item 33. Location of Accounts and Records
Item 34. Management Services
Item 35. Undertakings
Signatures
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
General Instructions
A. Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
‘‘Exchange-Traded Fund’’ means a
Fund or Class, the shares of which are
traded on a national securities
exchange, and that has formed and
operates pursuant to an exemptive order
granted by the Commission or in
reliance on an exemptive rule adopted
by the Commission.
*
*
*
*
*
‘‘Market Price’’ refers to the last
reported sale price at which ExchangeTraded Fund shares trade on the
principal U.S. market on which the
Fund’s shares are traded during a
regular trading session or, if it more
accurately reflects the current market
value of the Fund’s shares at the time
the Fund uses to calculate its net asset
value, a price within the range of the
highest bid and lowest offer on the
principal U.S. market on which the
Fund’s shares are traded during a
regular trading session.
*
*
*
*
*
B. Filing and Use of Form N–1A
*
*
*
*
*
4. * * *
(c) The plain English requirements of
rule 421 under the Securities Act [17
CFR 230.421] apply to prospectus
disclosure in Part A of Form N–1A. The
information required by Items 2 through
8 must be provided in plain English
under rule 421(d) under the Securities
Act.
*
*
*
*
*
C. Preparation of the Registration
Statement
*
*
*
*
*
3. * * *
(a) Organization of Information.
Organize the information in the
prospectus and SAI to make it easy for
investors to understand.
Notwithstanding rule 421(a) under the
Securities Act regarding the order of
information required in a prospectus,
disclose the information required by
Items 2 through 8 in numerical order at
the front of the prospectus. Do not
precede these Items with any other Item
except the Cover Page (Item 1) or a table
of contents meeting the requirements of
rule 481(c) under the Securities Act.
Information that is included in response
to Items 2 through 8 need not be
repeated elsewhere in the prospectus.
Disclose the information required by
Item 12 (Distribution Arrangements) in
one place in the prospectus.
(b) Other Information. A Fund may
include, except in response to Items 2
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
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4589
through 8, information in the prospectus
or the SAI that is not otherwise
required. For example, a Fund may
include charts, graphs, or tables so long
as the information is not incomplete,
inaccurate, or misleading and does not,
because of its nature, quantity, or
manner of presentation, obscure or
impede understanding of the
information that is required to be
included. Items 2 through 8 may not
include disclosure other than that
required or permitted by those Items.
(c) Use of Form N–1A by More Than
One Registrant, Series, or Class. Form
N–1A may be used by one or more
Registrants, Series, or Classes.
(i) When disclosure is provided for
more than one Fund or Class, the
disclosure should be presented in a
format designed to communicate the
information effectively. Except as
required by paragraph (c)(ii) for Items 2
through 8, Funds may order or group
the response to any Item in any manner
that organizes the information into
readable and comprehensible segments
and is consistent with the intent of the
prospectus to provide clear and concise
information about the Funds or Classes.
Funds are encouraged to use, as
appropriate, tables, side-by-side
comparisons, captions, bullet points, or
other organizational techniques when
presenting disclosure for multiple
Funds or Classes.
(ii) Paragraph (a) requires Funds to
disclose the information required by
Items 2 through 8 in numerical order at
the front of the prospectus and not to
precede Items 2 through 8 with other
information. Except as permitted by
paragraph (c)(iii), a prospectus that
contains information about more than
one Fund must present all of the
information required by Items 2 through
8 for each Fund sequentially and may
not integrate the information for more
than one Fund together. That is, a
prospectus must present all of the
information for a particular Fund that is
required by Items 2 through 8 together,
followed by all of the information for
each additional Fund, and may not, for
example, present all of the Item 2 (Risk/
Return Summary: Investment
Objectives/Goals) information for
several Funds followed by all of the
Item 3 (Risk/Return Summary: Fee
Table) information for several Funds. If
a prospectus contains information about
multiple Funds, clearly identify the
name of the relevant Fund at the
beginning of the information for the
Fund that is required by Items 2 through
8. A Multiple Class Fund may present
the information required by Items 2
through 8 separately for each Class or
may integrate the information for
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
multiple Classes, although the order of
the information must be as prescribed in
Items 2 through 8. For example, the
prospectus may present all of the Item
2 (Risk/Return Summary: Investment
Objectives/Goals) information for
several Classes followed by all of the
Item 3 (Risk/Return Summary: Fee
Table) information for the Classes, or
may present Items 2 and 3 for each of
several Classes sequentially. Other
presentations of multiple Class
information also would be acceptable if
they are consistent with the Form’s
intent to disclose the information
required by Items 2 through 8 in a
standard order at the beginning of the
prospectus. For a Multiple Class Fund,
clearly identify the relevant Classes at
the beginning of the Items 2 through 8
information for those Classes.
(iii) A prospectus that contains
information about more than one Fund
may integrate the information required
by any of Items 6 through 8 for all of the
Funds together, provided that the
information contained in any Item that
is integrated is identical for all Funds
covered in the prospectus. If the
information required by any of Items 6
through 8 is integrated pursuant to this
paragraph, the integrated information
should be presented immediately
following the separate presentations of
Item 2 through 8 information for
individual Funds. In addition, include a
statement containing the following
information in each Fund’s separate
presentation of Item 2 through 8
information, in the location where the
integrated information is omitted: ‘‘For
important information about [purchase
and sale of fund shares,] [tax
information,] and [financial
intermediary compensation], please turn
to [identify section heading and page
number of prospectus].’’
*
*
*
*
*
Part A: Information Required in a
Prospectus
Item 1. Front and Back Cover Pages
(a) Front Cover Page. Include the
following information, in plain English
under rule 421(d) under the Securities
Act, on the outside front cover page of
the prospectus:
(1) The Fund’s name and the Class or
Classes, if any, to which the prospectus
relates.
(2) The exchange ticker symbol of the
Fund’s shares or, if the prospectus
relates to one or more Classes of the
Fund’s shares, adjacent to each such
Class, the exchange ticker symbol of
such Class of the Fund’s shares. If the
Fund is an Exchange-Traded Fund, also
identify the principal U.S. market or
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
markets on which the Fund shares are
traded.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 2. Risk/Return Summary:
Investment Objectives/Goals
Disclose the Fund’s investment
objectives or goals. A Fund also may
identify its type or category (e.g., that it
is a Money Market Fund or a balanced
fund).
Item 3. Risk/Return Summary: Fee Table
*
*
*
*
*
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
* * * You may qualify for sales
charge discounts if you and your family
invest, or agree to invest in the future,
at least $[ll] in [name of fund family]
funds. More information about these
and other discounts is available from
your financial professional and in
[identify section heading and page
number] of the Fund’s prospectus and
[identify section heading and page
number] of the Fund’s statement of
additional information.
*
*
*
*
*
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
(expenses that you pay each year as a
percentage of the value of your
investment)
*
*
*
*
*
Example
*
*
*
*
*
Portfolio Turnover
The Fund pays transaction costs, such as
commissions, when it buys and sells
securities (or ‘‘turns over’’ its portfolio). A
higher portfolio turnover rate may indicate
higher transaction costs and may result in
higher taxes when Fund shares are held in
a taxable account. These costs, which are not
reflected in annual fund operating expenses
or in the example, affect the Fund’s
performance. During the most recent fiscal
year, the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate was
l% of the average value of its portfolio.
Instructions.
1. General.
(a) * * *
(b) Include the narrative explanations
in the order indicated. A Fund may
modify the narrative explanations if the
explanation contains comparable
information to that shown. The
narrative explanation regarding sales
charge discounts is only required by a
Fund that offers such discounts and
should specify the minimum level of
investment required to qualify for a
discount as disclosed in the table
required by Item 12(a)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) If the Fund is an Exchange-Traded
Fund,
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Fmt 4701
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(i) Modify the narrative explanation to
state that investors may pay brokerage
commissions on their purchases and
sales of Exchange-Traded Fund shares,
which are not reflected in the example;
and
(ii) If the Fund issues or redeems
shares in creation units of not less than
25,000 shares each, exclude any fees
charged for the purchase and
redemption of the Fund’s creation units.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Annual Fund Operating Expenses.
(a) * * *
(e) If there are expense reimbursement
or fee waiver arrangements that will
reduce any Fund operating expenses for
no less than one year from the effective
date of the Fund’s registration
statement, a Fund may add two captions
to the table: One caption showing the
amount of the expense reimbursement
or fee waiver, and a second caption
showing the Fund’s net expenses after
subtracting the fee reimbursement or
expense waiver from the total fund
operating expenses. The Fund should
place these additional captions directly
below the ‘‘Total Annual Fund
Operating Expenses’’ caption of the
table and should use appropriate
descriptive captions, such as ‘‘Fee
Waiver [and/or Expense
Reimbursement]’’ and ‘‘Total Annual
Fund Operating Expenses After Fee
Waiver [and/or Expense
Reimbursement],’’ respectively. If the
Fund provides this disclosure, also
disclose the period for which the
expense reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangement is expected to continue,
including the expected termination
date, and briefly describe who can
terminate the arrangement and under
what circumstances.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Example.
