Interactive Data for Mutual Fund Risk/Return Summary, 7748-7776 [E9-3359]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 32 / Thursday, February 19, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, and 274
[Release Nos. 33–9006, 34–59391, 39–2462,
IC–28617; File Number S7–12–08]
RIN 3235–AK13
Interactive Data for Mutual Fund Risk/
Return Summary
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AGENCY: Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
Table of Contents
SUMMARY: We are adopting rule
amendments requiring mutual funds to
provide risk/return summary
information in a form that is intended
to improve its usefulness to investors.
Under the rules, risk/return summary
information could be downloaded
directly into spreadsheets, analyzed in a
variety of ways using commercial offthe-shelf software, and used within
investment models in other software
formats. Mutual funds will provide the
risk/return summary section of their
prospectuses to the Commission and on
their Web sites in interactive data
format using the eXtensible Business
Reporting Language (‘‘XBRL’’). The
interactive data will be provided as
exhibits to registration statements and
as exhibits to prospectuses with risk/
return summary information that varies
from the registration statement. The
rules are intended not only to make
risk/return summary information easier
for investors to analyze but also to assist
in automating regulatory filings and
business information processing.
Interactive data has the potential to
increase the speed, accuracy, and
usability of mutual fund disclosure, and
eventually reduce costs. We also are
adopting rules to permit investment
companies to submit portfolio holdings
information in our interactive data
voluntary program without being
required to submit other financial
information.
DATES: Effective Date: July 15, 2009.
Compliance Date: January 1, 2011.
Section II.H. of this release contains
information on the effective date and
the compliance date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brent J. Fields, Assistant Director, Office
of Disclosure and Review, Mark H.
Berman, Senior Special Counsel, Office
of Special Projects, Tara R. Buckley,
Senior Counsel, Office of Chief Counsel,
Deborah D. Skeens, Senior Counsel, and
Alberto H. Zapata, Senior Counsel,
Office of Disclosure Regulation,
Division of Investment Management, at
(202) 551–6784, Securities and
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Exchange Commission, 100 F Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20549–5720.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) is adopting
amendments to rules 485 1 and 497 2
under the Securities Act of 1933
(‘‘Securities Act’’), rules 11,3 202,4 401,5
and 405 6 of Regulation S–T,7 and Form
N–1A 8 under the Securities Act and the
Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Company Act’’).9
Executive Summary
I. Introduction and Backgroud
A. Commission Initiatives to Update the
Public Disclosure Process
B. Current Filing Technology and
Interactive Data
II. Discussion
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
B. Content and Submission Requirements
for Interactive Risk/Return Summary
Information
C. Web Site Posting of Interactive Data
D. Consequences of Non-Compliance and
Hardship Exemption
E. Interactive Data List of Tags and
Commission Viewer
F. Application of Federal Securities Laws
G. Changes to the Voluntary Program
H. Compliance Date
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
IV. Cost/Benefit Analysis
V. Consideration of Burden on Competition
and Promotion of Efficiency,
Competition, and Capital Formation
VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VII. Statutory Authority
Text of Rule and Form Amendments
Executive Summary
The principal elements of the rule
amendments we are adopting today are
as follows:
• Open-end management investment
companies (‘‘mutual funds’’) 10 must
submit to the Commission a new exhibit
with their risk/return summary
1 17
CFR 230.485.
CFR 230.497.
3 17 CFR 232.11.
4 17 CFR 232.202.
5 17 CFR 232.401.
6 The Commission recently added new rule 405
to Regulation S–T [17 CFR 232.405] in a separate
release. See Securities Act Release No. 9002 (Jan.
30, 2009) [74 FR 6776 (Feb. 10, 2009)] (‘‘Interactive
Data Adopting Release’’).
7 17 CFR 232.10 et seq.
8 17 CFR 239.15A and 274.11A.
9 The Commission proposed these rule and form
amendments in June 2008. See Securities Act
Release No. 8929 (June 10, 2008) [73 FR 35442 (June
23, 2008)] (‘‘Proposing Release’’).
10 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)].
2 17
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information in interactive data format,
beginning with initial registration
statements, and post-effective
amendments that are annual updates to
effective registration statements that
become effective after January 1, 2011.11
• An interactive data file submitted
with a registration statement must be
filed as a post-effective amendment
under rule 485(b) under the Securities
Act 12 and must be filed after
effectiveness of the related filing, but no
later than 15 business days after the
effective date of the related filing. An
interactive data file required to be
submitted with a form of prospectus
filed pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) under
the Securities Act may be submitted
with the filing or subsequent thereto,
but no later than 15 business days after
the filing made pursuant to rule 497.
• Risk/return summary information
in interactive data format must be
provided as an exhibit identified in
General Instruction C.3.(g).(iv) of Form
N–1A.13
• The rules do not alter the
requirements to provide risk/return
summary information with the
traditional format filings.14
• A mutual fund required to provide
risk/return summary information in
interactive data format to the
Commission also is required to post that
information in interactive data format
on its Web site not later than the end of
the calendar day it submitted or was
required to submit the interactive data
11 We have adjusted the compliance date to
provide mutual funds sufficient time to become
familiar with interactive data. See infra Section II.H.
Interactive data will be required as an exhibit to a
registration statement or post-effective amendment
thereto that contains risk/return summary
information and to any form of prospectus filed
pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) under the Securities
Act [17 CFR 230.497(c) or (e)] that contains risk/
return summary information that varies from the
registration statement. Interactive data will not be
required as an exhibit to a post-effective
amendment that does not contain risk/return
summary information or to a form of prospectus
filed pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) that does not
contain risk/return summary information that varies
from the registration statement.
12 A post-effective amendment filed under rule
485(b) under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.485(b)]
may become effective immediately upon filing. A
post-effective amendment may only 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.
13 Form N–1A is the form used by mutual funds
to register under the Investment Company Act and
to offer securities under the Securities Act.
14 When we extended the voluntary program to
the mutual fund risk/return summary, we stated in
the adopting release that the interactive data
submission would be supplemental to filings and
not replace the required traditional electronic
format of the information it contains. We also said
that volunteers would be required to continue to
file their traditional electronic filings. See Part II.A.
of Securities Act Release No. 8823 (July 11, 2007)
[72 FR 39290, 39292 (July 17, 2007)].
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exhibit to the Commission, whichever is
earlier.15
• If a mutual fund does not submit or
post interactive data as required, the
fund’s ability to file post-effective
amendments to its registration statement
under rule 485(b) under the Securities
Act will be automatically suspended
until the fund submits and posts the
interactive data as required.
• Mutual funds providing risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format are required to use the most
recent list of tags released by XBRL
U.S.16 as required by Regulation S–T
and the EDGAR Filer Manual.17 Mutual
funds also are required to tag a limited
number of document and entity
identifier elements, such as the form
type and the fund’s name. As with
interactive data for the risk/return
summary, these document and entity
identifier elements must be formatted
using the appropriate list of tags as
required by Regulation S–T and the
EDGAR Filer Manual.
• New rule 406T of Regulation S–T 18
addresses the liability for an interactive
data file and provides that an interactive
data file is:
Æ Subject to the anti-fraud provisions
of Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act,
Section 10(b) of and rule 10b–5 under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’), and Section 206(1) of
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Advisers Act’’), except as
provided below;
Æ Deemed not filed or part of a
registration statement or prospectus for
purposes of Sections 11 or 12 of the
Securities Act, is deemed not filed for
purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange
Act or Section 34(b) of the Investment
15 The Web site posting requirement applies only
to the extent a mutual fund already maintains a
Web site.
16 The appropriate list of tags for document and
entity identifier elements will be a list released by
XBRL U.S., see infra note 46, and will be required
to be used by all issuers required to submit
interactive data.
17 Rule 405 of Regulation S–T directly sets forth
the basic tagging requirements and indirectly sets
forth the rest of the tagging requirements through
the requirement to comply with the EDGAR Filer
Manual, which is available on the Commission’s
Web site at: https://www.sec.gov/info/edgar/
edmanuals.htm. Consistent with rule 405, the
EDGAR Filer Manual contains the technical tagging
requirements. See Interactive Data Adopting
Release, supra note 6 (adopting rule 405 of
Regulation S–T). Currently, we are in the process
of updating the EDGAR Filer Manual to reflect
changes in the tagging requirements applicable to
financial statements. See Interactive Data Adopting
Release, supra note 6. We anticipate that similar
updates to address revisions in the tagging
requirements applicable to fund risk/return
summary information and portfolio holdings will be
finalized during 2009.
18 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (adopting rule 406T of Regulation S–T).
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Company Act, and otherwise is not
subject to liability under these sections;
Æ Deemed filed for purposes of (and,
as a result, benefit from) rule 103 of
Regulation S–T; 19 and
Æ Subject to liability for a failure to
comply with rule 405 of Regulation S–
T,20 but shall be deemed to have
complied with rule 405 and would not
be subject to liability under the antifraud provisions set forth above or
under any other liability provision if the
electronic filer:
fi Makes a good faith attempt to
comply with rule 405; and
fi after the electronic filer becomes
aware that the interactive data file fails
to comply with rule 405, promptly
amends the interactive data file to
comply with rule 405.
• These liability provisions will
apply only until October 31, 2014, and,
thereafter, an interactive data file will be
subject to the same liability provisions
as the related official filing.
• The voluntary program is being
modified to allow for participation by
mutual funds with respect to risk/return
summary information up until January
1, 2011, but continue to permit
investment companies to participate
with respect to financial statement
information thereafter. As a result, the
voluntary program will continue after
the compliance date of these rule
amendments for the financial statements
of investment companies that are
registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies,21 and other entities that
report under the Exchange Act and
prepare their financial statements in
accordance with Article 6 of Regulation
S–X.
• Registered investment companies,
business development companies, and
other entities that report under the
Exchange Act and prepare their
financial statements in accordance with
19 The interactive data file is deemed filed for
purposes of rule 103 of Regulation S–T [17 CFR
232.103] and, as a result, in general, the mutual
fund would not be subject to liability for electronic
transmission errors beyond its control if the mutual
fund corrects the problem through an amendment
as soon as reasonably practicable after the fund
becomes aware of the problem. Interactive data files
are deemed filed for purposes of rule 103 regardless
of whether they are eligible for the modified
treatment provided by rule 406T at the time
submitted. Rule 406T expressly provides that
interactive data files are deemed filed for purposes
of rule 103 to remove any negative inference that
otherwise might be drawn due to the fact that rule
406T deems interactive data files to be not filed for
other specified purposes.
20 See supra note 17.
21 Business development companies are a
category of closed-end investment companies that
are not required to register under the Investment
Company Act. See Section 2(a)(48) of the
Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a–2(a)(48)].
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Article 6 of Regulation S–X are
permitted to submit exhibits under the
voluntary program containing a tagged
schedule of portfolio holdings without
having to submit other financial
information in interactive data format.
We intend to monitor implementation
and, if necessary, make appropriate
adjustments to the adopted
amendments.
I. Introduction and Background
A. Commission Initiatives To Update
the Public Disclosure Process
Over the last several decades,
developments in technology and
electronic data communication have
facilitated greater transparency in the
form of easier access to, and analysis of,
financial reporting and disclosures.
Technological developments also have
significantly decreased the time and
cost of filing disclosure documents with
us. Most notably, in 1993 we began to
require electronic filing on our
Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and
Retrieval System (‘‘EDGAR’’).22 Since
then, widespread use of the Internet has
vastly decreased the time and expense
of accessing disclosure filed with us.
We continue to update our filing
standards and systems as technologies
improve, consistent with our goal to
promote efficient and transparent
capital markets. Most recently, we
unveiled the Interactive Data Electronic
Applications database (‘‘IDEA’’), which
will initially supplement and eventually
replace EDGAR, and which is designed
to take full advantage of interactive
technology in order to provide investors
with better and more useful financial
disclosures.23 Also, since 2003 we have
required electronic filing of certain
ownership reports filed on Forms 3,24
4,25 and 5 26 in a format that provides
interactive data, and recently we
adopted similar rules governing the
filing of Form D.27 In addition, recently
we have encouraged, and in some cases
required, mutual funds and public
reporting companies to provide
22 In 1993, we began to require domestic issuers
to file most documents electronically. Securities
Act Release No. 6977 (Feb. 23, 1993) [58 FR 14628
(Mar. 18, 1993)]. Electronic filing began with a pilot
program in 1984. Securities Act Release No. 6539
(June 27, 1984) [49 FR 28044 (July 10, 1984)].
23 See SEC Announces Successor to EDGAR
Database, Securities and Exchange Commission
Press Release, Aug. 19, 2008, available at: https://
www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-179.htm.
24 17 CFR 249.103 and 274.202.
25 17 CFR 249.104 and 274.203.
26 17 CFR 249.105.
27 17 CFR 239.500.
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disclosures and communicate with
investors using the Internet.28
In addition, we also implemented a
voluntary filer program, started in
2005,29 that has allowed us to evaluate
certain uses of interactive data. The
voluntary program allows companies to
submit financial statements on a
supplemental basis in interactive format
as exhibits to specified filings under the
Exchange Act and the Investment
Company Act. Over 100 operating
companies participated in the voluntary
program. These companies span a wide
range of industries and company
characteristics, and have a total market
capitalization of over $2 trillion.
Companies that participated in the
program were still required to file their
financial statements in American
Standard Code for Information
Interchange (‘‘ASCII’’) or HyperText
Markup Language (‘‘HTML’’).30 Four
mutual fund complexes participated in
the voluntary program and have
submitted financial statement
information in interactive data format.31
In 2007, we extended the program to
enable mutual funds voluntarily to
submit in interactive data format
supplemental information contained in
the risk/return summary section of their
prospectuses.32 The risk/return
summary contains information about a
fund’s investment objectives and
strategies, costs, risks, and past
performance.33 Twenty-five mutual
funds from a variety of fund families
have submitted risk/return summary
information in interactive data format.
These funds represent 15 fund
complexes, and consist of a range of
fund types, including 14 equity funds,
two balanced funds, five bond funds,
and four money market funds. The
funds participating in the voluntary
program also include larger and smaller
funds.34
Since the establishment of the
voluntary program for mutual fund risk/
return summary information, the
Commission has continued its
evaluation of interactive data, including
interactive data submitted by mutual
funds. The Commission’s evaluation of
interactive data has included the
hosting of three roundtables on the topic
of interactive data reporting,35 as well as
the creation, in April 2008 of a viewer
that allowed investors to read, analyze,
and compare the interactive risk/return
summary data submitted by mutual
funds.36
Additionally, prior to launching the
risk/return viewer, Commission staff
reviewed all of the interactive data files
submitted to the Commission to help
ensure the accuracy of the interactive
risk/return summary data displayed on
the Commission’s Web site, and the staff
communicated with the filers in order to
identify and correct any technical issues
with the submissions.37 Further, as
noted below, Commission staff also
surveyed voluntary program
participants for specific data regarding
the costs of preparing and submitting
risk/return summary information in
interactive data, including software
costs and internal and external labor
costs.38 Six of the participating mutual
funds responded, providing data in
response to this voluntary program
questionnaire. These six respondents
represent mutual fund complexes whose
assets comprise a range of
approximately .01% to 12% of all the
assets of the mutual funds that will be
required to submit interactive data.39
In a companion release, we recently
adopted rules requiring companies,
other than investment companies that
are registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies, and other entities that report
under the Exchange Act and prepare
28 See, e.g., Investment Company Act Release No.
28584 (Jan. 13, 2009) [74 FR 4546 (Jan. 26, 2009)]
(‘‘Summary Prospectus Adopting Release’’);
Exchange Act Release No. 57172 (Jan. 18, 2008) [73
FR 4450 (Jan. 25, 2008)]; Exchange Act Release No.
56135 (July 26, 2007) [72 FR 42222 (Aug. 1, 2007)];
Exchange Act Release No. 55146 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72
FR 4148 (Jan. 29, 2007)]; Securities Act Release No.
8591 (July 19, 2005) [70 FR 44722 (Aug. 3, 2005)].
29 Securities Act Release No. 8529 (Feb. 3, 2005)
[70 FR 6556 (Feb. 8, 2005)] (‘‘Voluntary Program
Adopting Release’’).
30 HTML is a standardized language commonly
used to present text and other information on Web
sites.
31 These four fund complexes made 23
submissions representing 12 mutual funds.
32 Securities Act Release No. 8823 (July 11, 2007)
[72 FR 39290 (July 17, 2007)] (‘‘Risk/Return
Voluntary Program Adopting Release’’).
33 Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N–1A.
34 Based on industry assets as of September 2008,
four of the five largest fund complexes have
submitted tagged risk/return summary information
as part of the voluntary filing program. LipperDirectors’ Analytical Data, Reuters Sept. 2008. As
of September 2008, the two smallest mutual funds
participating in the voluntary program had net
assets of approximately $41 million and $17
million. Id.
35 See materials available at https://www.sec.gov/
spotlight/xbrl/xbrl-meetings.shtml.
36 As discussed in Section I.B. infra, information
in interactive data format is intended to be
processed by software applications and is not
readable by humans without a viewer.
37 See infra Section II.E.3. (discussing the
Commission’s risk/return summary interactive data
viewer).
38 See Section III. below. Of the 22 mutual funds
that participated in the voluntary program at the
time the Commission proposed these amendments,
nine were provided questionnaires on the details of
their cost experience, and six responses were
collected representing the cost data for ten funds.
39 Based on total mutual fund assets of $10.6
trillion. Lipper-Directors’ Analytical Data, Reuters
Sept. 2008.
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their financial statements in accordance
with Article 6 of Regulation S–X, to
submit financial information to the
Commission in interactive data
format.40 In this release, as part of our
continuing efforts to assist investors
who use Commission disclosures, as
well as filers of that disclosure, we are
adopting rule amendments to require
that mutual fund risk/return summary
information be provided in a format that
makes the information interactive.