(a) Assume that the percentage
amounts listed under ‘‘Total Annual
Fund Operating Expenses’’ remain the
same in each year of the 1-, 3-, 5-, and
10-year periods, except that an
adjustment may be made to reflect any
expense reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangements that will reduce any Fund
operating expenses for no less than one
year from the effective date of the
Fund’s registration statement. An
adjustment to reflect any expense
reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangement may be reflected only in
the period(s) for which the expense
reimbursement or fee waiver
arrangement is expected to continue.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Portfolio Turnover. Disclose the
portfolio turnover rate provided in
response to Item 13(a) for the most
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
recent fiscal year (or for such shorter
period as the Fund has been in
operation). Disclose the period for
which the information is provided if
less than a full fiscal year. A Fund that
is a Money Market Fund may omit the
portfolio turnover information required
by this Item.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 4. Risk/Return Summary:
Investments, Risks, and Performance
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Principal risks of investing in the
Fund.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Risk/Return Bar Chart and Table.
(i) Include the bar chart and table
required by paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iii)
of this section. Provide a brief
explanation of how the information
illustrates the variability of the Fund’s
returns (e.g., by stating that the
information provides some indication of
the risks of investing in the Fund by
showing changes in the Fund’s
performance from year to year and by
showing how the Fund’s average annual
returns for 1, 5, and 10 years compare
with those of a broad measure of market
performance). Provide a statement to the
effect that the Fund’s past performance
(before and after taxes) is not necessarily
an indication of how the Fund will
perform in the future. If applicable,
include a statement explaining that
updated performance information is
available and providing a Web site
address and/or toll-free (or collect)
telephone number where the updated
information may be obtained.
*
*
*
*
*
Instructions.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Table.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Returns required by paragraphs
4(b)(2)(iii)(A), (B), and (C) for a Fund or
Series must be adjacent to one another
and appear in that order. The returns for
a broad-based securities market index,
as required by paragraph 4(b)(2)(iii),
must precede or follow all of the returns
for a Fund or Series rather than be
interspersed with the returns of the
Fund or Series.
3. Multiple Class Funds.
(a) When a Multiple Class Fund
presents information for more than one
Class together in response to Item
4(b)(2), provide annual total returns in
the bar chart for only one of those
Classes. The Fund can select which
Class to include (e.g., the oldest Class,
the Class with the greatest net assets) if
the Fund:
(i) Selects the Class with 10 or more
years of annual returns if other Classes
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
have fewer than 10 years of annual
returns;
(ii) Selects the Class with the longest
period of annual returns when the
Classes all have fewer than 10 years of
returns; and
(iii) If the Fund provides annual total
returns in the bar chart for a Class that
is different from the Class selected for
the most immediately preceding period,
explain in a footnote to the bar chart the
reasons for the selection of a different
Class.
(b) When a Multiple Class Fund offers
a new Class in a prospectus and
separately presents information for the
new Class in response to Item 4(b)(2),
include the bar chart with annual total
returns for any other existing Class for
the first year that the Class is offered.
Explain in a footnote that the returns are
for a Class that is not presented that
would have substantially similar annual
returns because the shares are invested
in the same portfolio of securities and
the annual returns would differ only to
the extent that the Classes do not have
the same expenses. Include return
information for the other Class reflected
in the bar chart in the performance
table.
(c) When a Multiple Class Fund
presents information for more than one
Class together in response to Item
4(b)(2):
(i) Provide the returns required by
paragraph 4(b)(2)(iii)(A) of this Item for
each of the Classes;
(ii) Provide the returns required by
paragraphs 4(b)(2)(iii)(B) and (C) of this
Item for only one of those Classes. The
Fund may select the Class for which it
provides the returns required by
paragraphs 4(b)(2)(iii)(B) and (C) of this
Item, provided that the Fund:
*
*
*
*
*
Item 5. Management
(a) Investment Adviser(s). Provide the
name of each investment adviser of the
Fund, including sub-advisers.
Instructions.
1. A Fund need not identify a subadviser whose sole responsibility for the
Fund is limited to day-to-day
management of the Fund’s holdings of
cash and cash equivalent instruments,
unless the Fund is a Money Market
Fund or other Fund with a principal
investment strategy of regularly holding
cash and cash equivalent instruments.
2. A Fund having three or more subadvisers, each of which manages a
portion of the Fund’s portfolio, need not
identify each such sub-adviser, except
that the Fund must identify any subadviser that is (or is reasonably expected
to be) responsible for the management of
a significant portion of the Fund’s net
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4591
assets. For purposes of this paragraph, a
significant portion of a Fund’s net assets
generally will be deemed to be 30% or
more of the Fund’s net assets.
(b) Portfolio Manager(s). State the
name, title, and length of service of the
person or persons employed by or
associated with the Fund or an
investment adviser of the Fund who are
primarily responsible for the day-to-day
management of the Fund’s portfolio
(‘‘Portfolio Manager’’).
Instructions.
1. This requirement does not apply to
a Money Market Fund.
2. If a committee, team, or other group
of persons associated with the Fund or
an investment adviser of the Fund is
jointly and primarily responsible for the
day-to-day management of the Fund’s
portfolio, information in response to
this Item is required for each member of
such committee, team, or other group. If
more than five persons are jointly and
primarily responsible for the day-to-day
management of the Fund’s portfolio, the
Fund need only provide information for
the five persons with the most
significant responsibility for the day-today management of the Fund’s portfolio.
Item 6. Purchase and Sale of Fund
Shares
(a) Purchase of Fund Shares. Disclose
the Fund’s minimum initial or
subsequent investment requirements.
(b) Sale of Fund Shares. Also disclose
that the Fund’s shares are redeemable
and briefly identify the procedures for
redeeming shares (e.g., on any business
day by written request, telephone, or
wire transfer).
(c) Exchange-Traded Funds. If the
Fund is an Exchange-Traded Fund,
(i) Specify the number of shares that
the Fund will issue (or redeem) in
exchange for the deposit or delivery of
basket assets (i.e., the securities or other
assets the Fund specifies each day in
name and number as the securities or
assets in exchange for which it will
issue or in return for which it will
redeem Fund shares) and explain that:
(A) Individual Fund shares may only
be purchased and sold on a national
securities exchange through a brokerdealer; and
(B) The price of Fund shares is based
on market price, and because ExchangeTraded Fund shares trade at market
prices rather than net asset value, shares
may trade at a price greater than net
asset value (premium) or less than net
asset value (discount); and
(ii) If the Fund issues shares in
creation units of not less than 25,000
shares each, the Fund may omit the
information required by Items 6(a) and
6(b).
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4592
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
Item 7. Tax Information
State, as applicable, that the Fund
intends to make distributions that may
be taxed as ordinary income or capital
gains or that the Fund intends to
distribute tax-exempt income. For a
Fund that holds itself out as investing
in securities generating tax-exempt
income, provide, as applicable, a
general statement to the effect that a
portion of the Fund’s distributions may
be subject to federal income tax.
day-to-day management of the Fund’s
portfolio, provide a brief description of
the person’s role on the committee,
team, or other group (e.g., lead member),
including a description of any
limitations on the person’s role and the
relationship between the person’s role
and the roles of other persons who have
responsibility for the day-to-day
management of the Fund’s portfolio.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 8. Financial Intermediary
Compensation
Include the following statement. A
Fund may modify the statement if the
modified statement contains comparable
information. A Fund may omit the
statement if neither the Fund nor any of
its related companies pay financial
intermediaries for the sale of Fund
shares or related services.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries.
If you purchase the Fund through a
broker-dealer or other financial
intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund
and its related companies may pay the
intermediary for the sale of Fund shares
and related services. These payments
may create a conflict of interest by
influencing the broker-dealer or other
intermediary and your salesperson to
recommend the Fund over another
investment. Ask your salesperson or
visit your financial intermediary’s Web
site for more information.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) An explanation that the price of
Fund shares is based on the Fund’s net
asset value and the method used to
value Fund shares (market price, fair
value, or amortized cost); except that if
the Fund is an Exchange-Traded Fund,
an explanation that the price of Fund
shares is based on market price.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Purchase of Fund Shares. Describe
the procedures for purchasing the
Fund’s shares.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Exchange-Traded Funds. If the
Fund is an Exchange-Traded Fund:
(1) The Fund may omit from the
prospectus the information required by
Items 11(a)(2), (b), and (c) if the Fund
issues or redeems Fund shares in
creation units of not less than 25,000
shares each; and
(2) Provide a table showing the
number of days the Market Price of the
Fund shares was greater than the Fund’s
net asset value and the number of days
it was less than the Fund’s net asset
value (i.e., premium or discount) for the
most recently completed calendar year,
and the most recently completed
calendar quarters since that year (or the
life of the Fund, if shorter). The Fund
may omit this table if the Fund provides
an Internet address at the Fund’s Web
site, which is publicly accessible, free of
charge, that investors can use to obtain
the premium/discount information
required in this Item.
Instructions.
1. Provide the information in tabular
form.
2. Express the information as a
percentage of the net asset value of the
Fund, using separate columns for the
number of days the Market Price was
greater than the Fund’s net asset value
and the number of days it was less than
the Fund’s net asset value. Round all
percentages to the nearest hundredth of
one percent.
3. Adjacent to the table, provide a
brief explanation that: Shareholders
may pay more than net asset value when
they buy Fund shares and receive less
than net asset value when they sell
Item 10. Management, Organization, and
Capital Structure
(a) Management.
(1) Investment Adviser.
(i) Provide the name and address of
each investment adviser of the Fund,
including sub-advisers. Describe the
investment adviser’s experience as an
investment adviser and the advisory
services that it provides to the Fund.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Portfolio Manager. For each
Portfolio Manager identified in response
to Item 5(b), state the Portfolio
Manager’s business experience during
the past 5 years. Include a statement,
adjacent to the foregoing disclosure, that
the SAI provides additional information
about the Portfolio Manager’s(s’)
compensation, other accounts managed
by the Portfolio Manager(s), and the
Portfolio Manager’s(s’) ownership of
securities in the Fund. If a Portfolio
Manager is a member of a committee,
team, or other group of persons
associated with the Fund or an
investment adviser of the Fund that is
jointly and primarily responsible for the
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
Item 11. Shareholder Information
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those shares, because shares are bought
and sold at current market prices.
4. Include a statement that the data
presented represents past performance
and cannot be used to predict future
results.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 14. Cover Page and Table of
Contents
(a) Front Cover Page. Include the
following information on the outside
front cover page of the SAI:
(1) The Fund’s name and the Class or
Classes, if any, to which the SAI relates.
If the Fund is a Series, also provide the
Registrant’s name.
(2) The exchange ticker symbol of the
Fund’s securities or, if the SAI relates to
one or more Classes of the Fund’s
securities, adjacent to each such Class,
the exchange ticker symbol of such
Class of the Fund’s securities. If the
Fund is an Exchange-Traded Fund, also
identify the principal U.S. market or
markets on which the Fund shares are
traded.
*
*
*
*
*
Item 27. Financial Statements
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Annual Report. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(7) Management’s Discussion of Fund
Performance. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) Provide a table showing the
number of days the Market Price of the
Fund shares was greater than the Fund’s
net asset value and the number of days
it was less than the Fund’s net asset
value (i.e., premium or discount) for the
most recently completed five fiscal
years (or the life of the Fund, if shorter).
The Fund may omit this table from the
annual report if the Fund provides an
Internet address at the Fund’s Web site,
which is publicly accessible, free of
charge, that investors can use to obtain
the premium/discount information
required in Item 11(g)(2).
Instructions.
1. Provide the information in tabular
form.
2. Express the information as a
percentage of the net asset value of the
Exchange-Traded Fund, using separate
columns for the number of days the
Market Price was greater than the
Fund’s net asset value and the number
of days it was less than the Fund’s net
asset value. Round all percentages to the
nearest hundredth of one percent.
3. Adjacent to the table, provide a
brief explanation that: Shareholders
may pay more than net asset value when
they buy Fund shares and receive less
than net asset value when they sell
E:\FR\FM\26JAR3.SGM
26JAR3
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
those shares, because shares are bought
and sold at current market prices.
4. Include a statement that the data
presented represents past performance
and cannot be used to predict future
results.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Annual and Semi-Annual Reports.
* * *
(1) Expense Example. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Instructions.
1. General.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) If the Fund is an Exchange-Traded
Fund:
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:50 Jan 23, 2009
Jkt 217001
(i) Modify the narrative explanation to
state that investors may pay brokerage
commissions on their purchases and
sales of Exchange-Traded Fund shares,
which are not reflected in the example;
and
(ii) If the Fund issues or redeems
shares in creation units of not less than
25,000 shares each, exclude any fees
charged for the purchase and
redemption of the Fund’s creation units.
*
*
*
*
*
14. Form N–4 (referenced in
§§ 239.17b and 274.11c) is amended by
revising the reference ‘‘Item 22(b)(ii) of
Form N–1A’’ to read ‘‘Item 27(b)(ii) of
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
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4593
Form N–1A’’ and by revising the
reference ‘‘Item 22(b)(ii) equation’’ to
read ‘‘Item 27(b)(ii) equation’’ in
Instruction 3 to Item 20(b)(ii).
Note: The text of Form N–4 does not, and
these amendments will not, appear in the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Dated: January 13, 2009.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–1035 Filed 1–23–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
E:\FR\FM\26JAR3.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 15 (Monday, January 26, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4546-4593]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-1035]
[[Page 4545]]
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Part III
Securities and Exchange Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, et al.
Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus Delivery Option for Registered
Open-End Management Investment Companies; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 15 / Monday, January 26, 2009 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 4546]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, and 274
[Release Nos. 33-8998; IC-28584; File No. S7-28-07]
RIN 3235-AJ44
Enhanced Disclosure and New Prospectus Delivery Option for
Registered Open-End Management Investment Companies
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission is adopting amendments
to the form used by mutual funds to register under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 and to offer their securities under the Securities
Act of 1933 in order to enhance the disclosures that are provided to
mutual fund investors. The amendments require key information to appear
in plain English in a standardized order at the front of the mutual
fund statutory prospectus. The Commission is also adopting rule
amendments that permit a person to satisfy its mutual fund prospectus
delivery obligations under section 5(b)(2) of the Securities Act by
sending or giving the key information directly to investors in the form
of a summary prospectus and providing the statutory prospectus on an
Internet Web site. Upon an investor's request, mutual funds are also
required to send the statutory prospectus to the investor. These
amendments are intended to improve mutual fund disclosure by providing
investors with key information in plain English in a clear and concise
format, while enhancing the means of delivering more detailed
information to investors. Finally, the Commission is adopting
additional amendments that are intended to result in the disclosure of
more useful information to investors who purchase shares of exchange-
traded funds on national securities exchanges.
DATES: Effective Date: March 31, 2009.
Compliance Date: See Part III.D. of this release for information on
compliance dates.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kieran G. Brown, Senior Counsel;
Sanjay Lamba, Senior Counsel; Devin F. Sullivan, Attorney; or Mark T.
Uyeda, Assistant Director, Office of Disclosure Regulation, at (202)
551-6784, or, with respect to exchange-traded funds, Adam B. Glazer,
Senior Counsel, Office of Regulatory Policy, at (202) 551-6792,
Division of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-5720.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission'') is adopting amendments to rules 159A,\1\ 482,\2\
485,\3\ 497,\4\ and 498 \5\ under the Securities Act of 1933
(``Securities Act'') and rules 304 \6\ and 401 \7\ of Regulation S-
T.\8\ The Commission is also adopting amendments to Form N-1A,\9\ the
form used by open-end management investment companies to register under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (``Investment Company Act'') and to
offer securities under the Securities Act; Form N-4,\10\ the form used
by insurance company separate accounts organized as unit investment
trusts and offering variable annuity contracts to register under the
Investment Company Act and to offer securities under the Securities
Act; and Form N-14,\11\ the form used by registered management
investment companies and business development companies to register
under the Securities Act securities to be issued in business
combinations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 17 CFR 230.159A.
\2\ 17 CFR 230.482.
\3\ 17 CFR 230.485.
\4\ 17 CFR 230.497.
\5\ 17 CFR 230.498.
\6\ 17 CFR 232.304.
\7\ 17 CFR 232.401.
\8\ 17 CFR 232.10 et seq.
\9\ 17 CFR 239.15A and 274.11A.
\10\ 17 CFR 239.17b and 274.11c.