B. Current Filing Technology and
Interactive Data
Companies filing electronically are
required to file their registration
statements and periodic reports in
ASCII or HTML format.41 Also, to a
limited degree, our electronic filing
system uses other formats for internal
processing and document-type
identification. For example, our system
uses eXtensible Markup Language
(‘‘XML’’) to process reports of beneficial
ownership of equity securities on Forms
3, 4, and 5 under Section 16(a) of the
Exchange Act.42
Electronic formats such as HTML,
XML, and XBRL are open standards 43
that define or ‘‘tag’’ data using standard
definitions. The tags establish a
consistent structure of identity and
context. This consistent structure can be
recognized and processed by a variety of
different software applications. In the
case of HTML, the standardized tags
enable Web browsers to present Web
sites’ embedded text and information in
a predictable format. In the case of
XBRL, software applications, such as
databases, financial reporting systems,
and spreadsheets, recognize and process
tagged information.
XBRL was derived from the XML
standard. It was developed and
continues to be supported by XBRL
International, a consortium of
approximately 550 organizations
representing many elements of the
financial reporting community
worldwide in more than 20
jurisdictions, national and regional.
40 Interactive
Data Adopting Release, supra, note
6.
41 Rule 301 of Regulation S–T [17 CFR 232.301]
requires electronic filings to comply with the
EDGAR Filer Manual, and Section 5.2 of the
EDGAR Filer Manual requires that electronic filings
be in ASCII or HTML format. Rule 104 of
Regulation S–T [17 CFR 232.104] permits filers to
submit voluntarily as an adjunct to their official
filings in ASCII or HTML unofficial PDF copies of
filed documents. Unless otherwise stated, we refer
to filings in ASCII or HTML as traditional format
filings.
42 15 U.S.C. 78p(a).
43 The term ‘‘open standard’’ is generally applied
to technological specifications that are widely
available to the public, royalty-free, at minimal or
no cost.
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XBRL U.S., the international
organization’s U.S. jurisdiction
representative, is a non-profit
organization 44 that includes companies,
public accounting firms, software
developers, filing agents, data
aggregators, stock exchanges, regulators,
financial services companies, and
industry associations.45
Risk/return summary information in
interactive format requires a standard
list of tags. These tags are similar to
definitions in an ordinary dictionary,
and they cover a variety of concepts that
can be read and understood by software
applications. For the risk/return
summary, a mutual fund will use the
most recent list of tags for risk/return
summary information released by XBRL
U.S.46 This list of tags contains
descriptive labels, authoritative
references to Commission regulations
where applicable, and other elements,
all of which provide the contextual
information necessary for interactive
data 47 to be recognized and processed
by software.48
44 XBRL U.S. is a 501(c)(6) organization. Internal
Revenue Code Section 501(c)(6) applies to
‘‘Business leagues, chambers of commerce, realestate boards, boards of trade, or professional
football leagues (whether or not administering a
pension fund for football players), not organized for
profit and no part of the net earnings of which
inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or
individual.’’ See 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(6).
45 XBRL U.S. supports efforts to promote
interactive financial and business data specific to
the U.S.
46 Unless stated otherwise, when we refer to the
‘‘list of tags for risk/return summary information’’
we mean the interactive data list of tags released
and maintained by XBRL U.S., including any
modifications. This list was initially developed by
the Investment Company Institute (‘‘ICI’’), which is
a national association of the U.S. investment
company industry.
47 The rules define the interactive data in
machine-readable format required to be submitted
as the ‘‘interactive data file,’’ which will be required
with every interactive data submission. See
Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6
(adopting new definitions under 17 CFR 232.11).
48 For example, contextual information identifies
the entity to which it relates, usually by using the
filer’s Central Index Key (‘‘CIK’’) number. A
hypothetical filer converting its traditional
electronic disclosure of total annual fund operating
expenses of 0.73% must create interactive data that
identifies what the 0.73% represents, total annual
fund operating expenses, and that the number is a
percentage. The contextual information includes
other information as necessary; for example, the
date of the prospectus to which it relates and the
series and class to which it applies.
A mutual fund may issue multiple ‘‘series’’ of
shares, each of which is preferred over all other
series in respect of assets specifically allocated to
that series. Rule 18f–2 under the Investment
Company Act [17 CFR 270.18f–2]. Each series is, in
effect, a separate investment portfolio.
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.
Rule 18f–3 under the Investment Company Act [17
CFR 270.18f–3].
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The initial risk/return summary list of
tags received acknowledgement from
XBRL International in June 2007,49 and
was used by mutual funds participating
in the Commission’s voluntary program.
More recently, XBRL U.S. has updated
the architecture of the list of tags for
risk/return summary information and
conformed the list of tags to changes we
recently adopted to the risk/return
summary disclosure requirements.50
The list was recently issued for public
comment,51 and it is expected to be
finalized and submitted to XBRL
International for acknowledgement by
the end of January 2009. Related
documents, such as the architecture and
technical guides, also are due to be
released publicly by the end of January
2009.
Data tags are applied to risk/return
summary information by using
commercially available software that
guides a preparer to tag information in
the risk/return summary, such as line
item costs in a mutual fund’s fee table,
with the appropriate tags in the
standard list. This involves locating an
element in the list of tags that represents
the particular disclosure that is to be
tagged. Occasionally, because mutual
funds have some flexibility in preparing
the risk/return summary, particularly
the narrative portions, it is possible that
a mutual fund may wish to use a nonstandard disclosure that is not included
in the standard list of tags. In this
situation, a fund will create a companyspecific element, called an extension.
Alternatively, a mutual fund may
choose to outsource the tagging process.
49 The list of tags is available on XBRL
International’s Web site at: https://xbrl.org/
Taxonomy/rr-summarydocument-20070516acknowledged.htm.
There are two levels of XBRL tag recognition: (1)
‘‘Acknowledgement’’ is formal recognition that a
list of tags complies with XBRL specifications,
including testing by a defined set of validation
tools; and (2) ‘‘approval’’ is a formal recognition
requiring more detailed quality assurance and
testing, including compliance with official XBRL
guidelines for the type of tag list under review,
creation of a number of instance documents, and an
open review period after acknowledgement. For
more information regarding the XBRL tag list
recognition process, see ‘‘Taxonomy Recognition
Process’’ on the XBRL International Web site
available at: https://www.xbrl.org/
TaxonomyRecognition/.
50 See infra Section II.E.1. (discussing the list of
tags for risk/return summary information);
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note
28.
51 XBRL U.S. released the updated list of tags for
risk/return summary information for public
comment on October 21, 2008. The list is available
on the XBRL U.S. Web site at: https://xbrl.us/
imtaxonomies/Pages/default.aspx. See XBRL U.S.
Announces Public Review of Data Tags for Mutual
Fund Risk/Return Summary and Schedule of
Investments, available on the XBRL U.S. Web site
at: https://xbrl.us/press/Pages/20081021.aspx. The
comment period closed on November 24, 2008.
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Because mutual fund risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format is intended to be processed by
software applications, the unprocessed
interactive data is not readable by
humans. Thus, viewers are necessary to
convert, or ‘‘render,’’ the interactive
data file to human readable format.
Some viewers, for example, may be
compared to Web browsers that are used
to read HTML files.
The Commission’s Web site currently
provides links to viewers that allow the
public to read mutual fund and other
company disclosures submitted using
interactive data. One of these viewers
allows users to view and compare
mutual fund risk/return summary
information, including investment
objectives and strategies, costs, risks,
and past performance, that is submitted
in interactive data format.52 These
viewers are intended to demonstrate the
capability of software to present
interactive data in human-readable form
and to provide open source software to
give developers a free resource they can
use as is or build upon. As noted above,
software also is able to process
interactive data so as to automate and,
as a result, facilitate access to and
analysis of tagged data. In addition, we
are aware of other applications under
development that may provide
additional and advanced
functionality.53
II. Discussion
The Commission received 16
comment letters on the proposed rule
amendments, including comments from
trade associations, fund complexes, a
data aggregator, technology service
providers, and individual investors and
professionals.54 The commenters
52 A mutual fund information viewer for the
voluntary program is available at: https://
a.viewerprototype1.com/viewer.
53 A list of interactive data products and service
providers is available at: https://xbrl.us/Vendors/
Pages/default-expand.aspx.
54 See comment letters of the American Bar
Association (‘‘ABA’’) (Aug. 18, 2008); James J.
Angel, Ph.D, C.F.A. (‘‘Angel’’) (Aug. 4, 2008); Gary
J. Coles (‘‘Coles’’) (July 25, 2008); Committee of
Annuity Insurers (‘‘Annuity Insurers’’) (July 23,
2008); Confluence (Aug. 1, 2008); Data
´
´
Communique, Inc. (‘‘Data Communique’’) (July 31,
2008); Federated Investors, Inc. (‘‘Federated’’) (Aug.
12, 2008); Robert Gilmore, C.P.A. (‘‘Gilmore’’) (July
31, 2008); Walter C. Hamscher (‘‘Hamscher’’) (July
31, 2008); ICI (Aug. 1, 2008); Lipper (July 29, 2008);
OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (‘‘Oppenheimer’’) (Aug. 4,
2008); Lorna A. Schnase (‘‘Schnase’’) (July 25,
2008); Jay Starkman, C.P.A. (‘‘Starkman’’) (July 30,
2008); T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (‘‘T. Rowe
Price’’) (Aug. 1, 2008); and The Vanguard Group,
Inc. (‘‘Vanguard’’) (Aug. 1, 2008). Comment letters
received in response to the Proposing Release are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-1208/s71208.shtml or from our Public Reference
Room at 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
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generally supported both the use of
technology to better inform mutual fund
investors and the Commission’s goal of
providing risk/return summary
information in interactive data format.55
Most commenters, however, stated that
requiring mutual funds to provide
tagged risk/return summary information
is premature.56 As discussed below,
commenters also raised other concerns
regarding the proposal, including
concerns regarding the adequacy of the
existing technology necessary to create
and submit interactive data files,57 what
information should be required to be
tagged,58 the proposed compliance
date,59 and the potential liability of
mutual funds under the federal
securities laws related to tagged risk/
return summary information.60
For the reasons discussed below, we
continue to believe that the enormous
potential of interactive data for
enhancing investors’ access to mutual
fund information justifies
implementation of this initiative.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed
amendments with some modifications
to address commenters’ concerns. The
rule amendments are intended to make
risk/return summary information easier
for investors to analyze and to assist in
automating regulatory filings and
business information processing.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
We are adopting, as proposed, rule
amendments that require mutual funds
to submit a complete set of their risk/
return summary information, set forth in
Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N–1A,61 in
55 Twelve commenters generally supported
tagging risk/return summary information in
interactive data format. See letters of ABA, Angel,
´
Annuity Insurers, Confluence, Data Communique,
Gilmore, Hamscher, ICI, Lipper, Oppenheimer, T.
Rowe Price, and Vanguard. Three commenters did
not support requiring interactive disclosure of risk/
return summary data. See letters of Federated,
Schnase, and Starkman. One commenter expressed
no explicit opinion on the matter. See letter of
Coles.
56 See letters of ABA, Confluence, Data
´
Communique, Federated, Gilmore, ICI,
Oppenheimer, Schnase, T. Rowe Price, and
Vanguard.
57 See letters of Confluence, Federated, Gilmore,
ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase, Starkman, and T. Rowe
Price.
58 See letters of ABA, Confluence, Data
´
Communique, Federated, and Schnase.
59 See letters of Confluence, Data Communique,
´
Federated, Gilmore, ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase, T.
Rowe Price, and Vanguard.
60 See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, and Schnase.
61 Recently, the Commission adopted
amendments to Form N–1A, see Summary
Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28, under
which the risk/return summary information,
formerly contained in Items 2 and 3 of Form N–1A,
was reconfigured in Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N–
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16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
interactive data format.62 In addition,
mutual funds are required to provide
document and entity identifier tags,
such as the form type and the fund’s
name. As was the case in the voluntary
program, the new requirement for
interactive data reporting is intended to
be disclosure neutral in that we do not
intend the rules to result in mutual
funds providing more, less, or different
disclosure for any given disclosure item,
regardless of whether the format is
ASCII, HTML, or XBRL.
We are adopting these rule
amendments because the submission of
interactive risk/return summary
information at this time is an important
next step in increasing the accessibility
of this information to mutual fund
investors and others. Requiring mutual
funds to submit the risk/return
summary section of their prospectuses
using interactive data format will enable
investors, analysts, and the Commission
staff to capture and analyze that
information more quickly and at less
cost than is possible using the same
information provided in a static format.
Any investor with a computer and an
Internet connection will have the ability
to acquire and download interactive
data that have generally been available
only to intermediaries and third-party
analysts. The interactive data rule
amendments do not change disclosure
requirements under the federal
securities laws and regulations, but will
add a requirement to include risk/return
summary information in an interactive
data format as an exhibit. Thus,
requiring that filers provide risk/return
summary information using interactive
data will not otherwise alter at all the
disclosure or formatting standards of
mutual fund prospectuses. These filings
will continue to be available as they are
today for those who prefer to view the
traditional text-based document.
Interactive data can create new ways
for investors, analysts, and others to
retrieve and use the information. For
example, users of risk/return summary
information will be able to download
cost and performance information
directly into spreadsheets, analyze it
using commercial off-the-shelf software,
or use it within investment models in
other software formats. Through
interactive data, what is currently static,
text-based information can be
dynamically searched and analyzed,
facilitating the comparison of mutual
fund cost, performance, and other
information across multiple classes of
the same fund and across the more than
1A. We apply the tagging rules to the information
required by amended Form N–1A.
62 See Item 405(b)(2) of Regulation S–T.
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8,000 mutual funds currently
available.63
Interactive data also provides an
opportunity to automate regulatory
filings and business information
processing, with the potential to
increase the speed, accuracy, and
usability of mutual fund disclosure.
Such automation may eventually reduce
costs. A mutual fund that uses a
standardized interactive data format at
earlier stages of its reporting cycle may
reduce the need for repetitive data entry
and, therefore, the likelihood of human
error. In this way, interactive data may
improve the quality of information
while reducing its cost. Also, to the
extent investors currently are required
to pay for access to mutual fund risk/
return summary information that has
been extracted and reformatted into an
interactive data format by third-party
sources, the availability of interactive
data in Commission filings may allow
investors to avoid additional costs
associated with third-party sources.
As noted above, although most
commenters generally supported the
concept of interactive disclosure of risk/
return summary information,64 they also
asserted that this initiative is
premature.65 In particular, several
commenters urged the Commission to
defer requiring mutual funds to submit
interactive risk/return summary
information because pending
Commission proposals related to a
mutual fund summary prospectus and
exchange-traded funds (‘‘ETFs’’) would
change the information in the risk/
return summary.66 Related to those
comments, commenters also asserted
that: (1) The list of tags for risk/return
summary information would require
updating if the proposed changes to the
risk/return summary are adopted; (2) the
63 Investment Company Institute, 2008
Investment Company Fact Book, at 15 (2008),
available at: https://www.icifactbook.org/pdf/
2008_factbook.pdf (as of year-end 2007, there were
8,752 mutual funds).
64 See supra note 55.
65 See supra note 56.
66 See letters of Data Communique, Federated,
´
ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase, T. Rowe Price, and
Vanguard. The Commission proposed revisions to
Form N–1A’s risk/return summary disclosure
requirements as part of two separate rulemaking
initiatives. See Investment Company Act Release
No. 28064 (Nov. 21, 2007) [72 FR 67790 (Nov. 30,
2007)] (proposing amendments intended to enhance
mutual fund disclosure of certain key information,
including risk/return summary information, by,
among other things, permitting mutual funds to
provide such information in the form of a summary
prospectus if certain conditions are satisfied)
(‘‘Summary Prospectus Initiative’’); and Investment
Company Act Release No. 28193 (Mar. 11, 2008) [73
FR 14618 (Mar. 18, 2008)] (proposing amendments
to the mutual fund risk/return summary to provide
certain information relating specifically to ETFs)
(‘‘ETF Initiative’’).
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
list of tags’ architecture needed to be
updated; and (3) related tools are not
sufficiently developed.67 Commenters
also stated that implementation is
premature because more information
needs to be collected from the current
voluntary program.68
While we are sensitive to these
commenters’ concerns, they do not
warrant delay in this important
initiative, particularly given recent
progress related to these comments.
First, the Commission recently adopted
amendments to Form N–1A related to
the Summary Prospectus Initiative and
the ETF Initiative.69 These amendments
do not significantly alter the content
requirements of the risk/return
summary section, consisting of limited
modifications to the disclosure in the
Fee Table.70 Mutual funds will not be
required to comply with these new
Form N–1A disclosure requirements
until January 1, 2010,71 providing
almost one year for them to revise their
disclosure. Second, as discussed further
67 See letters of Confluence, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, Schnase, and T. Rowe Price.
68 See letters of Federated, ICI, and Schnase.
69 These amendments were presented to the
Commission at an open meeting on November 19,
2008. See Summary Prospectus Adopting Release,
supra note 28. Form N–1A changes related to both
the Summary Prospectus Initiative and the ETF
Initiative were adopted together in the Summary
Prospectus Adopting Release.
In the Summary Prospectus Initiative, we
requested comment on whether the proposed
linking requirements for documents posted on an
Internet Web site should be modified. See Summary
Prospectus Initiative, supra note 66. We received
one comment on this issue opposing the
modification of the proposed linking requirements.
´
See letter of Data Communique. The linking
requirements were adopted as proposed. See
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note
28.
70 These amendments include: (1) Requiring
mutual funds that offer discounts on front-end sales
charges for volume purchases (so-called
‘‘breakpoint discounts’’) to include a brief narrative
disclosure alerting investors to the availability of
those discounts, see Item 3 of Form N–1A;
Instruction 1(b) to Item 3 of Form N–1A; (2) revising
the parenthetical heading for ‘‘Annual Fund
Operating Expenses’’ in the Fee Table to read
‘‘expenses that you pay each year as a percentage
of the value of your investment,’’ see Item 3 of Form
N–1A; (3) requiring mutual funds, other than
money market funds, to include brief disclosure
regarding portfolio turnover immediately following
the fee table example, see Instruction 5 to Item 3
of Form N–1A; and (4) permitting mutual funds to
place two additional captions in the Fee Table
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, see Instruction
3(e) to Item 3 of Form N–1A. The amendments also
require modification for ETFs to the narrative
explanation preceding the Fee Table to clarify that
investors may pay brokerage commissions not
reflected in the Fee Table. Instruction 1(e)(i) and (ii)
to Item 3 of Form N–1A.