\11\ 17 CFR 239.23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to Form N-1A
1. General Instructions to Form N-1A
2. Exchange Ticker Symbols
3. Information Required in Summary Section
a. Elimination of Proposed Portfolio Holdings Requirement
b. Order of Information
c. Investment Objectives and Goals
d. Fee Table
e. Investments, Risks, and Performance
f. Management
g. Purchase and Sale of Fund Shares
h. Tax Information
i. Financial Intermediary Compensation
4. Exchange-Traded Funds
a. Purchasing and Redeeming Shares
b. Total Return
c. Premium/Discount Information
5. Conforming and Technical Amendments to Form N-1A
B. New Delivery Option for Mutual Funds
1. Use of Summary Prospectus and Satisfaction of Statutory
Prospectus Delivery Requirements
2. Content of Summary Prospectus
a. General
b. Cover Page or Beginning of Summary Prospectus
c. Updating Requirements
3. Provision of Statutory Prospectus, SAI, and Shareholder
Reports
a. Documents Required To Be Provided on the Internet
b. Formatting Requirements for Information Provided on the
Internet
c. Technological Requirements for Online Information
d. Ability To Retain Documents
e. Safe Harbor for Temporary Noncompliance
f. Requirement To Send Documents
4. Incorporation by Reference
a. Permissible Incorporation by Reference
b. Effect of Incorporation by Reference
5. Filing Requirements for the Summary Prospectus
C. Technical and Conforming Amendments
D. Compliance Date
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. Cost/Benefit Analysis
VI. Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency, Competition, and
Capital Formation
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VIII. Statutory Authority
Text of Final Rule and Form Amendments
I. Executive Summary
Today, the Commission is adopting an improved mutual fund
disclosure framework that it originally proposed in November 2007.\12\
This improved disclosure framework is intended to provide investors
with information that is easier to use and more readily accessible,
while retaining the comprehensive quality of the information that is
available today. The foundation of the improved disclosure framework is
the provision to all investors of streamlined and user-friendly
information that is key to an investment decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Investment Company Act Release No. 28064 (Nov. 21, 2007)
[72 FR 67790 (Nov. 30, 2007)] (``Proposing Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To implement the new disclosure framework, we are adopting
amendments to Form N-1A that will require every prospectus to include a
summary section at the front of the prospectus, consisting of key
information about the fund, including investment objectives and
strategies, risks, costs, and performance. We are also adopting a new
option for satisfying prospectus delivery obligations with respect to
mutual fund securities under the Securities Act. Under the option, key
information will be sent or given to investors in the form of a summary
prospectus (``Summary Prospectus''), and the statutory prospectus will
be provided on an Internet Web site.\13\ Funds that select this option
will also be
[[Page 4547]]
required to send the statutory prospectus to the investor upon request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ A ``statutory prospectus'' is a prospectus that meets the
requirements of Section 10(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C.
77j(a)].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Commission is adopting amendments to Form N-1A
relating to exchange-traded funds (``ETFs'') that we proposed in a
separate release in March 2008.\14\ These amendments are intended to
result in the disclosure of more useful information to investors who
purchase shares of exchange-traded funds on national securities
exchanges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Investment Company Act Release No. 28193 (Mar. 11,
2008) [73 FR 14618 (Mar. 18, 2008)] (``ETF Proposing Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
Millions of individual Americans invest in shares of open-end
management investment companies (``mutual funds''),\15\ relying on
mutual funds for their retirement, their children's education, and
their other basic financial needs.\16\ These investors face a difficult
task in choosing among the more than 8,000 available mutual funds.\17\
Fund prospectuses, which have been criticized by investor advocates,
representatives of the fund industry, and others as being too long and
complicated, often prove difficult for investors to use efficiently in
comparing their many choices.\18\ Current Commission rules require
mutual fund prospectuses to contain key information about investment
objectives, risks, and expenses that, while important to investors, can
be difficult for investors to extract. Prospectuses are often long,
both because they contain a wealth of detailed information, which our
rules require, and because prospectuses for multiple funds are often
combined in a single document. Too frequently, the language of
prospectuses is complex and legalistic, and the presentation formats
make little use of graphic design techniques that would contribute to
readability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ An open-end management investment company is an investment
company, other than a unit investment trust or face-amount
certificate company, that offers for sale or has outstanding any
redeemable security of which it is the issuer. See Sections 4 and
5(a)(1) of the Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-4 and 80a-
5(a)(1)].
\16\ Investment Company Institute, 2008 Investment Company Fact
Book, at 70 (2008) (``2008 ICI Fact Book''), available at https://
www.ici.org/pdf/2008_factbook.pdf (88 million individual investors
own mutual funds).
\17\ Id. at 16 (in 2007, there were 8,752 mutual funds).
\18\ See, e.g., Don Phillips, Managing Director, Morningstar,
Inc., Transcript of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Interactive Data Roundtable, at 26 (June 12, 2006), available at
https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/xbrl/xbrlofficialtranscript0606.pdf
(``June 12 Roundtable Transcript'') (stating that current prospectus
is ``bombarding investors with way more information than they can
handle and that they can intelligently assimilate''). A Webcast
archive of the June 12 Interactive Data Roundtable is available at
https://www.connectlive.com/events/secxbrl/. See also Investment
Company Institute, Understanding Preferences for Mutual Fund
Information, at 8 (Aug. 2006), available at https://ici.org/pdf/rpt_
06_inv_prefs_summary.pdf (``ICI Investor Preferences Study'')
(noting that sixty percent of recent fund investors describe mutual
fund prospectuses as very or somewhat difficult to understand, and
two-thirds say prospectuses contain too much information);
Associated Press Online, Experts: Investors Face Excess Information
(May 25, 2005) (``There is broad agreement * * * that prospectuses
have too much information * * * to be useful.'' (quoting Mercer
Bullard, President, Fund Democracy, Inc.)); Thomas P. Lemke and
Gerald T. Lins, The ``Gift'' of Disclosure: A Suggested Approach for
Managed Investments, The Investment Lawyer, at 19 (Jan. 2001)
(stating that the fund prospectus ``typically contains more
information than the average investor needs'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Numerous commentators have suggested that investment information
that is key to an investment decision should be provided in a
streamlined document with other more detailed information provided
elsewhere.\19\ Furthermore, recent investor surveys indicate that
investors prefer to receive information in concise, user-friendly
formats.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See, e.g., Charles A. Jaffe, Improving Disclosure of Funds
Can Be Done, The Fort Worth Star-Telegram (May 7, 2006) (``Bring
back the profile prospectus, and make its use mandatory * * *. A two
page-summary of [the] key points [in the profile]--at the front of
the prospectus--would give investors the bare minimum of what they
should know out of the paperwork.''); Experts: Investors Face Excess
Information, supra note 18 (stating ``a possible middle ground in
the disclosure debate is to rely more heavily on so-called profile
documents which provide a two-page synopsis of a fund'' (attributing
statement to Mercer Bullard, President, Fund Democracy, Inc.));
Mutual Funds: A Review of the Regulatory Landscape, Hearing Before
the Subcomm. on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government Sponsored
Enterprises of the Comm. on Financial Services, U.S. House of
Representatives, 109th Cong. (May 10, 2005), at 24 (``To my mind, a
new and enhanced mutual fund prospectus should have two core
components. It should be short, addressing only the most important
factors about which typical fund investors care in making investment
decisions, and it should be supplemented by additional information
available electronically, specifically through the Internet, unless
an investor chooses to receive additional information through other
means.'' (Testimony of Barry P. Barbash, then Partner, Shearman &
Sterling LLP)); Thomas P. Lemke and Gerald T. Lins, The ``Gift'' of
Disclosure: A Suggested Approach for Managed Investments, supra note
18, at 19 (information that is important to investors includes goals
and investment policies, risks, costs, performance, and the identity
and background of the manager).
In addition, a mutual fund task force organized by the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (``NASD'') supported the use
of a ``profile plus'' document, on the Internet, that would include,
among other things, basic information about a fund's investment
strategies, risks, and total costs, with hyperlinks to additional
information in the prospectus. See NASD Mutual Fund Task Force,
Report of the Mutual Fund Task Force: Mutual Fund Distribution (Mar.
2005), available at https://www.finra.org/web/groups/rules_regs/
documents/rules_regs/p013690.pdf (``NASD Mutual Fund Task Force
Report''). The name of NASD has been changed to the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (``FINRA'').
\20\ See ICI Investor Preferences Study, supra note 18, at 29
(``Nearly nine in 10 recent fund investors say they prefer a summary
of the information they want to know before buying fund shares,
either alone or along with a detailed document * * *. Just 13
percent prefer to receive only a detailed document.''); Barbara
Roper and Stephen Brobeck, Consumer Federation of America, Mutual
Fund Purchase Practices, at 13-14 (June 2006), available at https://
www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/mutual_fund_survey_report.pdf (survey
respondents more likely to consult a fund summary document rather
than a prospectus or other written materials).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similar opinions were voiced at a roundtable held by the Commission
in June 2006, at which representatives from investor groups, the mutual
fund industry, analysts, and others discussed how the Commission could
change the mutual fund disclosure framework so that investors would be
provided with better information. Significant discussion at the
roundtable concerned the importance of providing mutual fund investors
with access to key fund data in a shorter, more easily understandable
format.\21\ The participants focused on the importance of providing
mutual fund investors with shorter disclosure documents, containing key
information, with more detailed disclosure documents available to
investors and others who choose to review additional information.\22\
There was consensus among the roundtable participants that the key
information that investors need to make an investment decision includes
information about a mutual fund's investment objectives and strategies,
risks, costs, and performance.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See, e.g., Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President and Chief Legal
Counsel, T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., June 12 Roundtable Transcript,
supra note 18, at 31 (``[S]hareholders prefer receiving a concise
summary of fund information before buying.'').
\22\ See, e.g., Don Phillips, Managing Director, Morningstar,
Inc., id. at 27 (stating that mutual fund investors need two
different documents, including a simplified print document and a
tagged electronic document); Paul Schott Stevens, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Investment Company Institute, id. at 72-73
(urging the Commission to consider permitting mutual funds to
``deliver a clear, concise disclosure document * * * much like the
profile prospectus'' with a statement that additional disclosure is
available on the funds' Web site or upon request in paper).
\23\ See, e.g., Barbara Roper, Director of Investor Protection,
Consumer Federation of America, id. at 20 (noting that there is
``agreement to the point of near unanimity about the basic factors
that investors should consider when selecting a mutual fund. These
closely track the content of the original fund profile with highest
priority given to investment objectives and strategies, risks,
costs, and past performance particularly as it relates to the
volatility of past returns.''). See also Paul G. Haaga, Jr.,
Executive Vice President, Capital Research and Management Company,
id. at 90 (stating that the Commission should ``specify some minimum
amounts of information'' to provide investors with ``something along
the lines of the [fund] profile''); Henry H. Hopkins, Vice President
and Chief Legal Counsel, T. Rowe Price Group, Inc., id. at 31 (``The
profile is an excellent, well organized disclosure document whose
content requirements were substantiated by SEC-sponsored focus
groups and an industry pilot program.'').
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[[Page 4548]]
The roundtable participants also discussed the potential benefits
of increased Internet availability of fund disclosure documents, which
include, among other things, facilitating comparisons among funds and
replacing ``one-size-fits-all'' disclosure with disclosure that each
investor can tailor to his or her own needs.\24\ In recent years,
access to the Internet has greatly expanded,\25\ and significant
strides have been made in the speed and quality of Internet
connections.\26\ The Commission has already harnessed the power of
these technological advances to provide better access to information in
a number of areas. Recently, for example, we created a program that
permits issuers, on a voluntary basis, to submit to the Commission
financial information and, in the case of mutual funds, key prospectus
information, in an interactive data format that facilitates automated
retrieval, analysis, and comparison of the information.\27\ More
recently, we proposed rules that would require mutual funds to provide
the risk/return summary section of their prospectuses, and companies to
provide their financial statements, to the Commission in interactive
data format.\28\ In addition, we recently adopted rules that provide
all shareholders with the ability to choose whether to receive proxy
materials in paper or via the Internet.\29\
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\24\ See, e.g., Paul Schott Stevens, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Investment Company Institute, id. at 70-71
(stating that the Internet can serve as ``far more than a stand-in
for paper documents * * *. It can * * * put investors in control
when it comes to information about their investments.''); Don
Phillips, Managing Director, Morningstar, Inc., id. at 49
(discussing ``the ability to use the Internet as a tool for
comparative shopping'').
\25\ Recent surveys show that Internet use among adults is at an
all time high with approximately three quarters of Americans having
access to the Internet. See A Typology of Information and Technology
Users, Pew Internet & American Life Project, at 2 (May 2007),
available at https://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_ICT_Typology.pdf;
Internet Penetration and Impact, Pew Internet & American Life
Project, at 3 (Apr. 2006), available at https://www.pewinternet.org/
pdfs/PIP_Internet_Impact.pdf. Further, while some have noted a
``digital divide'' for certain groups, see, e.g., Susannah Fox,
Digital Divisions, Pew Internet & American Life Project, at 1 (Oct.
5, 2005) (noting that certain groups lag behind in Internet usage,
including Americans age 65 and older, African-Americans, and those
with less education), others have noted that this divide may be
diminishing for those groups. See, e.g., Mutual Fund Shareholders'
Use of the Internet, 2006, Investment Company Institute, Research
Fundamentals, at 7 (Oct. 2006), available at https://www.ici.org/
stats/res/fm-v15n6.pdf (``Recent increases in Internet access among
older shareholders * * * have narrowed the generational gap
considerably. Today, shareholders age 65 or older are more than
twice as likely to have Internet access than in 2000.''); Michel
Marriott, Blacks Turn to Internet Highway, and Digital Divide Starts
to Close, The New York Times (Mar. 31, 2006), available at: https://
www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/us/
31divide.html?ex=1301461200&en=6fd4e942aaaa04ad&ei=5088 (``African-
Americans are steadily gaining access to and ease with the Internet,
signaling a remarkable closing of the `digital divide' that many
experts had worried would be a crippling disadvantage in achieving
success.'').
\26\ See John B. Horrigan, Home Broadband Adoption 2007, Pew
Internet & American Life Project, at 1 (June 2007), available at
https://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Broadband%202007.pdf (47% of
all adult Americans had a broadband connection at home as of early
2007).
\27\ See Investment Company Act Release No. 27884 (July 11,
2007) [72 FR 39290 (July 17, 2007)] (adopting rule amendments to
enable mutual funds voluntarily to submit supplemental tagged
information contained in the risk/return summary section of their
prospectuses); Securities Act Release No. 8529 (Feb. 3, 2005) [70 FR
6556 (Feb. 8, 2005)] (adopting rule amendments to enable registrants
voluntarily to submit supplemental tagged financial information).
\28\ Investment Company Act Release No. 28298 (June 10, 2008)
[73 FR 35442 (June 23, 2008)]; Securities Act Release No. 8924 (May
30, 2008) [73 FR 32794 (June 10, 2008)].
\29\ Exchange Act Release No. 56135 (July 26, 2007) [72 FR 42222
(Aug. 1, 2007)].
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As suggested by the participants at the June 2006 roundtable,
advances in technology also offer a promising means to address the
length and complexity of mutual fund prospectuses by streamlining the
key information that is provided to investors, ensuring that access to
the full wealth of information about a fund is immediately and easily
accessible, and providing the means to present all information about a
fund online in an interactive format that facilitates comparisons of
key information, such as expenses, across different funds and different
share classes of the same fund.\30\ Technology has the potential to
replace the current one-size-fits-all mutual fund prospectus with an
approach that allows investors, their financial intermediaries, third-
party analysts, and others to tailor the wealth of available
information to their particular needs and circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ A mutual fund may issue more than one class of shares that
represent interests in the same portfolio of securities with each
class, among other things, having a different arrangement for
shareholder services or the distribution of securities, or both. See
rule 18f-3 under the Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.18f-3].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In November 2007, the Commission proposed an improved mutual fund
disclosure framework that was intended to address the concerns that
have been raised about mutual fund prospectuses and to make use of
technological advances to enhance the provision of information to
mutual fund investors. The Commission received approximately 155
comment submissions.\31\ The commenters generally supported the
proposals, with some commenters suggesting specific changes to the
proposals. Commission staff also arranged for investor focus group
testing of the proposed Summary Prospectus.\32\ Today, the Commission
is adopting the proposed amendments with modifications to respond to
the focus group testing and to address commenters' recommendations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ In response to the ETF Proposing Release, the Commission
received seven comment submissions that addressed the proposed ETF
amendments to Form N-1A.
\32\ The Commission engaged a consultant to conduct focus group
interviews and a telephone survey concerning investors' views and
opinions about various disclosure documents filed by companies,
including mutual funds. During this process, investors participating
in focus groups were asked questions about a hypothetical Summary
Prospectus. Investors participating in the telephone survey were
asked questions relating to several disclosure documents, including
mutual fund prospectuses. We have placed in the comment file
(available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-28-07/s72807.shtml) for
the proposed rule the following documents from the investor testing
that relate to mutual fund prospectuses and the proposed Summary
Prospectus: (1) The consultant's report concerning focus group
testing of the hypothetical Summary Prospectus and related
disclosures (``Focus Group Report''); (2) transcripts of focus
groups relating to the hypothetical Summary Prospectus and related
disclosures (``Focus Group Transcripts''); (3) disclosure examples
used in these focus groups; and (4) an excerpt from the consultant's
report concerning the telephone survey of individual investors
(``Telephone Survey Report'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are adopting amendments to Form N-1A that will require every
prospectus to include a summary section at the front of the prospectus,
consisting of key information about the fund, including investment
objectives and strategies, risks, costs, and performance. This key
information is required to be presented in plain English in a
standardized order. Our intent is that this information will be
presented succinctly, in three or four pages, at the front of the
prospectus.
We are also adopting a new option for satisfying prospectus
delivery obligations with respect to mutual fund securities under the
Securities Act. Under the option, key information will be sent or given
to investors in the form of a Summary Prospectus, and the statutory
prospectus will be provided on an Internet Web site. Upon an investor's
request, funds will also be required to send the statutory prospectus
to the investor. Our intent in providing this option is that funds take
full advantage of the Internet's search and retrieval capabilities in
order to enhance the provision of information to mutual fund investors.