71 See Summary Prospectus Adopting Release,
supra note 28.
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16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
below,72 revisions to the list of tags for
risk/return summary information to
account for these limited disclosure
changes and revisions to the
architecture have been issued for public
comment and are expected to be
finalized by the end of January 2009.
Again, this will provide mutual funds
with substantial time to prepare to tag
their risk/return summary information.
Third, while the Commission’s current
viewer permits the rendering of tagged
risk/return summary information,
progress has been made to develop a
more advanced tool that will allow
issuers to test their tagged exhibits prior
to submitting them to the
Commission.73 This upgrade to the
viewer will be phased in, but should be
completed during mid-2009.
Finally, the Commission has been
exploring, via the voluntary program,
the use of interactive data for several
years, including the submission of
tagged financial information and risk/
return summary information. Twentyfive mutual funds have submitted over
40 exhibits tagged with interactive data,
giving the Commission experience in
adapting to the technology. In addition,
over 100 operating companies have
submitted financial statements tagged in
interactive data format. Each submission
has enabled issuers to gain experience
with submitting tagged documents and
enabled the Commission to refine its
technology infrastructure to accept and
efficiently render these interactive
exhibits. Moreover, given the extended
compliance date discussed below,
mutual funds will have almost two
years to resolve technical issues and
may continue participating in the
voluntary program in the interim to gain
more experience submitting interactive
data.
In addition to the recommendations to
delay this initiative, some commenters
expressed concern that limiting the
interactive data filing requirement to
only risk/return summary information
could lead investors to place undue
emphasis on this information,74 and
several commenters suggested that the
Commission consider expanding this
tagging requirement to include non-risk/
return disclosures in the new mutual
fund summary prospectus.75 Two of
72 See infra Section II.E.1. (discussing the list of
tags for risk/return summary information).
73 See infra Section II.E.3. (discussing the
Commission’s risk/return summary interactive data
viewer).
74 See letters of ABA, Data Communique, and
´
Federated. See also related discussion concerning
commenters’ suggestion that cautionary legends be
permitted, infra Section II.B.
75 See letters of Confluence, Data Communique,
´
and Schnase; see also discussion of Summary
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7753
these commenters recommended that all
items in the summary prospectus
should be tagged.76 We believe that
implementation of our interactive data
initiative should begin with the mutual
fund risk/return summary, but we will
continue to evaluate the benefits of
tagging all items in the summary
prospectus, as well as other information.
Several commenters questioned
whether XBRL is the appropriate
standard format for interactive data
disclosure, asserting that it is not
sufficiently developed at this time.77
Specifically, commenters asserted that
there are a limited number of
commercial software products that are
compatible with XBRL,78 and that
rendering and validating are still
expensive and problematic issues.79
One commenter also expressed concern
that endorsing XBRL could have the
effect of stifling competition for other
languages, although this commenter
acknowledged that she was unaware of
other languages that are likely to
become competitive with XBRL.80
While we acknowledge that XBRL is
an evolving technology, we believe it is
the appropriate interactive data format
with which to supplement ASCII and
HTML. Our experience with the
voluntary program, including feedback
from company, accounting, and
software communities, points to XBRL
as the appropriate open standard for the
purposes of this rule.81 XBRL data will
be compatible with a wide range of open
source and proprietary XBRL software
applications. As discussed above, many
XBRL-related products exist for
analysts, investors, filers, and others to
create and compare disclosures more
easily, the development process will
likely be hastened by mutual fund
disclosure using interactive data.
Several other factors support our
views regarding XBRL’s broad and
growing acceptance, internationally as
well as in the U.S. For example, the
Advisory Committee on Improvements
to Financial Reporting (‘‘CIFiR’’) 82
Prospectus Initiative, supra note 66, and Summary
Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28.
76 See letters of Confluence and Schnase.
77 See letters of Gilmore, Schnase, and Starkman.
78 See letter of Starkman.
79 See letter of Gilmore.
80 See letter of Schnase.
81 See note 58 of the Proposing Release, supra
note 9.
82 The Commission established CIFiR to examine
the U.S. financial reporting system, with the goals
of reducing unnecessary complexity and making
information more useful and understandable for
investors. See SEC Establishes Advisory Committee
to Make U.S. Financial Reporting System More
User-Friendly for Investors, Securities and
Exchange Commission Press Release, June 27, 2007,
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presented its final recommendations to
the Commission in its final report
issued in August 2008,83 which
includes a recommendation that the
Commission, over the long term, require
the filing of financial and non-financial
information using XBRL once specified
conditions are satisfied.84 We believe
that sufficient progress has been made
regarding each of these conditions.85
Also, XBRL has been used by other U.S.
agencies,86 and several foreign
securities regulators have adopted
voluntary or required XBRL reporting.87
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
B. Content and Submission
Requirements for Interactive Risk/
Return Summary Information
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that an interactive data file
must be submitted to the Commission
for any registration statement or posteffective amendment thereto on Form
N–1A that includes or amends
information provided in response to
Items 2, 3, or 4.88 In response to
available at: https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2007/
2007-123.htm.
CIFiR conducted open meetings on March 13–14,
2008 and May 2, 2008, in which it heard reactions
from an invited panel of participants to CIFiR’s
proposal regarding required filing of financial
information using interactive data. Archived
Webcasts of the meetings are available at https://
sec.gov/about/offices/oca/acifr.shtml. The panelists
presented their views and engaged with CIFiR
members regarding issues relating to requiring
interactive data tagged financial statements,
including tag list and technological developments,
implications for large and small public companies,
needs of investors, necessity of assurance and
verification of such tagged financial statements, and
legal implications arising from such tagging.
83 See Final Report of the Advisory Committee on
Improvements to Financial Reporting to the United
States Securities and Exchange Commission
(August 1, 2008), (‘‘CIFiR Report’’), available at:
https://www.sec.gov/about/offices/oca/acifr/acifrfinalreport.pdf.
84 Id. at 98. The recommendation appears in
chapter 4 of the CIFiR Report.
85 See discussion at note 135, and accompanying
text, of Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6.
86 Since 2005, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (‘‘FDIC’’), the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, and the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency have required the
insured institutions that they oversee to file their
quarterly Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (called ‘‘Call Reports’’) in interactive data
format using XBRL. Call Reports, which include
data about an institution’s balance sheet and
income statement, are used by these federal
agencies to assess the financial health and risk
profile of the financial institution.
87 For example, such countries include Canada,
China, Israel, Japan, Korea, and Thailand.
88 See rule 405(b)(2) of Regulation S–T; General
Instruction C.3.(g).(i) of Form N–1A. We are also
adopting technical amendments to rule 405 that
reflect this requirement. As previously noted, rule
405 of Regulation S–T directly sets forth the basic
tagging requirements and indirectly sets forth the
rest of the tagging requirements through the
requirement to comply with the EDGAR Filer
Manual. Consistent with rule 405, the EDGAR Filer
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16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
commenters’ concerns,89 however, we
are modifying our rules to encompass
changes to risk/return summary
information that mutual funds may
make pursuant to rule 497 under the
Securities Act.90 Specifically, in the
Proposing Release, we asked for
comment on whether mutual funds
should be required to submit tagged
risk/return summary information for
prospectuses submitted pursuant to rule
497 under the Securities Act. Rule 497
sets out general filing requirements for
fund prospectuses and provides, among
other things, that funds must file any
prospectus that contains information
that varies from that in the registration
statement.91 Commenters addressing the
matter uniformly recommended that
updates to interactive risk/return
summary information should be
required when such information is
revised in a filing made pursuant to rule
497 under the Securities Act,92 asserting
that failure to do so could: (1)
Compromise the integrity of the entire
interactive data program; 93 (2) result in
a rendered file containing different
information from the current
prospectus, potentially leading to
liability; 94 and (3) result in investors
accessing stale tagged data.95
We agree with commenters’ concerns
that failure to include changes to risk/
return summary information in filings
made pursuant to rule 497 could result
in investors and others accessing
outdated interactive data. For that
reason we are modifying the proposed
rules, in response to the commenters’
recommendations, to require that an
interactive data file must be submitted
to the Commission for any form of
prospectus filed pursuant to rule 497(c)
or (e) under the Securities Act that
includes information provided in
Manual will contain the detailed tagging
requirements.
89 See infra note 96 and accompanying
discussion.
90 17 CFR 230.497.
91 Specifically, (1) rule 497(c) under the Securities
Act requires mutual funds to file, within five days
after the effective date of a registration statement or
the commencement of a public offering after the
effective date of a registration statement, whichever
occurs later, ten copies of each form of prospectus
and form of statement of additional information
(‘‘SAI’’) used after the effective date; and (2) rule
497(e) under the Securities Act provides that, after
the effective date of a registration statement, no
prospectus that purports to comply with Section 10
of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j] or SAI that
varies from any form of prospectus or form of SAI
filed pursuant to rule 497(c) shall be used until
filed with the Commission.
92 See letters of Data Communique, ICI, and
´
Schnase.
93 See letter of Data Communique.
´
94 See letter of ICI.
95 See letter of Schnase.
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response to Items 2, 3, or 4 that varies
from the registration statement.96
We also are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that an interactive data file
to a Form N–1A filing, whether the
filing is an initial registration statement
or a post-effective amendment thereto,
must be submitted as an amendment to
the registration statement to which the
interactive data file relates and must be
submitted after the registration
statement or post-effective amendment
that contains the related information
becomes effective but not later than 15
business days after the effective date of
that registration statement or posteffective amendment.97 Our
requirement that the interactive data file
be submitted within 15 business days is
intended both to provide funds with
adequate time to prepare the exhibit and
to make the interactive data available
promptly. An exhibit containing
interactive data format risk/return
summary information can be submitted
under rule 485(b) of the Securities Act,
which provides for immediate
effectiveness of amendments that make
non-material changes, and will only
need to contain the new exhibit, a facing
page, a signature page, a cover letter
explaining the nature of the
amendment, and a revised exhibit
index.
To address the inclusion of tagged
risk/return summary information
submitted with rule 497 filings
discussed above, our amendments
provide that tagged risk/return summary
exhibits must be submitted with or after
the filing of a form of prospectus
pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) under the
Securities Act. The tagged exhibits may
be submitted concurrently with the rule
497 filing or up to 15 business days
subsequent to the filing made pursuant
to rule 497.98 Similar to the submissions
under rule 485(b), the 15 business days
is intended to provide funds adequate
96 See General Instruction C.3.(g).(ii) of Form
N–1A. We also revised paragraphs (c) and (e) of rule
497 to clarify that mutual funds must, if applicable
pursuant to General Instruction C.3.(g) of Form
N–1A, include an interactive data file.
97 See General Instruction C.3.(g).(i) to Form
N–1A.
98 See General Instruction C.3.(g).(ii) to Form
N–1A. Pursuant to the EDGAR Filer Manual,
mutual funds should include an interactive data file
as an exhibit (EX–101) contained in an EDGAR 497
submission. Funds submitting their exhibit
subsequent to their initial rule 497 filing should
make a second EDGAR 497 submission that
includes (1) a 497 document (this 497 document
may, in accordance with rule 411 under the
Securities Act, incorporate by reference the first
rule 497 filing and should include the accession
number of that first rule 497 filing), and (2) any
related interactive data exhibit.
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time to prepare their interactive data
exhibits.
We also are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that an interactive data file
be submitted as an exhibit to Form N–
1A, but also include a modification to
address submissions made with rule 497
filings, providing that an interactive
data file must be submitted as an exhibit
to the filing made pursuant to rule
497.99 Similar to the voluntary program,
the rules require that the information
contained in the risk/return summary
section in the traditional format filing be
the same as in the interactive data
format.100 We have not changed this
equivalency standard for risk/return
summary information provided in
interactive data format as required by
the rules. As proposed, we also are
adopting the requirement that an
interactive data file be submitted in
such a manner that will permit the
information for each series and, for any
information that does not relate to all of
the classes in a filing, each class of the
fund to be separately identified.101
However, information that is not classspecific, such as investment objectives,
is not required to be separately
identified by class.
The rules do not eliminate or alter
existing substantive disclosure
requirements for risk/return summary
information. The rules also do not
eliminate or alter existing ASCII or
HTML filing requirements. We believe
investors and other users may wish to
obtain an electronic or printed copy of
the entire registration statement in
ASCII or HTML, either in addition to or
instead of disclosure formatted using
interactive data. To clarify the intent of
the rules, we have included an
instruction to rule 405 of Regulation
S–T stating that the rules require a
disclosure format, but do not change
substantive disclosure requirements.102
The rules also state clearly that the
information in interactive data format
should not be more or less than the
information in the ASCII or HTML part
of the Form N–1A filing.103
As noted previously, several
commenters expressed concern that
tagging only a fund’s risk/return
summary information may give such
information too much emphasis, and
may encourage some investors to act on
99 See
General Instruction C.3.(g).(iv) of Form N–
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1A.
100 See
101 See
rule 405(b)(2) of Regulation S–T.
General Instruction C.3.(g).(iv) of Form N–
1A.
102 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (adopting Preliminary Note 2 to rule 405).
103 See rule 405(b)(2) of Regulation S–T.
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incomplete information.104 These
commenters suggested that registrants
be permitted to include a legend similar
to that required as part of the voluntary
program, cautioning investors, before
making an investment decision, to read
and consider the full prospectus or
other filing from which the information
was taken.105 Because we believe it is
inappropriate for the interactive data
files to alter or differ from the
information included in the related
official filing, we have not included any
provision permitting the inclusion of
additional cautionary language in the
interactive data file. Pursuant to
commenters’ recommendations,
however, we intend to modify the
Commission’s interactive data viewer to
include a legend recommending that
users review a fund’s full prospectus.106
This legend on the viewer serves a
similar goal as the tagged cautionary
language within an interactive data
file.107
While one commenter asserted that
interactive data should be embedded in
HTML filings,108 two other commenters
stated that such a requirement should be
deferred until embedding technology is
sufficiently developed.109 We agree that
it is necessary to monitor the usefulness
of interactive data reporting to investors
and the cost and ease of providing
interactive data before attempting
further integration of the interactive
data format. However, the rules will
treat interactive data as part of the
official filing, instead of as only a
supplement as is the case in the
voluntary program.110
C. Web Site Posting of Interactive Data
In the Proposing Release, we
proposed to require that each mutual
fund provide the same interactive data
that would be required to be provided
to the Commission on its Web site, if it
has one. Several commenters opposed
this requirement,111 with some asserting
that posting interactive data files on the
104 See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, and Schnase.
105 Id.
106 See infra Section II.E.3. (discussing the
Commission’s risk/return summary interactive data
viewer).
107 The Commission encourages third-party
viewers also to include this legend, however, we
note that the liability provisions we have adopted
attach only to interactive data as viewed on the
Commission’s viewer. See infra Section II.F.
(discussing liability).
108 See letter of Hamscher.
109 See letters of Data Communique and Schnase.
´
110 As further discussed below in Section II.F.,
however, for a specified period, interactive data
generally will be deemed not filed for purposes of
specified liability provisions.
111 See letters of ABA, ICI, Schnase, Starkman, T.
Rowe Price, and Vanguard.
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Web without a tool to convert them to
viewable format may confuse and
frustrate investors.112
We continue to believe that
interactive data, consistent with our
rules, should be easily accessible for all
investors and other market participants.
As such disclosure becomes more
widely available, advances in
interactive data software, online
viewers, search engines, and other Web
tools may in turn facilitate improved
access to and usability of the data,
promoting its awareness and use.
Encouraging widespread accessibility to
mutual funds’ risk/return summary
information furthers our mission to
promote fair, orderly, and efficient
markets, and facilitates capital
formation. Web site availability of the
interactive data will encourage its
widespread dissemination, contributing
to lower access costs for users. We
therefore are adopting the requirement
that each mutual fund provide its
interactive data files on the fund’s Web
site, if it has one.113 The interactive data
is required to be posted on a fund’s Web
site no later than the end of the calendar
day it is submitted to the Commission
or is required to be submitted to the
Commission, whichever is earlier.114 As
proposed, funds would have been
required to post the interactive data on
their Web sites by the end of the
business day on the earlier of the date
the interactive data is submitted or is
required to be submitted to the
Commission. In order to make it easier
for mutual funds to satisfy the posting
requirement by providing several more
hours in which to comply but still have
the posted information available in a
timely manner, the rule amendments, as
adopted, will require posting by the end
of the calendar rather than business day
specified.
We also are revising the proposed rule
to require that the interactive data be
posted on a fund’s Web site as long as
the registration statement to which it
112 See
letters of ICI and T. Rowe Price.
General Instruction C.3.(g).(i) and (ii) of
Form N–1A.
114 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (adopting rule 405(g)); rule 405(a). Rule
405(a) requires posting to a ‘‘corporate’’ Web site.
For mutual funds, this would require posting to the
fund’s Web site.
The day the interactive data is submitted
electronically to the Commission may not be the
business day on which it was deemed officially
filed. For example, a filing submitted after 5:30 p.m.
generally is not deemed officially filed until the
following business day. Under the rules, the Web
posting would be required at any time on the same
calendar day that the interactive data exhibit to a
mutual fund filing is deemed officially filed or
required to be filed, whichever is earlier.
113 See
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relates remains current.115 We believe
that such a period strikes an appropriate
balance between the fund effort needed
to post and the investor benefit from
having access to the posted material
through the additional source of the
mutual fund’s Web site. In this regard,
we note that the interactive data will be
available on the Commission’s Web site.
One commenter, who opposed the
proposal to require Web site posting,
recommended that funds instead be
required to post a link to the
Commission’s Web site to access the
XBRL files.116 However, we believe that
access to the interactive data on mutual
fund Web sites will enable search
engines and other data aggregators to
more quickly and cheaply aggregate the
data and make them available to
investors because the data will be
available directly from the filer, instead
of through third-party sources that may
charge a fee. It could also transfer
reliability costs of data availability to
the public sector by reducing the
likelihood that investors cannot access
the data through the Commission’s Web
site due to down-time for maintenance
or to increased network traffic. We also
believe that the availability of
interactive data on mutual fund Web
sites will make it easier and faster for
investors to collect information on a
particular fund, rather than if investors
were required to visit separately (for
example, by hyperlink) and search the
Commission’s Web site for information,
particularly if the investor is already
searching the mutual fund’s Web site.