The disclosure framework that we are adopting has the potential to
[[Page 4549]]
revolutionize the provision of information to the millions of investors
who rely on mutual funds for their most basic financial needs. It is
intended to help investors who are overwhelmed by the choices among
thousands of available funds described in lengthy and legalistic
documents to access readily key information that is important to an
informed investment decision. At the same time, by harnessing the power
of technology to deliver information in better, more useable formats,
the disclosure framework can help those investors, their
intermediaries, third-party analysts, the financial press, and others
to locate and compare facts and data from the wealth of more detailed
disclosures that are available.
III. Discussion
A. Amendments to Form N-1A
The Commission is adopting, with modifications to address
commenters' suggestions, amendments to Form N-1A that will require the
statutory prospectus of every mutual fund to include a summary section
at the front of the prospectus consisting of key information presented
in plain English in a standardized order.\33\ Commenters and investors
participating in focus groups arranged by Commission staff generally
supported the proposed summary presentation and agreed that it will
address investors' preferences for concise, user-friendly
information.\34\ The summary section will provide investors with key
information about the fund that investors can use to evaluate and
compare the fund. This summary will be located in a standardized,
easily accessible place and will be available to all investors,
regardless of whether the fund uses a Summary Prospectus and whether
the investor is reviewing the prospectus in a paper or electronic
format.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ The Commission is also adopting amendments to Form N-1A
relating to exchange-traded funds. See discussion infra Part
III.A.4.
\34\ See, e.g., Letter of AARP (Feb. 28, 2008) (``AARP
Letter''); Letter of Capital Research and Management Company (Feb.
28, 2008) (``Capital Research Letter''); Letter of Fund Democracy,
Consumer Federation of America, and Consumer Action (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``Fund Democracy et al. Letter''); Letter of Investment Company
Institute (Feb. 28, 2008) (``ICI Letter''); Letter of Mutual Fund
Directors Forum (Feb. 28, 2008) (``MFDF Letter''); Letter of
Morningstar, Inc. (Feb. 27, 2008) (``Morningstar Letter''); Focus
Group Report, supra note 32, at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As in our proposal, the information required in the summary section
of the prospectus will be the same as that required in the new Summary
Prospectus, and it is key information that is important to an
investment decision. We believe, and commenters generally agreed,\35\
that the key information that is important to an investment decision is
the same, whether an investor is reviewing the summary section of a
statutory prospectus or a short-form disclosure document. For that
reason, we are requiring the same information in the summary section of
the statutory prospectus and in the Summary Prospectus. In each case,
our intent is that funds prepare a concise summary (on the order of
three or four pages) that will provide key information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See, e.g., Letter of Bo Li (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Bo Li
Letter''); Letter of Data Communiqu[eacute], Inc. (Feb. 27, 2008)
(``Data Communiqu[eacute] Letter''); Letter of Firehouse
Communications LLC (Feb. 29, 2008) (``Firehouse Letter''); Letter of
L.A. Schnase (Feb. 26, 2008) (``Schnase Letter''). But see Letter of
Kathleen K. Clarke (Mar. 4, 2008) (``Clarke Letter'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, with the exception of some information that is common
to multiple funds, we are requiring, as proposed, that the summary
section be presented separately for each fund covered by a multiple
fund prospectus and that the information for multiple funds not be
integrated.\36\ This requirement is intended to assist investors in
finding important information regarding the particular fund in which
they are interested. Multiple fund prospectuses contribute
substantially to prospectus length and complexity, which act as
barriers to understanding. We have concluded that requiring a self-
contained summary section for each fund will significantly aid
investors' ability to use multiple fund prospectuses effectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N-1A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is committed to encouraging statutory prospectuses
that are simpler, clearer, and more useful to investors. The prospectus
summary section is intended to provide investors with streamlined
disclosure of key mutual fund information at the front of the statutory
prospectus, in a standardized order that facilitates comparisons across
funds. We are adopting the following amendments to Form N-1A in order
to implement the summary section.
1. General Instructions to Form N-1A
We are adopting, substantially as proposed, amendments to the
General Instructions to Form N-1A to address the new summary section of
the statutory prospectus. These amendments address plain English and
organizational requirements.
Plain English
We are amending, as proposed, the General Instructions to state
that the summary section of the prospectus must be provided in plain
English under rule 421(d) under the Securities Act.\37\ Rule 421(d)
requires an issuer to use plain English principles in the organization,
language, and design of the front and back cover pages, the summary,
and the risk factors sections of its prospectus.\38\ The amended
instruction will serve as a reminder that the new prospectus summary
section is subject to rule 421(d). The use of plain English principles
in the new summary section will further our goal of encouraging funds
to create useable summaries at the front of their prospectuses. The
prospectus, in its entirety, also will remain subject to the
requirement that the information be presented in a clear, concise, and
understandable manner.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ General Instruction B.4.(c) of Form N-1A; rule 421(d) [17
CFR 230.421(d)].
Commenters generally supported the use of plain English in the
summary section. See, e.g., AARP Letter, supra note 34; Letter of
CFA Institute (Feb. 28, 2008) (``CFA Institute Letter''); Letter of
Committee on Federal Regulation of Securities of the American Bar
Association's Section of Business Law (Mar. 17, 2008) (``ABA
Letter''); Letter of Investment Company Institute and Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association (Feb. 28, 2008) (``ICI
and SIFMA Letter'').
\38\ Rule 421(d) lists the following plain English principles:
(1) Short sentences; (2) definite, concrete, everyday words; (3)
active voice; (4) tabular presentation or bullet lists for complex
material, wherever possible; (5) no legal jargon or highly technical
business terms; and (6) no multiple negatives.
\39\ Pursuant to rule 421(b) [17 CFR 230.421(b)], the following
standards must be used when preparing prospectuses: (1) present
information in clear, concise sections, paragraphs, and sentences;
(2) use descriptive headings and subheadings; (3) avoid frequent
reliance on glossaries or defined terms as the primary means of
explaining information in the prospectus; and (4) avoid legal and
highly technical business terminology. We note that these standards
provide funds with flexibility, for example, in determining whether
or not to use headings in a question-and-answer format.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Organizational Requirements
We are also adopting amendments to the organizational requirements
of the General Instructions, with one modification to address
commenters' suggestions. The amendments will require mutual funds to
disclose the summary information in numerical order at the front of the
prospectus and not to precede this information with any information
other than the cover page or table of contents.\40\ Commenters
generally supported standardizing the order and content of the summary
section, agreeing that a standardized summary section will enhance
investor understanding and the ability to compare funds.\41\
Information included
[[Page 4550]]
in the summary section need not be repeated elsewhere in the
prospectus. While a fund may continue to include information in the
prospectus that is not required, a fund may not include any such
additional information in the summary section of the prospectus.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ General Instruction C.3.(a) to Form N-1A.
\41\ See, e.g., Letter of Evergreen Investments (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``Evergreen Letter''); Letter of Financial Services Institute (Feb.
28, 2008) (``Financial Services Institute Letter'').
\42\ General Instruction C.3.(b) of Form N-1A. See, e.g., CFA
Institute Letter, supra note 37; Letter of Great-West Retirement
Services (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Great-West Letter''); ICI Letter, supra
note 34; Letter of The Vanguard Group, Inc. (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``Vanguard Letter'') (supporting prohibition on including
information in the summary section that is not required).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, we are, with one exception, requiring as proposed
that a multiple fund prospectus present the summary information for
each fund sequentially and not integrate the information for more than
one fund.\43\ That is, a multiple fund prospectus will be required to
present all of the summary information for a particular fund together,
followed by all of the summary information for each additional fund.
For example, a multiple fund prospectus will not be permitted to
present the investment objectives for several funds followed by the fee
tables for several funds. A multiple fund prospectus will also be
required to identify clearly the name of the particular fund at the
beginning of the summary information for that fund.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N-1A. See supra
note 36 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many commenters agreed that multiple fund prospectuses should
present the summary information for each fund separately.\44\ Some
commenters stated that requiring a separate summary for each fund will
better achieve the Commission's goal of keeping summaries short, which
should help facilitate comparisons across funds.\45\ Commenters also
stated that multiple fund prospectuses often confuse investors and make
reviewing key information for a single fund more difficult.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See, e.g., CFA Institute Letter, supra note 37; Letter of
Coalition of Mutual Fund Investors (Feb. 13, 2008) (``CMFI
Letter''); Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34; Evergreen
Letter, supra note 41; MFDF Letter, supra note 34; Letter of the
National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``NAPFA Letter''); Letter of Oppenheimer Funds (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``Oppenheimer Letter'').
\45\ See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34;
Data Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35. See also ICI Letter,
supra note 34 (stating that some of its members believe that
requiring a separate summary for each fund will better facilitate
the Commission's goals of keeping documents short and facilitating
comparisons across funds).
\46\ See, e.g., Data Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35;
CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A number of commenters, however, expressed reservations about the
Commission's proposal to prohibit multiple fund summary sections,
requesting that the Commission permit integrated summaries for multiple
funds in at least some circumstances.\47\ Some commenters suggested
that integrated summary information would allow investors to better
compare all funds within a fund family, or at least certain categories
of funds within a fund family.\48\ Categories of funds cited included
international funds, asset allocation funds, and U.S. Treasury
Funds.\49\ In addition, some commenters argued that prohibiting
multiple fund summaries would lead to unnecessary duplication of
information and longer statutory prospectuses.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See, e.g., Letter of AIM Investments (Feb. 27, 2008) (``AIM
Letter'') (favoring integrated summaries for target date, asset
allocation or lifestyle funds, and variable annuity funds); Capital
Research Letter, supra note 34 (favoring integrated summaries for
target date and variable annuity funds).
\48\ See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Letter of American
Century Investments (Feb. 28, 2008) (``American Century Letter'');
Clarke Letter, supra note 35; ICI Letter, supra note 34; Letter of
Putnam Investments (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Putnam Letter''); Letter of
Russell Investments (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Russell Letter'').
\49\ See, e.g., Letter of T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (Feb.
28, 2008) (``T. Rowe Letter'') (favoring integrated summaries for
certain categories of funds and citing focus group research
conducted by T. Rowe Price concerning integrated versus single-fund
summaries).
\50\ See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; American Century
Letter, supra note 48; Letter of Dechert LLP (Mar. 3, 2008)
(``Dechert Letter''); Putnam Letter, supra note 48; Russell Letter,
supra note 48. See also ICI Letter, supra note 34 (members split,
with some noting that an integrated summary may be more useful to
investors in certain circumstances, in particular for groups of
funds an investor may wish to compare, and others believing that a
separate document for each fund would better accomplish goals of
keeping the document short and facilitating comparisons across
funds).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A number of investors in our focus groups expressed the view that
multiple fund presentations of mutual fund information could be helpful
in facilitating useful comparisons among funds.\51\ Some of these
investors stated that multiple fund presentations could be used as a
screening tool to determine which funds to research in more detail.\52\
Some investors in our focus groups, however, indicated that combining
too many funds within a single summary can result in confusing
complexity.\53\ The investors in our focus groups did not express a
consensus on a specific limit on the number of funds or page length
that would be appropriate in multiple fund presentations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See Focus Group Report, supra note 32, at 9.
\52\ See Focus Group Transcripts, supra note 32, at 20.
\53\ Id. at 19 (``I thought there were too many in the [multiple
fund prospectus]. It just really makes your head spin when you have
to read all that.''), 22, 46.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we believe that multiple fund presentations can, in limited
circumstances, be useful in helping investors to compare funds, we have
determined that prohibiting multiple fund summary sections is more
consistent with the goal of achieving concise, readable summaries for
investors. The requirement that summary information be separately
presented for each fund in a multiple fund prospectus is intended to
address the problem of lengthy and complex multiple fund prospectuses
in the least intrusive manner possible. Multiple fund prospectuses
contribute substantially to prospectus length and complexity, which act
as barriers to investor understanding. We have concluded that
permitting information for multiple funds to be integrated in the
summary section would undermine our goal of providing mutual fund
investors with concise and readable key information.
We note, however, that our rules do not restrict in any way the use
of multiple fund presentations in advertising and sales materials,
whether those materials are provided along with the Summary Prospectus
or separately.\54\ Funds have complete flexibility to prepare and
present comparative information to investors regarding any grouping of
multiple funds that they believe is useful, and also to provide
automated tools on their Web sites permitting investors to choose which
funds to compare. As a result, we do not believe that the prohibition
on multiple fund summaries in the statutory prospectus will impair in
any significant manner funds' ability to provide useful, comparative
information to investors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See rule 482 under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.482] and
rule 34b-1 under the Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.34b-1]
(investment company advertising rules).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are adopting one exception to the requirement that multiple fund
prospectuses not integrate the summary information for more than one
fund in order to eliminate duplicative information and reduce
prospectus length. Two commenters recommended that the Commission
permit summary information that is identical for multiple funds to be
presented once, at the end of all the individual summaries within a
multiple fund statutory prospectus.\55\ We agree with these commenters
that permitting integration of information that is likely to be uniform
for multiple funds will further our goal of concise, user-friendly
summary sections. Therefore, a multiple fund prospectus
[[Page 4551]]
will be permitted to integrate the information required by any of new
Item 6 (purchase and sale of fund shares), Item 7 (tax information),
and Item 8 (financial intermediary compensation) if it is identical for
all funds covered in the prospectus.\56\ This information is often
uniform across multiple funds unlike, for example, information about
investment objectives, costs, performance, or portfolio managers. If
the information required by any of Items 6 through 8 is integrated, the
integrated information will be required to immediately follow the
separate individual fund summaries containing the other non-integrated
information. In addition, a statement containing the following
information will be required in each individual fund summary section in
the location where the information that is integrated, and presented
later, would have appeared.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See Capital Research Letter, supra note 34; ICI Letter,
supra note 34.
\56\ General Instruction C.3.(c)(iii) of Form N-1A. This
exception will not be available to Summary Prospectuses delivered
pursuant to new rule 498 because a Summary Prospectus may describe
only one fund. See discussion infra Part III.B.2.a.
For important information about [purchase and sale of fund
shares,] [tax information,] and [financial intermediary
compensation], please turn to [identify section heading and page
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
number of prospectus].
As proposed, the instructions will permit a fund with multiple
share classes, each with its own cost structure, to present the summary
information separately for each class, to integrate the information for
multiple classes, or to use another presentation that is consistent
with disclosing the summary information in a standard order at the
beginning of the prospectus.\57\ Commenters generally supported, or did
not express a view with respect to, allowing multiple class summary
sections; and some commenters noted that such sections would assist
investors in choosing the class most appropriate for their
circumstances.\58\ We are not requiring the integration of information
for multiple classes of a fund, which two commenters argued was
important to facilitate cost comparisons.\59\ We are retaining
flexibility in this area because we believe that whether a multiple
class presentation is helpful or overwhelming depends on the particular
circumstances. We note, however, that our ongoing interactive data
initiative is intended, among other things, to facilitate cost
comparisons by investors across multiple classes of a single fund, as
well as across different funds.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ General Instruction C.3.(c)(ii) of Form N-1A.
\58\ See, e.g., Clarke Letter, supra note 35; Data
Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35; Great-West Letter, supra
note 42; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44.
\59\ See, e.g., Fund Democracy et al. Letter, supra note 34;
Letter of Brock Hastie (Jan. 8, 2008) (``Hastie Letter'').
\60\ See supra note 28 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Page Limits
As proposed, we are not imposing page limits on the summary
section. We emphasize, however, that it is our intent that funds
prepare a concise summary (on the order of three or four pages) that
will provide key information. Commenters differed regarding whether the
Commission should impose page limits on the summary.
Several commenters supported page limits. One commenter expressed
concern that, in the absence of a page limit, the summary section would
tend to expand over time, which would undermine its usefulness.\61\
Another commenter noted that, absent page limits, lengths of summary
sections would vary widely, hindering investors' ability to compare
funds.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ See Letter of Independent Directors Council (Feb. 15, 2008)
(``IDC Letter'').
\62\ See Firehouse Letter, supra note 35. See also Letter of
Jeffrey C. Keil (Jan. 9, 2008) (``Keil Letter'') (suggesting that
summaries might garner more investor attention if limited to two or
three pages).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we share these commenters' concerns, especially with respect
to the possibility of summary sections getting longer over time, we
believe that these concerns are outweighed by the concerns of other
commenters that page limits could constrain appropriate disclosure and
lead funds to omit material information.\63\ We also agree with a
commenter who noted that the prohibition of multiple fund summary
sections should help to limit their length.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See, e.g., Letter of Janus Capital Group (Feb. 28, 2008)
(``Janus Letter''); CMFI Letter, supra note 44.
\64\ See Data Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elimination of Separate Purchase and Redemption Document
As proposed, we are eliminating the provisions of Form N-1A that
permit a fund to omit detailed information about purchase and
redemption procedures from the prospectus and to provide this
information in a separate document that is incorporated into and
delivered with the prospectus, as well as a similar provision in the
requirements for the statement of additional information (``SAI'').\65\
We have concluded that this option is unnecessary in light of the new
Summary Prospectus which could be used, at a fund's option, along with
any additional sales materials, including a document describing
purchase and redemption procedures.\66\ The elimination of these
provisions does not otherwise alter the information about purchase and
redemption procedures that must appear in the fund's prospectus and
SAI, and this information will continue to be required in those
documents.