Therefore, to help further our goals of
decreasing user cost and increasing
information availability over the long
term, our rules do not allow mutual
funds to comply with the Web posting
requirement by including a hyperlink to
the Commission’s Web site.
This requirement is consistent with
the increasing role that mutual fund
Web sites perform in supplementing the
information filed electronically with the
Commission by delivering risk/return
summary information and other
disclosure directly to investors. We also
believe that this requirement can
115 See rule 405(a)(4) of Regulation S–T; see also
General Instruction C.3.(g).(iii) of Form N–1A.
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. A
mutual fund updates its registration statement by
filing a post-effective amendment to the registration
statement.
116 See letter of Data Communique.
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provide an incentive for mutual funds to
add content to or otherwise enhance
their Web sites thereby improving
investor experience. For example, we
recently adopted amendments that
would permit a person to satisfy the
mutual fund prospectus delivery
obligations under the Securities Act by
sending or giving key information
directly to investors in the form of a
summary prospectus and providing the
statutory prospectus on an Internet Web
site.117 Mutual funds may also satisfy
certain disclosure obligations by posting
required disclosures on their Web
sites.118 In addition, many mutual funds
provide on their Web sites access to
their prospectuses, statements of
additional information, and other
Commission filings.119 This rule will
expand such Web site posting by
requiring mutual funds with Web sites
to post their interactive data as well.
D. Consequences of Non-Compliance
and Hardship Exemption
We are adopting, as proposed, a rule
amendment providing that, if a filer
does not provide the required
interactive data submission, or post the
interactive data on its Web site, by the
required due date, the filer’s ability to
file post-effective amendments under
rule 485(b), which provides for
immediate effectiveness of amendments
that make non-material and other
changes, will be automatically
suspended.120 Any suspension becomes
effective at the time that the filer fails
to meet the requirement to submit or
post interactive data and terminates as
soon as the filer has submitted and
posted that data. The suspension
applies to a failure to submit and post
interactive data as an exhibit to a
registration statement or as an exhibit to
117 See Summary Prospectus Adopting Release,
supra note 28. Upon an investor’s request, a mutual
fund also would be required to send the statutory
prospectus to the investor in paper or by e-mail.
118 See, e.g., Securities Act Release No. 8458
(Aug. 23, 2004) [69 FR 52788 (Aug. 27, 2004)]
(disclosure regarding portfolio managers); Securities
Act Release No. 8408 (April 19, 2004) [69 FR 22300
(April 23, 2004)] (disclosure regarding market
timing and selective disclosure of portfolio
holdings); Securities Act Release No. 8393 (Feb. 27,
2004) [69 FR 11244 (Mar. 9, 2004)] (shareholder
reports and quarterly portfolio disclosure);
Securities Act Release No. 8188 (Jan. 31, 2003) [68
FR 6564 (Feb. 7, 2003)] (disclosure of proxy voting
policies and records); Exchange Act Release No.
47262 (Jan. 27, 2003) [68 FR 5348 (Feb. 3, 2003)]
(disclosure of code of ethics).
119 Mutual funds filing registration statements are
required to disclose whether or not they make
available free of charge on or through their Web
site, if they have one, their SAI and shareholder
reports. Funds that do not make their reports
available in that manner also must disclose the
reasons that they do not. See Item 1(b)(1) of Form
N–1A.
120 See rule 485(c)(3) under the Securities Act.
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a filing under rule 497 under the
Securities Act.
The suspension applies to posteffective amendments filed after the
suspension becomes effective, but does
not apply to post-effective amendments
that were filed before the suspension
became effective. The suspension does
not apply to post-effective amendments
filed solely for purposes of submitting
interactive data, which will enable a
filer to cure its failure to submit
interactive data by filing an amendment
under rule 485(b) and posting the
information on its Web site. Similarly,
a filer may cure a failure to submit an
interactive data file that is required to be
submitted with a rule 497 filing by
making a subsequent rule 497 filing
with the interactive data exhibit and
also posting the information on its Web
site.
Several commenters opposed this
automatic suspension as unnecessary,
particularly given Commission authority
to punish those who violate its rules.121
Some commenters asserted that it could
lead to potential penalties for minor
violations of the interactive filing
requirements.122 We continue to believe
that precluding the use of immediate
effectiveness of post-effective
amendments during any period of
failure to comply is an appropriate
means to direct attention to the
interactive data requirement without
permanently suspending a mutual
fund’s ability to file post-effective
amendments under rule 485(b) once the
fund has remedied the failure. The
provision strikes an appropriate balance
between limiting non-compliant mutual
funds from using the immediate
effectiveness provision, yet also
providing an easy remedy to diminish
any risk of any undue penalty to funds.
We previously proposed conditioning
a fund using rule 485(b) upon the fund
having on file with the Commission a
current report on Form N–SAR.123 We
ultimately did not adopt that proposal
in response to commenters’ criticisms
that the proposal was unnecessary and
potentially unfair to funds, and their
recommendation that the Commission
rely upon its enforcement remedies to
punish late filers.124 One commenter
urged us to take a similar approach
related to our proposed suspension for
failure to comply with the interactive
121 See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI, and
Oppenheimer.
122 See letters of Federated and ICI.
123 17 CFR 274.101. See Securities Act Release
No. 7015 (Sept. 21, 1993) [58 FR 50291 (Sept. 27,
1993)].
124 See Securities Act Release No. 7083 (Aug. 17,
2004) [59 FR 43460 (August 24, 1994)].
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data requirements.125 Unlike that prior
proposal, which linked a fund’s ability
to rely upon rule 485(b) to Form N–
SAR, a form separate from the
registration statement, the suspension
that we are adopting today relates to a
specific requirement in Form N–1A. We
believe that it is appropriate to link a
fund’s ability to receive immediate
effectiveness with a requirement that
the fund be current in its filing
obligations with respect to that form.
Several commenters also raised
concerns over the language of the
suspension in proposed rule 485(c),
which would apply to any
‘‘registrant.’’ 126 The commenters
asserted that a fund that is part of a
series fund may be prevented from filing
a post-effective amendment to its
registration statement under rule 485(b)
if another fund in that series had an
issue with an interactive data file.
One of those commenters
recommended that, if the proposal is
adopted, the Commission clarify that
‘‘registrant’’ means the specific series at
issue.127 We do not believe that the
commenter’s recommendation is
workable. Specifically, multi-series
funds are generally contained within the
same prospectus in a registration
statement, and post-effective
amendments are typically filed
concurrently for multiple series. In such
a case, it is generally unworkable to
permit automatic effectiveness for
certain series while prohibiting reliance
upon rule 485(b) for other series in the
same filing. Further, the requirement
that a fund’s registration statement is
compliant with its interactive data
obligations should apply to all of the
risk/return summary information in that
registration statement, and, thus, if a
registrant is not current in its
obligations, the ability to rely upon rule
485(b) should be suspended until
remedied.
As noted in the Proposing Release, the
failure to provide the required
interactive data submission will not
affect a mutual fund’s ability to
incorporate by reference the mutual
fund’s prospectus or statement of
additional information (‘‘SAI’’) into
another document, such as the summary
prospectus.128 We received no
comments regarding this issue.
125 See
letter of Federated.
letters of ICI, Oppenheimer, and Schnase.
127 See letter of Schnase.
128 Rule 303(a)(3) of Regulation S–T [17 CFR
232.303(a)(3)] restricts the ability of registered
investment companies to incorporate by reference
into an electronic filing documents that have not
been filed in electronic format. We will not
interpret rule 303 to apply to the failure to file
interactive data files.
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126 See
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Consistent with the treatment of other
applicable reporting obligations, we are
adopting, as proposed, a continuing
hardship exemption for the inability
timely to submit electronically
interactive data. Rule 202 of Regulation
S–T provides for continuing hardship
exemptions.129
Rule 202 permits a filer to apply in
writing for a continuing hardship
exemption if information otherwise
required to be submitted in electronic
format cannot be so filed without undue
burden or expense. If the Commission or
the staff, through authority delegated
from the Commission, grants the
request, the filer must file the
information in paper by the applicable
due date and file a confirming electronic
copy if and when specified in the grant
of the request.
As proposed, we are revising rule 202
to provide that a grant of a continuing
hardship exemption for interactive data
will not require a paper submission.130
If the filer did not electronically submit
the interactive data by the end of the
period for which the exemption was
granted, the filer’s ability to file posteffective amendments under rule 485(b)
will be suspended until it does
electronically submit the interactive
data.131 Similarly, we are revising rule
202 to provide an essentially mirrorimage exemption from the requirement
for a mutual fund that has a Web site to
post the interactive data on its Web
site.132 We did not receive any
comments addressing this issue.
E. Interactive Data List of Tags and
Commission Viewer
1. Data Tags
Under the rule, mutual funds are
required to submit their risk/return
summary information in an interactive
data file using the most recent list of
tags released by XBRL U.S. for risk/
return summary information, as
approved for use by the Commission.133
Interactive data is required for the
entirety of the risk/return summary
129 Rule 201 of Regulation S–T [17 CFR 232.201]
provides for temporary hardship exemptions. We
are not adopting a temporary hardship exemption
because our rules provide a mutual fund with a 15business day period for submitting the interactive
data file for a related official filing.
130 See rule 202 as adopted in Interactive Data
Adopting Release, supra note 6.
131 Amendment to Note 4 to rule 202 as adopted
in Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6;
rule 485(c)(3).
132 Id.
133 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (adopting amendments to rule 11 of
Regulation S–T and adopting new rule 405(a)) and
amendments to rule 405(a).
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information, including information for
all series and all classes.134
The submission also must include any
supporting files as prescribed by the
EDGAR Filer Manual.135 Mutual funds
are required to tag a limited number of
document and entity identifier
elements, such as the form type and the
fund’s name. As with interactive data
for the risk/return summary, these
document and identity identifiers are
formatted using the appropriate list of
tags as required by Regulation S–T and
the EDGAR Filer Manual.136
Several commenters asserted that the
list of tags for risk/return summary
information required additional
development before the Commission
mandates filing of risk/return
summaries in interactive data format.137
Three commenters asserted that there
are significant technical difficulties
relating to the current list of tags,138
noting, for example, that the current
tagging software did not provide a way
to accurately replicate footnotes to the
fee table, or special symbols such as
registered marks.139 Commenters further
asserted that mutual funds would not
have sufficient time to resolve these
technical issues,140 to test the final list
of tags,141 or to review the various
software options for compliance with
the rules.142 Several commenters also
asserted that currently-available tagging
software has yet to be finalized for use
in rendering interactive versions of risk/
return summary information.143 These
commenters urged that required use of
the list of tags be delayed until these
deficiencies have been remedied,144 and
the list has been acknowledged by XBRL
International.145 One commenter
expressed concern that the revisions to
the list would not be finalized and
acknowledged by XBRL International in
a brief enough time period to allow
thorough evaluation and
134 See
General Instruction C.3.(g) of Form N–1A.
discussed supra note 17, rule 405 of
Regulation S–T directly sets forth the basic tagging
requirements and indirectly sets forth the rest of the
tagging requirements, which are contained in the
EDGAR Filer Manual. See Interactive Data Adopting
Release, supra note 6 (adopting rule 405 of
Regulation S–T).
136 Id.
137 See letters of Federated, Gilmore, ICI,
Oppenheimer, Schnase, and Vanguard.
138 See letters of Federated, ICI, and Vanguard.
139 See letters of Federated and Vanguard.
140 See letter of Federated.
141 See letter of ICI.
142 See letters of ICI and Oppenheimer.
143 See letters of Federated, Gilmore, ICI, and
Oppenheimer.
144 See letters of Federated and Vanguard.
145 See letters of ICI and Schnase.
135 As
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implementation prior to the proposed
compliance date.146
Given the status of the list of tags for
risk/return summary information, we do
not believe the issues raised by
commenters warrant delay of the
initiative. As previously noted, XBRL
U.S. has updated the architecture of the
list of tags developed by the ICI and
conformed the list to the changes in the
risk/return summary that we adopted as
part of our Summary Prospectus
Initiative.147 Among other things, the
updates are intended to address
technical problems, such as the
difficulty of tagging footnotes that were
cited by commenters. It is anticipated
that these changes related to the
architecture and addition of new tags
will be finalized by the end of January
2009,148 almost two years before the
compliance date for submission of
tagged risk/return summary
information. Further, the contract with
XBRL U.S. requires that the list of tags
receive acknowledgement prior to
finalization.
Furthermore, there are a growing
number of software applications
available to preparers and consumers
that are designed to help make
interactive data increasingly useful to
both retail and institutional investors, as
well as to other participants in the U.S.
and global capital markets. On this
basis, we believe interactive data, and in
particular the XBRL standard, are
growing and that the list of tags for risk/
return summary information is now
sufficiently comprehensive to require
that mutual funds provide their risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format.
Updates to the list of tags for risk/
return summary reporting may be
posted and available for downloading
from time to time to reflect changes in
the risk/return summary requirements,
refinements to the list of tags, or for
other reasons. To provide mutual funds
sufficient time to become familiar with
any such updates, we anticipate giving
advance notice before requiring use of
an updated list of tags. Based on
experience to date with the list of tags
for risk/return summary information, we
believe that, with the enhancements to
the list of tags that XBRL U.S. is
developing, the list of tags will be
sufficiently developed to support the
interactive data disclosure requirements
in the rules.
One of the useful aspects of
interactive data is its extensibility—that
146 See
letter of Oppenheimer.
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release,
supra note 28.
148 See supra note 51 and accompanying text.
147 See
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is, the ability to add to the standard list
of tags in order to accommodate unique
circumstances in a mutual fund’s
particular disclosures. The use of
customized tags, however, may also
serve to reduce the ability of users to
compare similar information across
mutual funds. In order to promote
comparability across funds, we are
adopting, as proposed, the rule
provision that limits the use of
extensions to circumstances where the
appropriate element does not exist in
the standard list of tags.149 Wherever
possible and when a standard element
is appropriate, preparers are required to
change the label for an element that
exists in the standard list of tags, instead
of creating a new customized tag.150 We
received no comments concerning this
issue.
2. Regulation S–T and the EDGAR Filer
Manual
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that mutual funds provide
interactive data in the form of exhibits
to the related registration statement on
Form N–1A, and we are also adopting
a requirement that mutual funds
provide interactive data in the form of
exhibits to any related form of
prospectus filed pursuant to rule 497(c)
or (e) under the Securities Act that
includes risk/return summary
information that varies from the
registration statement.151 Interactive
data will be required to comply with our
Regulation S–T 152 and the EDGAR Filer
Manual. The EDGAR Filer Manual is
available on our Web site.153 It includes
technical information for making
electronic filings with the Commission.
Volume II of this manual includes
guidance on the preparation,
submission, and validation of
interactive data submitted under the
voluntary program.154
In addition to both Regulation S–T,
which includes the rules we are
adopting, and the instructions in our
149 Rule 405(c)(1)(iii)(B) as adopted in Interactive
Data Adopting Release, supra note 6.
150 Rule 405(c)(1)(iii)(A) as adopted in Interactive
Data Adopting Release, supra note 6.
151 The requirement to submit interactive data as
an exhibit appears in General Instruction C.3.(g).(iv)
of Form N–1A.
152 Rule 405 of Regulation S–T directly sets forth
the basic tagging and posting requirements for the
XBRL data and requires compliance with the
EDGAR Filer Manual. Consistent with rule 405, the
EDGAR Filer Manual contains the detailed tagging
requirements.
153 The EDGAR Filer Manual is available at:
https://www.sec.gov/info/edgar/edmanuals.htm.
154 As previously noted, the EDGAR Filer Manual
is currently being updated to incorporate changes
to the tagging requirements applicable to financial
data and to fund risk/return summary information.
See supra note 17.
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EDGAR Filer Manual, filers may access
other sources for guidance in tagging
their financial information. These
include the XBRL U.S. Preparers Guide;
user guidance accompanying tagging
software; and financial printers and
other service providers. New software
and other forms of third-party support
for tagging risk/return summary
information using interactive data are
also becoming available.
3. Commission Viewer
Some commenters asserted that the
Commission’s mutual fund viewer
required more development before the
Commission requires filings in
interactive data format.155 Specifically,
commenters expressed concern that the
viewer was too narrow and
uncomfortable to read,156 that filers in
the voluntary program were unable to
view an interactive data exhibit prior to
submitting the exhibit,157 and that
existing viewers, including the
Commission’s, do not display the tagged
files consistently.158
While, as discussed above, the
Commission’s current viewer permits
the rendering of tagged risk/return
summary information, we are in the
process of implementing changes to
develop a more advanced tool that
should address many of these concerns.
The upgraded viewer will permit filers
to conduct test filings and view
rendered documents prior to submitting
their exhibits. We expect these upgrades
to be completed during mid-2009.
Further evaluation will be useful with
respect to the availability of inexpensive
and sophisticated interactive data
viewers. Currently software providers
are developing interactive data viewers,
and we anticipate that these will
become widely available and
increasingly useful to investors.
As noted previously, commenters also
expressed concern about the potential
risks to investors of providing them
with only the risk/return summary
without a reference to the additional
information that is contained in the
registration statement.159 In order to
avoid confusion, three of these
commenters suggested that the viewable
interactive data be accompanied by a
cautionary legend encouraging investors
to read and consider the full prospectus
or other filing from which the
155 See letters of ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase,
Starkman, and Vanguard.
156 See letter of Starkman.
157 See letter of Vanguard.
158 See letter of ICI.
159 See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, and Schnase. See also discussion at
Section II.B. supra, note 104 and accompanying
text.