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\65\ Instruction 6 to current Item 1(b) of Form N-1A; current
Item 6(g) of Form N-1A; Instruction to current Item 18(a) of Form N-
1A.
\66\ See discussion infra Part III.B.1. Most commenters did not
address this proposed change. But see Clarke Letter, supra note 35
(supporting change); Schnase Letter, supra note 35 (opposing
change).
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Variable Contract and Retirement Plan Funds
Finally, we are modifying the proposal to permit funds that are
used as investment options for retirement plans and variable insurance
contracts to modify or omit certain information required in the new
summary section. This modification addresses commenters' concerns that
certain information is not relevant to those funds.\67\ Specifically,
we are amending the General Instructions to Form N-1A to permit funds
that are used as investment options for retirement plans and variable
insurance contracts to modify or omit the information required by new
summary section Item 6 (purchase and sale of fund shares).\68\ Existing
Form N-1A permits funds that are used as investment options for
retirement plans and variable insurance contracts to modify or omit
certain information regarding the purchase and sale of fund shares that
is not relevant in these contexts.\69\ The amendment we are making
extends the same treatment to the purchase and sale information in the
new summary section.
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\67\ See Letter of EQ Advisors Trust/AXA Premier VIP Trust (Feb.
28, 2008) (``EQ/AXA Letter''); Letter of Committee of Annuity
Insurers (Feb. 28, 2008) (``CAI Letter'').
\68\ General Instruction C.3.(d)(i) of Form N-1A.
\69\ General Instruction C.3.(d)(i) of existing Form N-1A. We
note that Item 7 of the summary section, which requires tax
information that may not be relevant in the context of retirement
plans and variable insurance contracts, expressly states that the
disclosures are only required to be made, as applicable.
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2. Exchange Ticker Symbols
We requested comment on whether we should require or permit a fund
to include its ticker symbol in the summary, or on the front or back
cover page of the statutory prospectus or SAI or elsewhere. Many
commenters suggested that the Commission should require or permit funds
to disclose their exchange ticker symbols.\70\ We agree
[[Page 4552]]
with these commenters that requiring exchange ticker symbols to be
included in fund disclosure documents would make it easier for
investors to find information about particular funds and share classes
of funds. Accordingly, we are requiring that a fund include its
exchange ticker symbol on the cover pages of the statutory prospectus
and SAI.\71\ Specifically, a fund will be required to disclose the
exchange ticker symbol of the fund's shares or, if the prospectus or
SAI relate to one or more classes of the fund's shares, adjacent to
each such class, the exchange ticker symbol of that class.
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\70\ See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note 44; Data
Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35; Firehouse Letter, supra
note 35; Hastie Letter, supra note 59; Letter of William E. Kent
(Dec. 26, 2007) (``Kent Letter''); NAPFA Letter, supra note 44;
Letter of Art Ticknor (Feb. 6, 2008) (``Ticknor Letter'').
\71\ Item 1(a)(2) of Form N-1A; Item 14(a)(2) of Form N-1A.
Exchange ticker symbols will also be required on the cover page, or
at the beginning of, the Summary Prospectus. Rule 498(b)(1)(ii).
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3. Information Required in Summary Section
We are adopting the required content of the summary section
substantially as proposed, except that, having considered commenters'
concerns and the views of investors expressed in focus groups, we have
determined not to require disclosure of a fund's portfolio holdings.
The summary section of a mutual fund statutory prospectus will consist
of the following information: (1) Investment objectives; (2) costs; (3)
principal investment strategies, risks, and performance; (4) investment
advisers and portfolio managers; (5) brief purchase and sale and tax
information; and (6) financial intermediary compensation. These items
will appear in the same order that we proposed. We have modified the
requirements for some items to address comments and views expressed in
the focus groups.
a. Elimination of Proposed Portfolio Holdings Requirement
The Commission has determined not to require the summary section to
include the list of the fund's 10 largest holdings which we
proposed.\72\ As proposed, the top 10 holdings list would have been
updated in the statutory prospectus on an annual basis and in the
Summary Prospectus on a quarterly basis.\73\
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\72\ Proposed Item 5 of Form N-1A.
\73\ Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C.
77j(a)(3)] generally requires that when a prospectus is used more
than nine months after the effective date of the registration
statement, the information in the prospectus must be as of a date
not more than sixteen months prior to such use. The effect of this
provision is to require mutual funds to update their prospectuses
annually to reflect current cost, performance, and other financial
information. See proposed rule 498(b)(2)(iii) (proposed Summary
Prospectus quarterly updating requirement).
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Commenters were split regarding whether the top 10 portfolio
holdings should be required in the summary section. We are persuaded by
the commenters who pointed out the limited utility of the proposed top
10 holdings list.\74\ Commenters expressed the view that top 10
holdings information may mislead investors because the top 10 holdings
may not accurately represent a fund's overall holdings \75\ and because
the top 10 holdings information may become stale.\76\ Commenters also
pointed out that portfolio holdings information is already widely
available through other sources, such as shareholder reports and other
Commission filings,\77\ as well as fund Web sites and sales
materials.\78\
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\74\ See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; Letter of Cornell
Securities Law Clinic (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Cornell Law Clinic
Letter''); Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Letter of Foreside
Compliance Services, LLC (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Foreside Letter'');
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell Letter, supra note 48.
Other commenters supported including the top 10 portfolio
holdings in the summary section. See, e.g., CMFI Letter, supra note
44; Data Communiqu[eacute] Letter, supra note 35; Firehouse Letter,
supra note 35; Letter of Jill Gross (Feb. 28, 2008); Letter of
Richard K. Hopkins (Feb. 15, 2008) (``Hopkins Letter''); Letter of
Richard McCormick (Feb. 11, 2008) (``McCormick Letter''); Letter of
William Mahavier (Feb. 10, 2008) (``Mahavier Letter''); Letter of
Dan Meador (Feb. 12, 2008); NAPFA Letter, supra note 44; Letter of
Bruce R. Bent (Feb. 28, 2008) (``Bent Letter'').
\75\ See, e.g., Dechert Letter, supra note 50 (top 10 holdings
information could mislead investors of a diversified fund where top
10 holdings represent a relatively small percentage of the fund's
holdings); ICI Letter, supra note 34 (noting that a fund's top 10
holdings may be misleading for funds in a master-feeder structure,
funds of funds, fixed income funds, index funds, money market funds,
exchange-traded funds, and new funds); Letter of New York City Bar
(Feb. 25, 2008) (``NYC Bar Letter'') (arguing that for certain types
of funds, such as money market funds, fixed income funds, and index
funds, top 10 holdings information may be misleading); Letter of
Leslie L. Ogg (Feb. 1, 2008) (``Ogg Letter'') (noting that top 10
holdings information can be misleading for multi-manager funds,
funds of funds, long-short funds, and funds using derivative
instruments).
\76\ See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; CAI Letter, supra
note 67; Capital Research Letter, supra note 34; Clarke Letter,
supra note 35; Dechert Letter, supra note 50; ICI Letter, supra note
34; IDC Letter, supra note 61; Janus Letter, supra note 63; NYC Bar
Letter, supra note 75; Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Russell
Letter, supra note 48.
\77\ Form N-CSR [17 CFR 249.331; 17 CFR 274.128] (form used by
investment companies semi-annually to file certified shareholder
reports); Form N-Q [17 CFR 249.332; 17 CFR 274.130] (form used by
investment companies to file schedule of portfolio holdings for
first and third quarters).
\78\ See, e.g., AIM Letter, supra note 47; EQ/AXA Letter, supra
note 67; Evergreen Letter, supra note 41; Russell Letter, supra note
48; T. Rowe Letter, supra note 49.
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We continue to believe that information concerning a fund's
portfolio holdings may provide investors with a greater understanding
of a fund's stated investment objectives and strategies and may assist
investors in making more informed asset allocation decisions. In light
of the limited utility of top 10 holdings information, however, and the
widespread availability of portfolio holdings information from other
sources, we have determined not to require this information in the
summary section. Some commenters and investors in our focus groups
suggested that we instead require disclosure about the current
allocation of a fund's portfolio by asset type, such as a pie chart
that would graphically display this information.\79\ We have determined
not to require this information because we have concluded that it is
subject to the same concerns about staleness as top 10 holdings
information and because of the widespread availability of portfolio
holdings information from other sources. Nonetheless, where a fund's
asset allocation strategy is a principal investment strategy of the
fund, the fund should clearly disclose this strategy,\80\ and we would
encourage the use of graphical representations as a potentially helpful
communications tool.
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\79\ See, e.g., Cornell Law Clinic Letter, supra note 74;
Oppenheimer Letter, supra note 44; Focus Group Report, supra note
32, at 6.
\80\ Items 4(a) and 9 of Form N-1A (requiring disclosure of
principal investment strategies).
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