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information is taken.160 Specifically,
one commenter suggested that the
viewable interactive data be
accompanied by a cautionary legend
similar to that required to be included
in fund advertisements by rule 482
under the Securities Act.161 We agree
that it is appropriate to place context on
the information presented in the viewer,
and to encourage investors to review a
fund’s prospectus. Accordingly, we will
include language within any rendered
risk/return summary information on the
Commission’s upgraded mutual fund
viewer to: (1) Inform users that the
information is derived from a portion of
the fund’s prospectus; (2) explain that
the prospectus contains additional
information about the mutual fund; and
(3) state that a fund’s prospectus should
be read carefully before investing.
Commenters also raised concerns
about potential liability under the
federal securities laws relating to
rendered interactive data filings.162
These concerns are addressed in Section
II.F., below.
F. Application of Federal Securities
Laws
Complete, accurate, and reliable
disclosures are essential to investors
and the proper functioning of the
securities markets. Our requirement to
submit interactive data with mutual
fund registration statements is designed
to provide investors with new tools to
obtain, review, and analyze information
from mutual funds more efficiently and
effectively. To satisfy these goals,
interactive data must meet investor
expectations of reliability and accuracy.
Many factors, including mutual fund
policies and procedures buttressed by
incentives provided by the
Commission’s application of
technology, market forces, and the
liability provisions of the federal
securities laws, help further those goals.
New rule 406T of Regulation S–T 163
addresses the liability for an interactive
data file and provides that an interactive
data file is:
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
160 See
letters of ABA, ICI, and Schnase.
161 See letter of ICI. See also rule 482(b)(1) under
the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.482]. Rule 482(b)(1)
requires a mutual fund advertisement to include a
statement that ‘‘[a]dvises an investor to consider the
investment objectives, risks, and charges and
expenses of the investment company carefully
before investing; explains that the prospectus
contains this and other information about the
investment company; identifies a source from
which an investor may obtain a prospectus; and
states that the prospectus should be read carefully
before investing.’’
162 See letters of ABA, ICI, Oppenheimer, and
Schnase.
163 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (adopting rule 406T of Regulation S–T).
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• Subject to the anti-fraud provisions
of Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act,
Section 10(b) of and rule 10b–5 under
the Exchange Act, and Section 206(1) of
the Investment Advisers Act except as
provided below;
• Deemed not filed or part of a
registration statement or prospectus for
purposes of Sections 11 or 12 of the
Securities Act, is deemed not filed for
purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange
Act or Section 34(b) of the Investment
Company Act, and otherwise is not
subject to liability under these sections;
• Deemed filed for purposes of rule
103 of Regulation S–T; and
• Subject to liability for a failure to
comply with rule 405 of Regulation
S–T, but shall be deemed to have
complied with rule 405 and would not
be subject to liability under the antifraud provisions set forth above or
under any other liability provision if the
electronic filer:
Æ Makes a good faith attempt to
comply with rule 405; and
Æ After the electronic filer becomes
aware that the interactive data file fails
to comply with rule 405, promptly
amends the interactive data file to
comply with rule 405.
In regard to correcting an interactive
data file, the Commission added the
term ‘‘promptly’’ to the list of defined
terms in Rule 11 under Regulation
S–T.164 Rule 11 defines ‘‘promptly’’ as
‘‘as soon as reasonably practicable
under the facts and circumstances at the
time.’’ The definition is followed by a
non-exclusive safe harbor. The safe
harbor generally provides that a
correction made by the later of 24 hours
or 9:30 a.m. on the next business day
after the filer becomes aware of the need
for the correction is deemed promptly
made. If a fund fails to comply with the
safe harbor, the fund still may have
corrected promptly depending on the
applicable facts and circumstances.
As adopted, the liability provisions of
new Rule 406T will apply only until
October 31, 2014. We believe that
limiting the modified application of the
federal securities laws to a specified
period improves the balance between
avoiding unnecessary cost and expense
and encouraging accuracy in regard to
interactive data because it recognizes
that issuers and service providers likely
will grow increasingly skilled at and
comfortable with the tagging
requirements.
Except for the period limitation, this
provision is substantially the same as
the proposed treatment of interactive
164 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6 (amending Rule 11).
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7759
data files under the proposed rules.165
In the Proposing Release, the
Commission sought comment on this
topic, and commenters generally
supported limiting the liability of
mutual funds for good faith errors in
tagging or formatting interactive data
submissions.166 As adopted, however,
we include a provision that, after
October 31, 2014, these liability
provisions will no longer apply and an
interactive data file will be subject to
the same liability provisions as the
related official filing.167 We adopt this
provision because we believe, over time,
information in interactive data should
be subject to the same liability as all
other information in a fund’s filing. The
provision, however, provides funds
with protections over a substantial
period to become comfortable with
ensuring the accuracy of their
interactive data files.
As proposed, rule 406 of Regulation
S–T also provided that the usual
liability provisions of the federal
securities laws would apply to humanreadable interactive data that is
identical in all material respects to the
corresponding data in the traditional
format filing 168 as displayed by a
viewer that the Commission provides.
Commenters raised substantial concerns
over this proposal, including: (1)
Seeking clarification of the liability
applicable to situations not intended to
be addressed explicitly by the proposed
rules, such as for errors arising as a
result of the Commission’s interactive
data rendering software,169 or as a result
of comparative applications provided by
either the Commission or a third
party; 170 (2) requesting clarifications
that funds should not be held
responsible for information converted
into viewable form by non-Commission
viewers,171 or for interactive data posted
on fund Web sites; 172 and (3) requesting
that a mutual fund be able to
incorporate by reference the fund’s full
prospectus and SAI into the viewable
interactive data exhibit.173
165 See Proposing Release, supra note 9
(proposing rule 406).
166 See letters of ABA, Angel, ICI, and Schnase.
167 See rule 406T(d) of Regulation S–T.
168 As proposed, the human-readable interactive
data would have been identical to the
corresponding data in the traditional format filing
if the mutual fund complied with the interactive
data tagging requirements of proposed rule 405.
169 See letter of ABA.
170 See letter of Oppenheimer.
171 See letters of ABA, ICI, and Oppenheimer.
172 See letters of ABA and ICI.
173 See letters of Federated, ICI, and Schnase. One
commenter noted that the risk/return summary
information in a prospectus is subject to liability
under Sections 11 or 12 of the Securities Act, but
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
In response to commenters’ concerns
we believe that interactive data in
viewable form are best addressed in
relation to interactive data files and
traditional concepts of liability.
Interactive data in viewable form that
are displayed on the Commission’s Web
site will reflect the related interactive
data file and, as a result, such
interactive data in viewable form should
be treated in the same manner as the
related interactive data file in regard to
a fund’s failure to correctly tag an
interactive data file that results in a
failure of the interactive data in
viewable form to reflect the related
official filing. Interactive data in
viewable form that are displayed on
other Web sites would be subject to
general anti-fraud principles applicable
to republication of another person’s
statements.174 Consistent with
traditional concepts of liability, a fund
could not be liable twice for a failure
that occurs in both an interactive data
file and the related interactive data in
viewable form.
We believe that this change is
appropriate to address commenters’
concerns and provide certainty as to the
parameters of their liability related to
interactive data. We also believe that it
is appropriate given other protections
that investors will receive related to the
interactive data, including that the risk/
return summary information and other
disclosures in the traditional format
related official filing to which the
interactive data relate would continue to
be subject to the usual liability
provisions of the federal securities laws.
For example, the traditional format
related official filing would continue to
be subject to Section 10(b) and rule
10b–5 of the Exchange Act and, in the
appropriate circumstance, to Section 11
of the Securities Act.
In the Interactive Data Adopting
Release, we elaborate further upon
interactive data in viewable form and
our decision not to impose any separate
liability for such data.175 Given that the
rules do not include such provisions,
we do not address further commenters’
requests for clarification related to
liability for rendered documents.
Further, we do not believe it is needed
to provide funds with the ability to
incorporate by reference into rendered
documents, given that liability is not
imposed separately upon interactive
data in viewable form.
In the Proposing Release, we did not
propose to permit or require cautionary
legends for interactive risk/return
summary information. Several
commenters expressed concern about
the potential consequences of investor
reliance on incomplete information.176
Two commenters suggested that the
Commission require viewable
interactive risk/return disclosures to
include a cautionary disclosure similar
to the legend we recently required for
the new mutual fund summary
prospectus, which advises investors
where to locate additional information
about the fund in the fund’s prospectus
and SAI, and permits a fund to
incorporate certain information by
reference into the summary
prospectus.177 As noted in Section II.E.
above, we agree with commenters that it
is appropriate to alert investors about
the availability of additional
information in a fund’s prospectus.
Therefore, we will include cautionary
language on the Commission’s mutual
fund viewer encouraging investors to
review a fund’s full prospectus.
We believe, however, that attempting
to place in interactive data legends of
the type suggested would be
impracticable because interactive data
will often be accessed in its machinereadable form and, even if it were
accessed in viewable form, might not be
accessed in a place where the legend
would appear. As to a legend that states
people should not rely on the
interactive data in particular, such a
legend would be inappropriate because
there is no reason the data should not
be reliable and, were it not reliable, it
would have little value.178
We are adopting, as proposed, the
requirement that an interactive data file
consist of ‘‘no more and no less’’ than
the corresponding risk/return summary
information in the related official
filing.179 One commenter expressed
concern that submitting interactive risk/
return summary information for
multiple funds may confuse some
investors who seek data about only a
only in connection with the full prospectus in
which it is contained, and the SAI that is typically
incorporated therein. See letter of ICI. The
commenter asserted that it would not be
appropriate to isolate the risk/return summary
information from the context of the entire
registration statement and impose liability.
174 These general anti-fraud principles relate to,
among other areas, aiding and abetting, control
persons, entanglement, and adoption.
175 See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra
note 6.
176 See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, and Schnase.
177 See letters of ICI and Schnase; see also
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note
28.
178 We reach a different conclusion regarding a
tagged legend in the voluntary program and
continue to require such legends to provide
investors with limited additional notice because
that information is not part of the official filing and
was intended for experimental submissions.
179 Rule 405(b)(2) of Regulation S–T.
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single fund.180 However, as a result of
our Summary Prospectus Initiative,
multiple fund prospectuses must
present the summary information for
each fund sequentially and not integrate
the information for more than one
fund.181 Since risk/return summary
information for multiple funds will no
longer be permitted to be combined in
the prospectus, this information will
also, in accordance with rule 405, be
presented separately in interactive
format. In view of this requirement,
interactive risk/return summary
information for multiple funds should
be as easy for investors to locate and
understand as similar information for a
single-fund prospectus.
To assist mutual funds in ensuring the
accuracy of their XBRL filings, we plan,
in the future, to make available to
mutual funds the opportunity to make a
test submission with the Commission to
create viewable interactive data.182 If
the validation system finds an error, it
will advise the filer of the nature of the
error and whether the error was major
or minor. As occurs in the voluntary
program, a major error in an interactive
data exhibit that is part of a live filing
will cause the exhibit to be held in
suspense in the electronic filing system.
The rest of the filing will be accepted
and disseminated if there are no major
errors outside of the interactive data
exhibit. If that happens, the filer will
need to revise the interactive data
exhibit to eliminate the major error and
submit the exhibit as an amendment to
the filing to which it is intended to
appear as an exhibit. A minor error in
an interactive data exhibit that is part of
a live filing will not prevent the
interactive data exhibit from being
accepted and disseminated together
with the rest of the filing if there are no
major errors in the rest of the filing. We
believe it is appropriate to accept and
disseminate a filing without the
interactive data exhibit submitted with
it if only the exhibit has a major error,
in order to disseminate at least as much
information at least as timely as would
have been disseminated were there no
interactive data requirement.
The rule does not require mutual
funds to involve third parties, such as
auditors or consultants, in the creation
of the interactive data provided as an
exhibit to a mutual fund’s Form N–1A
filing, including assurance.183 We are
180 See
letter of ICI.
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release,
supra note 28.
182 The EDGAR Filer Manual addresses test
submissions primarily at Section 6.6.5 of Volume II.
183 With respect to registration statements, SAS
37 (AU Section 711) was issued in April 1981 to
address the auditor’s responsibilities in connection
181 See
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taking this approach after considering
various factors, including:
• Commenters’ views;
• The availability of a comprehensive
list of tags for risk/return summary
information from which appropriate
tags can be selected, thus reducing a
mutual fund’s need to develop new
elements;
• The availability of user-friendly
software with which to create the
interactive data file;
• The delayed compliance date, prior
to which mutual funds may become
familiar with the tagging of risk/return
summary information;
• The availability of interactive data
technology specifications, and of other
XBRL U.S., XBRL International, and
Commission resources for preparers of
tagged data; 184
• The advances in rendering/
presentation software and validation
tools for use by preparers of tagged data
that can identify the existence of certain
tagging errors;
• The expectation that preparers of
tagged data will take the initiative to
develop practices to promote accurate
and consistent tagging; and
• The mutual fund’s and preparer’s
liability for the accuracy of the
traditional format version of the risk/
return summary information.
G. Changes to the Voluntary Program
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Mutual funds will no longer be able
to submit risk/return summary
information in interactive data format
through the voluntary program after the
compliance date for the mandatory
rules. We are amending rule 401 of
Regulation S–T to remove risk/return
summary information as a category of
information permitted to be submitted
under the voluntary program effective
after the compliance date for the
mandatory rules.185 This amendment
differs from our proposal which would
have removed the option to file risk/
return summary information under the
voluntary program altogether. This
change makes explicitly clear that
mutual funds may continue to
experiment with the submission of risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format up until the
compliance date for these rule
amendments. For this same reason, we
are not adopting proposed changes to
rule 8b–33 under the Investment
with filings under the federal securities statutes.
With respect to our rule, an auditor will not be
required to apply AU Section 711 to the interactive
data provided as an exhibit in a fund’s registration
statement, or to the viewable interactive data.
184 An example of Commission resources includes
the EDGAR Filer Manual.
185 See rule 401(b)(iv).
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Company Act and certain technical
amendments to rule 401 of Regulation
S–T.186
Further, in order to encourage
participation in the voluntary program
for tagging investment company
financial information, we are adopting,
substantially as proposed, amendments
to enable investment companies that are
registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies, and other entities that report
under the Exchange Act and prepare
their financial statements in accordance
with Article 6 of Regulation S–X to
submit exhibits containing a tagged
schedule of portfolio holdings without
having to submit other financial
information in interactive data
format.187 As with the current voluntary
program, volunteers will be able to
participate merely by submitting a
tagged Schedule I—Investments in
Securities of Unaffiliated Issuers
(‘‘Schedule I’’).188 To facilitate this,
XBRL U.S. developed a list of tags that
could be used to tag portfolio holdings.
On October 21, 2008, XBRL U.S. issued
its Schedule of Investments Taxonomy
for public comment.189 The taxonomy is
expected to be finalized by XBRL U.S.
by the end of January 2009.
Currently, the interactive data
furnished under the voluntary program
must consist of at least one item from a
list of enumerated mandatory content
(‘‘Mandatory Content’’), including
financial statements, earnings
information, and, for registered
management investment companies,
financial highlights or condensed
financial information and risk/return
summary information set forth in Form
N–1A.190 We are adding Schedule I
information as a separate item of
Mandatory Content that participants can
submit in order to give volunteers
greater flexibility in tagging fund data.
Several commenters asserted that
expanding the voluntary program to
include fund portfolio holdings
186 See proposed rule 8b–33; proposed rule
401(b)(1)(iv); proposed rule 401(d)(1)(i); and
proposed rule 401(d)(2)(i) in the Proposing Release,
supra note 9.
187 Rule 401(b)(1)(v) (designating Schedule I—
Investments in securities of unaffiliated issuers as
mandatory content under the voluntary program).
The voluntary program will be modified to permit
participation only by registered investment
companies, business development companies, and
other entities that report under the Exchange Act
and prepare their financial statements in
accordance with Article 6 of Regulation S–X. See
Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6
(rule 401(a)).
188 Rule 12–12 of Regulation S–X [17 CFR 210.12–
12].
189 See supra note 51.
190 Rule 401(b)(1) of Regulation S–T [17 CFR
232.401(b)(1)].
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7761
information was premature.191 These
commenters stated that (1) the
information would not be meaningful to
individual investors; 192 (2) the
taxonomy does not yet exist; 193 and (3)
more experience with the technology is
necessary before expansion of the
program.194 Given that participants may
already provide portfolio holdings
information as part of their financial
statements under the voluntary
program, we disagree with these
comments. The expansion of the
voluntary program to permit the
submission of portfolio holdings
information simply provides volunteers
with an alternative to submitting
complete financial statement
information and increases the options
for participation in the program.
Investors, financial intermediaries, and
third-party information providers,
among others, use the portfolio holdings
data contained in Schedule I to make
decisions concerning the purchase and
continued holding of funds and for
other purposes. Portfolio holdings data
may be even more useful to these
various stakeholders if such data is
interactive.
Under the current voluntary program,
any official filing with which tagged
exhibits are submitted must disclose
that the financial information is
‘‘unaudited’’ or ‘‘unreviewed,’’ as
applicable and that the purpose of
submitting the tagged exhibits is to test
the related format and technology and,
as a result, investors should not rely on
the exhibits in making investment
decisions.195 We believe that this
cautionary disclosure should also be
tagged and included within each
interactive data exhibit, in order to help
alert investors and other users that the
exhibits should not be relied on in
making investment decisions.
Accordingly, we are requiring, as
proposed, that this disclosure be
included in the exhibits submitted
pursuant to the voluntary program as a
tagged data element,196 consistent with
how the cautionary disclosure is
presented in risk/return summary
exhibits under the current voluntary
program.
H. Compliance Date
The rules require all mutual funds to
submit interactive data with any
registration statement or post-effective
191 See letters of Data Communique, ICI, and
´
Vanguard.
192 See letter of Data Communique.
´
193 See letter of ICI.
194 See letter of Vanguard.
195 Rule 401(d)(1)(ii) of Regulation S–T [17 CFR
232.401(d)(1)(ii)].
196 See rule 401(d)(2).
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amendment on Form N–1A that
includes or amends risk/return
summary information and with any
form of prospectus filed pursuant to rule
497(c) or (e) under the Securities Act
that contains risk/return summary
information that varies from the
registration statement.197 The first
required submissions will be for initial
registration statements and posteffective amendments that are annual
updates to effective registration
statements 198 and that become effective
after January 1, 2011. Further, no
mutual fund is required to comply with
the provision to submit a tagged risk/
return summary exhibit with any form
of prospectus filed pursuant to rule
497(c) or (e) under the Securities Act
until that fund has first submitted an
exhibit with its registration statement.
In the Proposing Release, we asked for
comment on an anticipated compliance
date that would require submissions for
initial registration statements and posteffective amendments that are annual
updates to effective registration
statements and that become effective
after December 31, 2009. Commenters
generally objected to this compliance
date, asserting that adoption of the
requirement to tag risk/return summary
information is premature, given that the
Commission’s pending Summary
Prospectus Initiative and ETF Initiative
would change the required information
in the risk/return summary.199
Commenters also asserted that the
proposed schedule for implementation
of interactive data tagging should be
delayed because it did not allow mutual
funds sufficient time to resolve
outstanding technical issues or to
review the various options for
compliance with the rule.200 Others
asserted that more information is
needed to be collected from the current
voluntary program, including costs and
benefits.201 Two commenters supported
phasing in the interactive data
requirements based on the size of a
mutual fund’s total net assets, with
larger funds becoming subject to the
rules first.202 Finally, commenters also
noted that implementing tagging of the
current risk/return summary is
premature given that the risk/return
summary and the taxonomy could
potentially change as a result of the
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
197 See
General Instruction C.3.(g) to Form N–1A.
198 See supra note 11 and accompanying text.
199 See supra note 69 and accompanying text.
200 See letters of Federated, ICI, and
Oppenheimer.
201 See letters of Federated, ICI, and Schnase.
202 See letters of Data Communique and Schnase.
´
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16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
Summary Prospectus Initiative and the
ETF Initiative.203
While we believe that these comments
warrant a change in the compliance date
to ensure funds have sufficient time to
prepare their first risk/return summary
submissions in interactive data format,
they do not justify a substantial delay in
implementation of this initiative. First,
as we discussed above, we recently
adopted final amendments to Form N–
1A in the Summary Prospectus
Adopting Release,204 and, therefore, do
not believe those commenter concerns
warrant delaying implementation of this
tagged risk/return summary
information.205
Second, for the reasons we discussed
in Section II.A., we believe that the
compliance date we are adopting will
allow mutual funds sufficient time to
prepare risk/return summary
information in interactive data format.
As we noted previously, XBRL U.S. has
updated the list of tags to reflect our
most recent revisions to mutual fund
risk/return disclosure requirements, and
has submitted this list for public
comment, after which it will be
submitted for acknowledgment to XBRL
International. This process should be
completed by the end of January 2009.
Therefore, we believe that the list of tags
for risk/return summary information is
now sufficiently advanced, to require
that mutual funds provide their risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format. Further, as
discussed above, over the last three
years the Commission has gained
experience with interactive data in the
voluntary program covering both mutual
fund risk/return and financial statement
information.
We do, however, recognize that
requiring mutual funds to tag their risk/
return summary information at the same
time that they are revising their
prospectuses for the recent amendments
to Form N–1A in the Summary
Prospectus Adopting Release could
result in an unnecessary burden. For
that reason, we are making a
modification to the compliance date so
that mutual funds have an additional
year before they are required to submit
tagged risk/return summary
information. This period of almost two
years should provide funds with
sufficient time to prepare the amended
203 See letter of ICI, Oppenheimer, T. Rowe Price,
and Vanguard.
204 See supra notes 69 and 70 and accompanying
text.
205 These amendments were adopted on
November 19, 2008. See supra note 69, and
Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note
28.
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disclosures and interactive data
submissions based on those disclosures.
While the requirements we recently
adopted for interactive submission of
financial data include a schedule of
tiered implementation, we believe that
mutual fund investors have an
important interest in having access to
interactive risk/return data from all
funds concurrently. Therefore, we are
adopting, as proposed, a single
compliance date for all mutual funds.
We expect that most mutual funds that
are part of smaller fund families, which
generally are disproportionately affected
by regulatory costs, will be able to
provide their risk/return summary
information in interactive data format
without undue effort or expense. While
interactive data reporting involves
changes in reporting procedures mostly
in the initial reporting periods, we
expect that these changes will provide
efficiencies in future periods. As a
result, there may be potential future net
savings to the mutual fund, particularly
if interactive data become integrated
into the mutual fund’s disclosure
process. While we recognize that
requiring interactive data risk/return
summary information will likely result
in start-up expenses for all mutual fund
families, we expect that both software
and third-party services will be
available to help meet the needs of
mutual fund families, including meeting
the unique needs of smaller mutual
fund families.
We are sensitive to concerns
expressed by some commenters that
undue expense and burden may
accompany the adoption of required
interactive data reporting.206 We believe
that the extended compliance date and
the proposed 15-business day period for
making interactive data submissions
seem to alleviate these concerns.207
Under the rules we are adopting, the
voluntary program is being modified to
allow for participation by mutual funds
with respect to risk/return summary
information up until January 1, 2011,
but continue to permit investment
companies to participate with respect to
financial statement information
thereafter. Investment companies may
submit their tagged portfolio holdings
information, pursuant to the rules we
are adopting, at any time after the
effective date of these rules, July 15,
2009. This effective date was chosen to
coincide with the release of an updated
EDGAR Filer Manual which will
206 See
letters of ICI, Schnase, and Starkman.
discuss more fully supra at Section II.F
liability related to required submissions of
interactive data.
207 We
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incorporate the new list of tags for
portfolio holdings information.
We intend to monitor implementation
and, if necessary, make appropriate
adjustments to the adopted
amendments.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
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A. Reporting and Burden Estimate
Certain provisions of the rule and
form amendments contain ‘‘collection of
information’’ requirements within the
meaning of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (‘‘PRA’’).208 The titles for
the collections of information are: (1)
‘‘Mutual Fund Interactive Data’’ (OMB
Control No. 3235–0642) and (2)
‘‘Voluntary XBRL-Related Documents’’
(OMB Control No. 3235–0611). We
published notice soliciting comments
on the collection of information
requirements in the release proposing
the amendments 209 and submitted the
proposed collections of information to
the Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) for review and approval in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and
5 CFR 1320.11.210 OMB has assigned a
control number to the collection of
information for mutual fund interactive
data. We received four comments on the
collection of information
requirements 211 and have revised the
estimated reporting and cost burdens of
the rule and form amendments, as
discussed below. An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, an information
collection 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 the Mutual Fund
Interactive Data collection of
information. We have submitted a
revised request to OMB.
The title for the new collection of
information for submitting risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format that the amendments establish is
‘‘Mutual Fund Interactive Data’’. This
collection of information relates to
already existing regulations and forms
adopted under the Securities Act, the
Exchange Act, and the Investment
Company Act that set forth disclosure
requirements for mutual funds and
other issuers. The amendments require
mutual funds to submit their risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format and post it on their Web sites, if
208 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Proposing Release, supra note 9, 73 FR at
209 See
35459.
210 See Proposing Release, supra note 9, 73 FR at
35457–59.
211 See letters of Confluence, ICI, Schnase, and
Starkman.
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any, in interactive data form. The
specified risk/return summary
information already is and will continue
to be required to be submitted to the
Commission in traditional format under
existing disclosure requirements.
Compliance with the amendments is
mandatory beginning with initial
registration statements and posteffective amendments that are annual
updates to effective registration
statements that become effective after
January 1, 2011.212
The title for the collection of
information for submitting portfolio
holdings in interactive data format is
‘‘Voluntary XBRL-Related Documents’’.
The amendments will permit
investment companies that are
registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies, and other entities that report
under the Exchange Act and prepare
their financial statements in accordance
with Article 6 of Regulation S-X to
submit exhibits containing a tagged
schedule of portfolio holdings without
having to submit other financial
information in interactive data format.
Compliance with these amendments is
voluntary.
B. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
Form N–1A (OMB Control No. 3235–
0307) under the Securities Act and the
Investment Company Act 213 is used by
mutual funds to register under the
Investment Company Act and to offer
their securities under the Securities Act.
The information required by the new
collection of information, corresponds
to the risk/return summary information
now required by Form N–1A and is
required to appear in exhibits to Form
N–1A, exhibits to prospectuses with
risk/return summary information that
varies from the registration statement,
and on mutual funds’ Web sites.
In the Proposing Release, we
estimated that each mutual fund would
submit one interactive data document as
an exhibit to a registration statement or
a post-effective amendment thereto on
Form N–1A that includes or amends
information provided in response to
Items 2 or 3.214 We estimated in the
Proposing Release that interactive data
filers would require an average of
approximately 13 burden hours to tag
risk/return summary information in the
first year, and the same task in
subsequent years would require an
212 See
supra Section II.H.
CFR 239.15A; 17 CFR 274.11A.
214 This information is now contained in Items 2,
3, and 4. See supra note 61.
213 17
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average of approximately 11 hours.215
Therefore, we estimated the average
annual burden over a three-year period
to be approximately 12 hours.216
In response to commenters’ concerns,
however, we are modifying our rules to
include changes to risk/return summary
information that mutual funds are
permitted to make pursuant to rule 497
under the Securities Act.217 Based on a
limited, random, non-statistical survey
by Commission staff of filings made
pursuant to rule 497, we estimate that
5% of mutual funds, or approximately
443 funds,218 will make changes to risk/
return summary information in filings
submitted pursuant to rule 497. Based
on estimates of 8,856 mutual funds each
submitting one interactive data
document as an exhibit to a registration
statement or post-effective amendment
thereto 219 and 443 mutual funds
submitting an additional interactive
data document as an exhibit to a filing
pursuant to rule 497, each incurring 12
hours per year on average, we estimate
that, in the aggregate, interactive data
adoption will result in an additional
111,588 burden hours for all mutual
funds for each of the first three years.220
Converted into dollars, this amounts to
approximately $23,768,244.221
One commenter challenged the
estimates provided in the Proposing
Release, asserting that the sample of
voluntary program participants is too
small and consists mostly of large fund
215 The average burden hours for the first and
subsequent submissions were calculated using data
collected from a voluntary program participant
questionnaire. See infra Section IV.
216 (13.33 hours for the first submission + 11.275
hours for the second submission + 11.275 hours for
the third submission) ÷ 3 years = approximately 12
hours.
217 See supra notes 90 through 95 and
accompanying text.
218 5% × 8,856 mutual funds = approximately 443
mutual funds.
219 This estimate is based on an analysis by the
Division of Investment Management staff of
publicly available data.
220 (8,856 mutual funds + 443 mutual funds) × 12
incremental burden hours per mutual fund =
111,588 burden hours.
221 This cost increase is estimated using an
estimated hourly wage rate of $213.00 ((111,588
burden hours) × ($213.00 hourly wage rate) =
$23,768,244 total incremental internal cost). The
estimated wage figure is based on published rates
for compliance attorneys and programmer analysts,
modified to account for an 1800-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 $194,
respectively. See Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association, Report on Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry
2007 (Sept. 2007) (‘‘SIFMA Report’’). The estimated
wage rate was further based on the estimate that
compliance attorneys would account for one quarter
of the hours worked and senior system analysts
would account for the remaining three quarters,
resulting in a weighted wage rate of $213.00 per
hour (($270 × .25) + ($194 × .75)).
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complexes.222 We note that the 22
participants in the voluntary program at
that time included both larger and
smaller funds, and, therefore, the
estimates derived from our experiences
with this program reflect burdens
incurred by funds of varying sizes.223 Of
these 22 funds, six funds, representing
a range of fund complex sizes, provided
data in response to the voluntary
program questionnaire concerning
internal and external costs of preparing
and submitting interactive risk/return
summary information.224
We further estimate, as we did in the
Proposing Release, that mutual funds
will require an average of approximately
1 burden hour to post interactive data to
their Web sites. Based on estimates of
8,856 mutual funds posting interactive
data, each incurring 1 burden hour per
year on average, we estimate that, in the
aggregate, adoption of Web site posting
requirements will result in an additional
8,856 burden hours for all mutual
funds.225 Converted into dollars, this
amounts to approximately
$2,214,000.226
One commenter asserted that the
Commission’s cost estimates may be
vastly understated because they omit
the much larger cost of converting fund
Web sites to XBRL compatibility.227
This commenter did not provide any
specific cost estimates to support this
assertion. Complying with the Web site
posting requirement, however, does not
require conversion of the fund’s Web
site infrastructure.
We also estimate, as we did in the
Proposing Release, that software and
consulting services will be used by
mutual funds for an increase of
approximately $802 per mutual fund.228
222 See
letter of Schnase.
we noted above in Section I.A., to date 25
funds have participated in the voluntary program.
However, at the time of our Proposing Release, only
22 funds had submitted interactive data risk/return
summary information.
224 The average burden hours for the first and
subsequent submissions were calculated using data
collected from six responses to a voluntary program
participant questionnaire from mutual funds that
participated in the voluntary program. See infra
Section IV.A.
225 8,856 mutual funds × 1 burden hour per
mutual fund = 8,856 burden hours.
226 ($250 × 1 hour × 8,856 mutual funds). This
cost estimate is based on informal discussions with
a limited number of persons believed to be
generally knowledgeable about preparing,
submitting, and posting interactive data. See infra
Section IV.A.
227 See letter of Starkman.
228 For purposes of this estimate, we assumed that
the largest 50 fund complexes will develop software
in-house incurring costs of $125,000 in the first
year. Assuming that the largest 50 fund complexes
will develop software for use in all of their funds,
and that their funds encompass 80% of the number
of funds (7,085), then the average first year cost for
those funds will be ($125,000 × 50)/7,085 = $882.
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223 As
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Based on the estimate of 8,856 mutual
funds using software and consulting
services at an annual cost of $802 we
estimate that, in the aggregate, the total
external costs to the industry will be
approximately $7,098,970.229 While one
commenter asserted that these estimates
do not include professional costs from
outside accountants and lawyers,230 we
note that this estimate does reflect the
external cost data provided in response
to the voluntary program questionnaire.
Respondents to the questionnaire
universally indicated that they did not
use the services of outside accountants
in preparing their interactive data
submissions. A few of the respondents
indicated that they used the services of
an outside attorney in preparing their
interactive data submissions, however,
only one respondent indicated a de
minimis expense for such services. A
few respondents who did not use the
services of an outside attorney for their
voluntary filing did indicate they would
work with an outside attorney to
prepare their interactive data
submission upon adoption of our rule
amendments. These costs were reflected
in our estimates in the Proposing
Release.
One commenter also stated that costs
for the voluntary program participants
were low because many fund groups
received tagging software and services at
no cost, which the commenter
anticipated would not be the case upon
the adoption of our rule amendments.231
We note, however, that our survey data
included information from funds that
used no-cost software and from one
fund that created its own software inhouse at great expense.232 We believe
our cost estimates provide an adequate
picture of the initial software
expenditures for funds to comply with
our rule amendments.
One commenter asserted that
automated tagging and filing processes
would reduce the risk and cost
associated with manual processes.233
Therefore, for those funds using software developed
internally, the average 3 year cost will be
approximately $827 ($882 in the first year + $800
in the second year + $800 in the third year) ÷ 3
years = approximately $827. The average 3 year cost
for those funds that use commercial software will
be $700 ($500 in the first year + $800 in the second
year + $800 in the third year) ÷ 3 years = $700.
Assuming 80% of funds incurred costs of $827 and
20% of funds incurred costs of $700, the average
software and consulting cost per mutual fund will
be approximately $802. These estimates were
derived from responses to a voluntary program
questionnaire. See infra Section IV.A.
229 8,856 mutual funds × $802 = approximately
$7,098,970.
230 See letter of Schnase.
231 See letter of ICI.
232 See infra note 252.
233 See letter of Confluence.
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We agree that such software tools may
help minimize both the burden on
respondents and the risk of errors in the
collection process. While this
commenter noted that additional
software tools would need to be
introduced in order to allow data to be
identified and tagged at its source,
thereby automating the processing of the
risk/return data, we expect that the
development of such tools is likely to be
hastened by mutual fund disclosure
using interactive data. As noted
previously,234 there is a growing
number of software applications
available to preparers and consumers
that are designed to help make
interactive data increasingly useful to
both retail and institutional investors.
Regulation C and Regulation S–T
Regulation C (OMB Control No. 3235–
0074) describes the procedures to be
followed in preparing and filing
registration statements with the
Commission. Regulation S–T (OMB
Control No. 3235–0424) specifies the
requirements that govern the electronic
submission of documents. The changes
to these items that we are adopting will
add and revise rules under Regulations
C and S–T. As we explained in the
Proposing Release, the additional
collection of information burden that
will result from these changes, however,
are included in Form N–1A, and we
have reflected the burden for these new
requirements in the burden estimate for
the new collection of information
‘‘Mutual Fund Interactive Data.’’ The
rules in Regulations C and S–T do not
impose any separate burden.
C. Changes to the Voluntary Program
We are decreasing the burden
associated with the existing collection
of information for Voluntary XBRLRelated Documents to reflect the
amendments. Mutual funds will no
longer be able to submit risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format through the voluntary program
after the compliance date for the
mandatory rules.
When we adopted the amendments to
expand the voluntary program to enable
mutual funds voluntarily to submit risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format, we estimated an
increase to the existing collection of
information for Voluntary XBRL-Related
Documents.235 We estimated that 10%
of the approximately 545 fund
complexes that have mutual funds, or
55 fund complexes, would each submit
234 See
supra Section II.E.
Risk/Return Voluntary Program Adopting
Release, supra note 32.
235 See
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documents containing tagged risk/return
summary information for one mutual
fund.236 We further estimated that the
initial creation of tagged documents
containing risk/return summary
information would require, on average,
approximately 110 burden hours per
mutual fund, and the creation of such
tagged documents in subsequent years
would require an average 10 burden
hours per mutual fund. Because the
PRA estimates represent the average
burden over a three-year period, we
estimated the average hour burden for
the submission of tagged documents
containing risk/return summary
information for one mutual fund to be
approximately 43 hours.237
Based on our previous estimates of 55
participants submitting tagged
documents containing risk/return
summary information for one mutual
fund once per year and incurring 43
hours per submission, we estimated
that, in the aggregate, the industry
would incur an additional 2,365 burden
hours associated with the
amendments.238 We further estimated
that 75% of this burden increase, or
approximately 1,774 hours, would be
borne internally by the mutual fund
complexes. We estimated that this
internal burden increase converted to
dollars would amount to a total annual
increase of internal costs of
approximately $393,828.239
We also estimated that 25% of the
burden, or approximately 591 hours,
would be outsourced to external
professionals and consultants retained
by the mutual fund complex at an
average cost of $256.00 per hour for a
total annual increase of approximately
$151,296.240 In addition, we estimated
that the cost of licensing software would
be $333 per participant per year, for a
total annual increase of $18,315.241
Altogether, we estimated the total
annual increase in external costs related
to the amendments would be
$169,611.242
Given that mutual funds will no
longer be able to submit risk/return
236 In the case of a mutual fund with multiple
series, our estimate treated each series as a separate
mutual fund.
237 (110 hours in the first year + 10 hours in the
second year + 10 hours in the third year) ÷ 3 years
= 43 hours.
238 55 documents per year × 43 hours per
submission = 2,365 hours.
239 See note 82 of the Risk/Return Voluntary
Program Adopting Release, supra note 32.
240 See note 83 of the Risk/Return Voluntary
Program Adopting Release, supra note 32.
241 $333 per participant × 55 participants =
$18,315.
242 This annual total consisted of $151,296 in
outside professional costs plus $18,315 in software
costs.
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summary information in interactive data
format through the voluntary program
some time after adoption of the
amendments, we will reduce the
internal hour burden associated with
the voluntary program by 1,774 hours
and the internal cost burden by
$393,828. We will also reduce the
external cost burden by $169,611.
The amendments to the voluntary
program also enable investment
companies that are registered under the
Investment Company Act, business
development companies, and other
entities that report under the Exchange
Act and prepare their financial
statements in accordance with Article 6
of Regulation S–X to submit exhibits
containing a tagged schedule of
portfolio holdings without having to
submit other financial information in
interactive data format. As with the
current voluntary program, volunteers
can participate, without pre-approval,
merely by submitting Schedule I in
interactive data format.
One commenter stated that the cost
estimates from the voluntary program
did not include many, or any, costs
associated with tagging data other than
the risk/return summary, such as
portfolio holdings information.243 We
note, however, that the hour and cost
burdens for voluntary interactive data
submissions of portfolio holdings
information were discussed separately
from the hour and cost burdens for the
submission of risk/return summary
information in interactive data format in
the Proposing Release and also are
discussed below.
We estimate that 20 registrants will
choose to submit a schedule of portfolio
holdings in interactive data format.244
We believe that investment companies
that are registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies, and other entities that report
under the Exchange Act and prepare
their financial statements in accordance
with Article 6 of Regulation S–X will
participate, given the flexibility
provided by a new option to submit
exhibits containing just portfolio
holdings information in interactive data
format.
Submission of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
will not affect the burden of preparing
the registrants’ traditional format filings.
In order to provide portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format, a
participating registrant will have to tag
243 See
letter of Schnase.
estimate is based on the current level of
participation in the voluntary program, in which 25
funds have submitted interactive risk/return
summary information.
244 This
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7765
Schedule I and submit the resulting
interactive data file as an exhibit to its
filing on Form N–CSR or Form N–Q.245
A list of tags that could be used to tag
portfolio holdings is expected to be
finalized by the end of January 2009.
Based on our experience with mutual
funds that have submitted risk/return
summary information in the current
voluntary program, we estimate that the
initial creation of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
will require, on average, approximately
12 burden hours per registrant,246 and
the creation of such information in
interactive data format in subsequent
years will require an average of 10
burden hours per registrant.247 Because
the PRA estimates represent the average
burden over a three-year period, we
estimate the average hour burden for the
submission of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
for one registrant to be approximately 11
hours.248
Based on the estimate of 20 registrants
submitting interactive data files
containing portfolio holdings
information once each year and
incurring 11 hours per submission we
estimate that, in the aggregate, the
industry will incur an additional 220
burden hours associated with the
proposed amendments.249 We estimate
245 Form N–CSR [17 CFR 249.331; 17 CFR
274.128]; Form N–Q [17 CFR 249.332; 17 CFR
274.130].
246 Mutual funds submitting risk/return summary
information in our voluntary program indicated that
an initial submission in the voluntary program took
approximately 13 hours of labor. Given that the
submission of portfolio holdings in interactive data
format is less complex than the submission of risk/
return summary information in interactive data
format but potentially requires the tagging of many
more individual items, we estimate that the initial
creation of interactive data files containing portfolio
holdings information will require, on average,
approximately 12 burden hours per volunteer.
247 Mutual funds submitting risk/return summary
information in the current voluntary program
indicated that each set of submissions, after the
initial set, would take approximately 11 burden
hours, or 2 hours less than the initial submission.
We estimate that the reduction in burden hours for
subsequent submissions of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format will be a
similar 2 hour reduction, or approximately 10
burden hours per volunteer.
248 (12 hours in the first year + 10 hours in the
second year + 10 hours in the third year) ÷ 3 years
= approximately 11 hours. While the PRA requires
an estimate based on a hypothetical three years of
participation, a registrant, as noted earlier, could
participate in the voluntary program by submitting
portfolio holdings information in interactive data
format over a shorter period or even just once as
the registrant chooses.
249 20 documents per year × 11 hours per
submission = 220 hours. We note that mutual funds
submit portfolio holdings information to the
Commission four times per year. However, for
purposes of our analysis, we estimate that mutual
funds choosing to participate in the voluntary
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that this internal burden increase
converted to dollars will amount to
approximately $47,000.250
We also estimate that external
professionals and consultants will be
retained by the registrant for an increase
of approximately $600.00.251 It is our
understanding that annual software
licensing costs generally would be
included in the cost of hiring external
professionals and consultants.252 Based
on the estimate of 20 registrants
retaining external professionals and
consultants at an annual cost of $600.00
we estimate that, in the aggregate, the
total external cost to the industry will be
$12,000.253
As a result of the changes to the
voluntary program, we therefore
estimate a total decrease in internal
burden hours of approximately 1,600 254
and a total decrease in internal costs of
approximately $347,000.255 We further
estimate a total decrease in external
costs of approximately $158,000.256
program will submit portfolio holdings information
in interactive data format once each year.
250 This cost increase is estimated by multiplying
the increase in annual internal hour burden (220)
by the estimated hourly wage rate of $213.00. See
supra note 221.
251 ($100.00 in the first year + $800.00 in the
second year + $800.00 in the third year) ÷ 3 years
= approximately $600.00. Mutual funds
participating in our voluntary program for the
submission of risk/return summary information in
interactive data format indicated an initial external
cost of $100.00 for the hiring of external
professionals and consultants and projected an
annual cost of $800.00 for external service
providers going forward. The increase going
forward was due to the fact that two of the
participants indicated that each of their external
service providers had waived its fee for the initial
submission.
252 We note that one respondent spent over
$100,000 internally to develop software to submit
risk/return summary information in interactive data
format. We did not include this number in our
calculations as this software was developed solely
for purposes of submitting risk/return summary
information and not for submitting financial
information in interactive data format. See infra
note 270.
We also note that one commenter stated that our
estimated costs for interactive data software and
services were low because many fund groups
received tagging software and services at no cost.
See supra note 231 and accompanying text.
253 20 registrants submitting interactive data files
under the voluntary program × $600.00 = $12,000.
254 (1,774 hours for the removal of risk/return
summary information from the voluntary program
¥ 220 hours for the submission of schedule of
portfolio holdings in interactive data format =
approximately 1,600 hours.)
255 ($393,828 for the removal of risk/return
summary information from the voluntary program
¥ $47,000 for the submission of schedule of
portfolio holdings in interactive data format =
approximately $347,000.)
256 ($169,611 for the removal of risk/return
summary information from the voluntary program
¥ $12,000 for the submission of schedule of
portfolio holdings in interactive data format =
approximately $158,000.)
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IV. Cost/Benefit Analysis
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
The interactive data framework that
we are adopting has the potential to
remove a barrier in the flow of
information between mutual funds and
users of information that is conveyed
through mutual fund disclosures. This
should enable less costly dissemination
of information and thereby improve the
allocation of capital. The cost of
implementation will depend primarily
on the costs of transition by mutual
funds to the new mode of reporting. The
magnitudes of these benefits and costs
from any individual mutual fund’s
adoption of interactive data reporting
will depend on the number of other
mutual funds that also adopt and on the
availability of supporting software and
other infrastructures that enable
analysis of the information. To the
extent that submitted information
allows investors to make investment
decisions based on market-wide
comparison and analysis, the value to
the investors of the reported information
tends to increase with the total number
of mutual funds adopting the regime.
Likewise, mutual funds’ incentives to
report their information using
interactive data depends on the interest
level of the investors in this mode of
reporting. By mandating
implementation, the rule will expand
the network of adopters and thereby
create positive network externalities of
reported information for the investors.
In the Proposing Release, we
requested public comment and
empirical data regarding the costs and
benefits of the amendments. Three
commenters generally expressed
concern about the costs of implementing
the Commission’s proposal and the
uncertain nature of any cost efficiencies
or cost savings.257 One commenter
stated that investors will not be helped
by the additional costs incurred by
mutual funds as a result of the proposal
and that the required interactive
disclosure will be static and quickly
outdated.258 None of these commenters
provided any specific quantitative data
relating to cost estimates.
1. Benefits of Interactive Data
Submissions and Web Site Posting
The rules have the potential to benefit
investors both directly and by
facilitating the exchange of information
between mutual funds and the third
party information providers and other
257 See
258 See
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
intermediaries who receive and process
mutual fund disclosures.
Information Access
Benefits of the rulemaking accrue
from the acceleration of market-wide
adoption of interactive data format
reporting. The magnitudes of the
benefits thus depend on the value to
investors of the new reporting regime
relative to the old reporting regime and
on the extent to which the mandated
adoption speeds up the market-wide
implementation.
Requiring mutual funds to file their
risk/return summary information using
the interactive data format enables
investors, third-party information
providers, and the Commission staff to
capture and analyze that information
more quickly and at a lower cost than
is possible using the same information
provided in a static format.259 Even
though the new regime does not require
any new information to be disclosed or
reported, certain benefits accrue when
mutual funds use an interactive data
format to report their risk/return
summary information. These include
the following. Through interactive data,
what is currently static, text-based
information can be dynamically
searched and analyzed, facilitating the
comparison of mutual fund cost,
performance, and other information
across multiple classes of the same fund
and across the more than 8,000 funds
currently available. Any investor with a
computer has the ability to acquire and
download data that have generally been
available only to intermediaries and
third-party analysts. For example, users
of risk/return summary information can
download it directly into spreadsheets,
analyze it using commercial off-theshelf software, or use it within
investment models in other software
formats. Also, to the extent investors
currently are required to pay for access
to mutual fund risk/return summary
information that has been extracted and
reformatted into an interactive data
format by third-party sources, the
availability of interactive data in
Commission filings will allow investors
to avoid additional costs associated with
third-party sources.
The magnitude of this informational
benefit varies, however, with the
availability of sophisticated tools that
will allow investors to analyze the
information. The growing development
of software products for users of
interactive data is helping to make
interactive data increasingly useful to
259 See
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
both institutional and retail investors.260
For example, currently there are many
software providers and financial
printers that are developing interactive
data viewers. We anticipate that these
will become widely available and
increasingly accessible to investors. We
expect that the open standard feature of
the interactive data format will facilitate
the development of applications, and
software, and that some of these
applications may be made available to
the public for free or at a relatively low
cost. The continued improvement in
this software will allow increasingly
useful ways to view and analyze mutual
fund risk/return summary information
to help investors make more wellinformed investment decisions.
Interactive data also provides a
significant opportunity for mutual funds
to automate their regulatory filings and
business information processing, with
the potential to increase the speed,
accuracy, and usability of mutual fund
disclosure. This reporting regime may in
turn reduce filing and processing costs.
By enabling mutual funds to further
automate their disclosure processes,
interactive data may eventually help
funds improve the timeliness of, and
speed at which they generate
information. For example, with
standardized interactive data tags,
registration statements may require less
time for information gathering and
review. One commenter expressed some
skepticism about the ability of
interactive data to create internal
efficiencies that may ultimately result in
cost savings.261 We continue to believe,
however, that internal efficiencies may
be one of several possible benefits of
interactive data tagging.
A mutual fund that uses a
standardized interactive data format at
earlier stages of its reporting cycle may
also increase the accuracy of its
disclosure by reducing the need for
repetitive data entry that could
introduce errors and enhancing the
ability of a mutual fund’s in-house
professionals to identify and correct
errors in the fund’s registration
statements filed in traditional electronic
format. There has been a growing
development in both the number and
capabilities of software products and
applications to assist mutual funds to
tag their risk/return summary
information using interactive data
260 See SEC’s Office of Interactive Disclosure
Urges Public Comment as Interactive Data Moves
Closer to Reality for Investors, Securities and
Exchange Commission Press Release, Dec. 5, 2007,
available at: https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2007/
2007-253.htm.
261 See letter of ICI.
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helping make interactive data
increasingly useful.262
Mutual funds that automate their
regulatory filings and business
information processing in a manner that
facilitates their generation and analysis
of disclosures should, as a result, realize
a reduction in costs.
Market Efficiency
The requirements may benefit
investors by making financial markets
more efficient in regard to the
following: 263
• Capital formation as a result of
mutual funds being in a better position
to attract shareholders because of greater
(less costly) awareness on the part of
investors of mutual fund risk/return
summary information; and
• Capital allocation as a result of
investors’ being better able to allocate
capital among those mutual funds
seeking it because of interactive data
reporting’s facilitating innovations in
efficient communication of mutual fund
risk/return summary information.
More Efficient Capital Formation
An increase in the efficiency of
capital formation is a benefit that may
accrue to the extent that interactive data
reduces some of the information barriers
that make it costly for mutual funds to
find appropriate sources of new
investors. In particular, smaller mutual
fund complexes are expected to benefit
from enhanced exposure to investors. If
interactive data risk/return summary
reporting increases the availability, or
reduces the cost of collecting and
analyzing, mutual fund risk/return
summary data, as anticipated, then there
could be improved coverage of mutual
funds in smaller fund complexes by
third party information providers and
commercial data vendors.
At present, some mutual funds in
smaller fund complexes do not provide
their data to third party information
providers.264 This may reduce the
likelihood that their data is readily
available to investors who use
commercially available products to
assess mutual fund performance. If
interactive data reporting increases
coverage of mutual funds in smaller
fund complexes by third-party
262 Id.
263 We believe the benefits will stem primarily
from the requirement to submit interactive data to
the Commission and the Commission’s
disseminating that data. We also believe, however,
that the requirement that mutual funds with Web
sites post the interactive data required to be
submitted would encourage its widespread
dissemination thereby contributing to lower access
costs for users and the related benefits described.
264 Analysis by Division of Investment
Management staff based on publicly available data.
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information providers, and this
increases their exposure to investors,
then lower search costs for shareholders
could result.
More Efficient Capital Allocation
An increase in the efficiency of
capital allocation may accrue to the
extent that interactive data increase the
quality of information by reducing the
cost to access, collect, and analyze
mutual fund risk/return summary
information or improve the content of
mutual fund-reported information.265
An increase in quality and improvement
in content should enable investors to
better allocate their capital among
mutual funds.
Information quality in mutual fund
markets is likely to be higher as a result
of interactive data reporting, leading to
more efficient capital allocation. As a
result of the improved utility of
information, investors may be able to
evaluate various mutual funds, thereby
facilitating capital flow into their
favored investment prospects.
We believe that requiring mutual
funds to provide interactive data is
likely to improve the quality of risk/
return summary information available to
end users, and helps spur interactive
data-related innovation in the supply of
mutual fund comparative products,
resulting from a potential increased
competition among suppliers of such
products due to lower entry barriers as
a result of lower data collection costs.
However, we have considered
competing views of the informational
consequences of interactive data. For
example, a requirement to submit
interactive data information could
decrease the marginal benefit of
collecting information and thus reduce
the information quality to the extent it
reduces third-party incentives to
facilitate access to, collect, or analyze
information. Assuming that markets
efficiently price the value of
information, the amount of information
accessed, collected (or enhanced), and
analyzed will be determined by the
marginal benefit of doing so.266
Lowering information collection costs
(through a requirement to submit
interactive data information) should
265 In the context of the discussion below, quality
refers to the ease with which end-users of risk/
return summary information can access, collect,
and analyze the data. This issue is separate from the
content of mutual fund-reported information.
266 Also, we expect that because the rules require
the use of the XBRL interactive data standard, the
open standard nature of XBRL will facilitate the
development of related software, some of which
may, as a result, be made available to the public for
free or at a relatively low cost and provide the
public alternative ways to view and analyze
interactive data information.
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increase this benefit. If this is so, then
there should be no degradation in the
level of information quality as a result
of changes in third-party provider
behavior under an interactive data
reporting regime. However, if one
competitor in the industry can subsidize
its operations through an alternative
revenue stream, both quality and
competition may suffer.267
Another potential information
consequence of the requirements is how
the precision and comparability of the
information disseminated by data
service providers may change because
the interactive data requirements will
shift the source of data formatting that
allows aggregation and facilitates
comparison and analysis from end-users
to mutual funds submitting interactive
data. At present, data service providers
manually key risk/return summary
information into a format that allows
aggregation. As a result, the data service
provider makes interpretive decisions
on how to aggregate reported items so
that they can be compared across all
mutual funds. Consequently, when a
subscriber of the commercial product
offered by a data service provider uses
this aggregated data, it can expect
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267 For illustration purposes only, assume that an
Internet service company develops an interactive
data-based tool that easily provides mutual fund
risk/return summary information for free to all
subscribers, and it uses this product as a loss leader
to increase viewership and advertising revenue. If
the data provided is of the same quality as data
provided through subscription to other available
commercial products, then there should be no
informational efficiency loss. However, if a data
aggregator’s providing information that improves
investor interpretation and goes beyond risk/return
summary information is possible, but no longer
profitable to produce for competitors without the
subsidy, then valuable information production may
be lost.
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consistent interpretation of the reported
items. In contrast, the requirement for
mutual funds to submit interactive data
information will require mutual funds
to independently decide within the
confines of applicable requirements
which ‘‘tag’’ best describes each item
within the risk/return summary—
lessening the amount of interpretation
required by data service providers or
end-users of the data. Once a standard
tag is chosen, comparison to other funds
is straightforward. However, because
mutual funds have some discretion in
how to select tags, and can extend the
taxonomy (create new tags) when an
appropriate tag does not exist, unique
interpretations by each fund could
result in reporting differences from what
current data service providers and other
end-users would have chosen. This
view suggests that the fund-submitted
information disseminated by data
service providers may be, on the one
hand, less comparable because they
have not normalized it across mutual
funds but, on the other hand, more
accurate because the risk of human error
in the manual keying and interpretation
of filed information will be eliminated
and more precise because it will reflect
decisions by the mutual funds
themselves. Replicating prior methods
still will be possible, however, because
mutual funds continue to be required to
file risk/return summary information in
traditional format. As a result, nothing
prohibits data service providers from
continuing to provide data in the same
manner that they did before.
Nonetheless, interactive data benefits
could diminish if other reporting
formats are required for clarification in
data aggregation.
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The content of mutual fund-reported
information may improve because, as
previously discussed, a mutual fund
that uses a standardized interactive data
format at earlier stages of its disclosure
cycle may increase the accuracy of its
disclosure. In contrast, the content of
mutual fund-reported information may
improve or decline to the extent that the
interactive data process influences what
mutual funds disclose. While the
requirements to submit and post
interactive data information are
designed to be disclosure neutral, it is
possible they may affect what is
disclosed.
2. Costs of Interactive Data Submissions
and Web Site Posting
The primary cost of the rule
amendments is the cost of mutual funds’
implementation of the rule, which
includes the costs of submitting and
posting interactive data. We discuss this
cost element extensively below. In
addition, because the rules allow an
increase in the flow of risk/return
summary information being reported
directly to third party information
providers and investors, there will be a
cost of learning on the part of the
investors in using and analyzing risk/
return summary information at the
interactive data level.
As for the cost of implementation of
the rule, based on currently available
data, we estimate the average direct
costs of submitting and posting
interactive data-formatted risk/return
summary information for all mutual
funds under the proposed rules will,
based on certain assumptions, be as
follows:
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7769
TABLE—ESTIMATED DIRECT COSTS TO INDIVIDUAL FUNDS OF SUBMITTING INTERACTIVE DATA-FORMATTED RISK/RETURN
SUMMARY INFORMATION
First
submission
Subsequent
submissions
Preparation 268 .............................................................................................................................................................
Software and consulting services 269 ...........................................................................................................................
Web site posting 271 .....................................................................................................................................................
270 20,600
250
$2,300
800
250
Total cost ..............................................................................................................................................................
23,450
3,350
$2,600
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The above estimates are generated
from a limited number of voluntary
program participant questionnaire
responses. In particular, these responses
provided detail on the actual and
projected costs of preparing risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format and for purchasing software or
related filing agent services. A detailed
analysis of the costs associated with
voluntary program participation
suggests that the estimated direct cost of
submitting risk/return summary
information in interactive data format
falls within the range of $735.50 to
$127,500 per fund for the first
submission.272 This cost reflects
expenditures on interactive data-related
software, consulting or filing agent
services used, and the market rate for all
internal labor hours spent (including
training) to prepare, review, and submit
the first interactive data format risk/
return summary information. The future
experiences of individual mutual funds
regarding risk/return summary
information filed in an interactive data
format still may vary according to the
mutual funds’ size, complexity, and
other factors not apparent from the
voluntary program participant responses
and commenters’ responses. The
discussion below summarizes the direct
cost estimates of compliance regarding
risk/return summary submissions based
on voluntary program participant
questionnaire responses and the
specified assumptions.273
• Average cost of first submission,
excluding the costs of Web site posting,
from voluntary program questionnaire
data is $23,200.
• Projected average cost of
subsequent submissions, excluding the
costs of Web site posting, from
voluntary program questionnaire data is
$3,100.
This analysis attempts to quantify
some of the direct costs that mutual
funds will incur to submit and post
interactive data. Whether mutual funds
choose to purchase and learn how to use
software packages designed for
interactive data submissions or
outsource this task to a third party,
internal (labor) resources will be
required to complete the task. The cost
estimates provided here using voluntary
program participant questionnaire
responses shed light on the potential
dollar magnitude of the costs of
requiring interactive data submissions.
At the time the Commission proposed
these amendments, 22 mutual funds had
participated in the voluntary program
for interactive risk/return summaries. Of
these, nine were provided
questionnaires on the details of their
cost experience, and six responses were
collected representing the cost data for
ten funds.274 The table below
summarizes the aggregate costs per
mutual fund, including software and
filing agent service costs and an
estimated cost for the internal labor
hours required to prepare and submit
the interactive data format information.
The low and high estimates of the cost
for internal labor hours were calculated
using a variety of billing rates
corresponding to the job descriptions of
internal personnel involved in
preparing the tagged risk/return
summaries.275 The reported costs are
calculated using responses from the 6
voluntary program participants that
provided responses. Those six
respondents represent mutual fund
complexes whose assets comprise a
range of approximately.01% to 12.00%
of all the assets of the mutual funds that
will be required to submit interactive
data.276
268 Estimates based on risk/return summary
voluntary program questionnaire responses. The
voluntary program questionnaire responses
indicated that different filers use different
personnel to prepare interactive data submissions.
We calculated costs for each participant based upon
the personnel each individual respondent to the
voluntary program questionnaire indicated it used
and the length of time it indicated the personnel
spent on the preparation. The numbers in the table
represent the average of all of these calculations.
The following wage rates were assumed for
preparation cost estimates: operations specialist—
$129; paralegal—$168; senior compliance
examiner—$180; intermediate business analyst—
$183; senior accountant—$185; programmer
analyst—$194; financial reporting manager—$268;
and attorney—$295. These estimated wage figures
are based on published rates for the personnel
above, modified to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits, and overhead, yielding the
effectively hourly rates above. See SIFMA Report,
supra note 221.
269 Software licensing and the use of a consultant
can be substitutionary—mutual funds can choose to
do one or the other, or do both—and are thus
aggregated.
270 We note that one volunteer expended over
$100,000 in information technology to develop
internal software that applies interactive data tags
to risk/return summary information. This one
expenditure by one fund resulted in a higher
average software and consulting services cost per
fund of $20,600 for the first submission. Excluding
this data, the average software and consulting
services costs per fund would have been
approximately $500.
While our averages imply that the costs of
internally developing software is allocated to one
fund in the sample, in reality the complex that
developed the software will likely use that software
for all of its funds. Thus the development cost
could be allocated across all funds within that
complex rather than to one fund.
271 Voluntary program participants were not
required to post on their Web sites, if any, the
interactive data information they submitted.
Consequently, the costs of the requirement to post
interactive data information are not derived from
the voluntary program participant questionnaire
responses or discussed in our analysis of those
responses. Those costs are, instead, derived from
informal discussions with a limited number of
persons believed to be generally knowledgeable
about preparing, submitting, and posting interactive
data.
272 See supra note 270 with respect to the high
end of the range.
273 The details of this analysis regarding risk/
return summary information, including the
underlying assumptions and other considerations
related to both the costs and benefits of requiring
submission of interactive data, are provided
following the summary.
274 The questionnaires requested data for one
fund; however, several questionnaire respondents
voluntarily submitted cost information for more
than one fund.
275 See supra note 221. These estimates are from
the 2007 SIFMA Report, 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. Questionnaire respondents
apportioned time spent tagging risk/return
summaries among various job types.
276 Based on total mutual fund assets of $10.6
trillion. Lipper-Directors’ Analytical Data, Reuters
Sept. 2008.
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TABLE—SUMMARY OF ILLUSTRATIVE SURVEY DATA ON THE DIRECT COST ESTIMATES FOR VOLUNTARY PROGRAM
PARTICIPANTS
All voluntary program
participants respondents
Low
First submission:
Estimated costs ........................................................................................................................................
Subsequent submissions:
Estimated costs ........................................................................................................................................
Average reduction in cost:
From first to second submission ..............................................................................................................
Scalability of Interactive Data-Related
Support Services and Technology
The final cost consideration in this
section is the scalability of interactive
data-related support services and
technology. In particular, it is unclear
how the market for interactive data
support services and technology will
change in light of the adoption of the
rule amendments.
The roles of each potential kind of
service provider within the interactive
data market are likely to develop further
and are not yet clear, and there are
many potential participants to consider,
including the software vendors, print/
filing agents, and consultants, as well as
the Commission.279 Until the market of
mutual funds that submit interactive
data information grows substantially
larger, it is difficult to predict how
standard solutions will evolve. For
example, we do not know whether
mutual funds will adopt solutions that
create interactive data submissions
using third party software, a so-called
‘‘bolt-on’’ approach, or will seek
integrated solutions that enable funds to
prepare interactive data submissions
from their existing software. Moreover,
filing agents may maintain their role as
an intermediary by offering interactive
data technology or other service
providers may cause that role to change.
Others with technical expertise may
participate in the technology with
unpredictable results.
Combining the uncertainty over the
source of future interactive data services
with increased demand for these
services could result in a new
equilibrium market price that is
different from what is currently reported
by voluntary program participants. This
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277 We
note that these costs are higher due to one
questionnaire respondent who spent significantly
more than all other respondents to create its own
interactive data software in-house. See supra note
270.
278 Id.
279 In addition, mutual fund complexes with a
large number of funds may consider developing
software in-house since that cost could be allocated
across all of their funds.
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price will be higher if the demand for
interactive data services increases (from
15 mutual fund complexes currently
participating in the voluntary program
to approximately 683 mutual fund
complexes 280 participating) at a faster
rate than the supply for these same
services. More broadly, if the interactive
data requirement results in clients
subscribing for interactive data services
faster than the rate at which these
services can be supplied, then a price
increase is the natural discriminator in
how to allocate limited resources.
The submission costs discussed in
this section suggest that if interactive
data is implemented too quickly it could
result in higher than necessary
submission costs if the supply of
interactive data-related resources is
constrained, but the effect will likely
diminish as a market place for
interactive data services develops.
Hence, this concern is mitigated by
delaying the requirement that mutual
funds submit interactive data until
January 1, 2011. This delay is designed
to allow interactive data service
suppliers to keep pace with demand.
B. Changes to Voluntary Program
In order to facilitate further evaluation
of data tagging, the rule amendments
will enable investment companies that
are registered under the Investment
Company Act, business development
companies, and other entities that report
under the Exchange Act and prepare
their financial statements in accordance
with Article 6 of Regulation S–X to
submit exhibits containing a tagged
schedule of portfolio holdings without
having to submit other financial
information in interactive data format.
1. Benefits
We believe that portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
will allow more efficient and effective
retrieval, research, and analysis of
registrants’ portfolio holdings through
280 See ICI 2008 Investment Company Fact Book,
supra note 63, at 14 (683 fund sponsors).
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High
$735.50
277 $127,500
$555.00
$5,640
24.54%
278 95.58%
automated means. The proposed
amendments to the voluntary program
will assist us in assessing whether using
interactive data tags enhances users’
ability to analyze and compare portfolio
holdings information included in filings
with the Commission.
Currently, a number of companies use
computers and data entry staff to mine
portfolio holdings information provided
by mutual funds and others in order to
populate databases that are used to
package information for sale to analysts,
funds, investors, and others. Permitting
funds and other entities to tag portfolio
holdings information in Commission
filings will aid this data-mining process
in that it will identify points of data at
the source, which will reduce the cost
to populate databases and improve the
accuracy of that data. Additionally, the
changes to the voluntary program will
benefit funds and the public by
permitting experimentation with data
tagging using the new portfolio holdings
list of tags when it is created.
In the future, the availability of
potentially more accurate information
about mutual funds and other entities
will also reduce the cost of research and
analysis and create new opportunities
for companies that compile, provide,
and analyze data to produce more value
added services. Enhanced access to
information submitted in interactive
data format also will allow retail
investors (or financial advisers assisting
such investors) to perform more
personalized and sophisticated analyses
and comparisons of mutual funds and
other investment options, which will
result in investors making better
informed investment decisions, and
therefore in a more efficient distribution
of assets by investors among different
funds. This may, in turn, also contribute
to increased competition among mutual
funds and other entities and result in a
more efficient allocation of resources
among competing investment products.
Although it is not possible to quantify
precisely the beneficial effects of more
efficient allocation of investors’ assets
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
and increased competition, they may be
significant, given the size of the mutual
fund industry.
Other benefits resulting from the
inclusion of portfolio holdings
information as a stand-alone item in the
voluntary program will include an
increase in the accuracy of information
and the potential for increased
timeliness of data that investors use to
make informed investment decisions.
Another benefit is that portfolio
holdings information submitted in
interactive data format will allow
automated, instantaneous extraction of
every investment disclosed in the
schedule of portfolio holdings. Finally,
the investment analysis process may
become more efficient and effective
through the increased use of automation
and reduced human intervention that
should result from the use of interactive
data.
2. Costs
The amendments to the voluntary
program will lead to some costs for
filers choosing to submit portfolio
holdings information in interactive data
format. For purposes of the PRA, we
estimated that the increase in annual
internal burden hours to the industry
will be approximately 220 hours, which
will amount to an increase in costs of
approximately $47,000 and that the
increase in annual external costs per
filer will amount to approximately $600
per year for a total estimated increase to
the industry of approximately $12,000
on an annual basis.281
We based these cost estimates upon,
among other things, experience with
mutual funds who have submitted risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format in the current
voluntary program.282 Due to the fact
that no mutual fund has submitted
portfolio holdings information through
the voluntary program, however, we
have limited data to quantify the cost of
implementing the use of interactive data
tags applied to portfolio holdings
information. In the future, there may be
additional costs to current users of
EDGAR data. For example, companies
that currently provide tagging and
dissemination of EDGAR data may
experience decreased demand for their
services. These entities have developed
certain products and services based on
data in EDGAR; many entities
disseminate, repackage, analyze, and
sell the information. Allowing filers to
submit tagged portfolio holdings
information, even voluntarily, may have
an impact on entities providing EDGAR281 See
282 See
infra Section III.A.2.
supra note 268.
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based services and products. Because
the Commission does not regulate all
these entities, it is currently not feasible
to accurately estimate the number or
size of these potentially affected
entities. The limited, voluntary nature
of the program will help the
Commission assess the effect, if any, on
these entities. Additionally, the
availability of interactive data on
EDGAR may provide these companies
with alternative business opportunities.
Combined with the removal of risk/
return summary information from the
voluntary program, we estimated for
PRA purposes that there will be a total
decrease of 1,600 burden hours which
will amount to approximately $347,000,
and a total decrease in external costs of
approximately $158,000. Therefore, the
total cost decrease to the industry for
purposes of the PRA for the rule
amendments related to the voluntary
program is $505,000.283
V. Consideration of Burden on
Competition and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange
Act 284 requires us, when adopting rules
under the Exchange Act, to consider the
impact that any new rule would have on
competition. In addition, Section
23(a)(2) prohibits us from adopting any
rule that would impose a burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.
Furthermore, Section 2(b) 285 of the
Securities Act, Section 3(f) 286 of the
Exchange Act, and Section 2(c) 287 of the
Investment Company Act 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.
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
The rule amendments to require
mutual funds to submit interactive data
to the Commission and post it on their
Web sites are intended to make risk/
return summary information easier for
investors to analyze while assisting in
automating regulatory filings and
business information processing. As
283 This estimate was derived from previously
reported costs estimates from the voluntary
program.
284 15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
285 15 U.S.C. 77b(b).
286 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
287 15 U.S.C. 80a–2(c).
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discussed previously,288 we believe that
these amendments are likely to benefit
investors by making financial markets
more efficient in regard to capital
formation by reducing some of the
information barriers that make it costly
for mutual funds to find appropriate
sources of new investors. Similarly,
these requirements may enable investors
to better allocate their capital among
mutual funds by reducing the cost to
access, collect, and analyze mutual fund
risk/return summary information and by
improving the content of fund-reported
information available to investors. Since
lower data collection costs would lower
entry barriers for suppliers of
interactive-data-related fund
comparative products, these
requirements also may result in
increased competition among these
suppliers, which, in turn, would help
spur innovation with respect to such
products.
We requested comment on whether
the proposed amendments would
promote efficiency, competition, and
capital formation. One commenter
asserted that requiring funds to utilize
the current list of tags when revisions
are likely in the near term would be
inefficient and costly.289 As noted
above, however, revisions to the list of
tags for risk/return summary
information have been issued for public
comment and are expected to be
finalized by the end of January 2009.
Again, this will provide mutual funds
with substantial time to prepare to tag
their risk/return summary information.
This commenter also stated that its
members were skeptical that using
XBRL for risk/return summary
information will create internal
efficiencies that would ultimately result
in cost savings.290 While the internal
efficiencies of interactive data for
mutual funds are currently
unquantified, we continue to believe
that they may be available to mutual
funds. Further, as discussed in detail
above, we anticipate that the rules may
lead to more efficient capital formation
and allocation.291
We understand that private sector
businesses such as those that access
mutual fund information and aggregate,
analyze, compare, or convert it into
interactive format have business models
and, as a result, competitive strategies
that the adopted interactive data
requirements might affect. Since
interactive data technology is designed
to remove an informational barrier,
288 See
289 See
supra Section IV.A.1.
letter of ICI.
290 Id.
291 See
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business models within the mutual fund
services industry that are currently
adapted to traditional format document
reporting may change, with possible
consequences for the revenue stream of
current product offerings due to the
competitive effects of such a change.
The competitive effects may relate to
changes in the accessibility of risk/
return summary information to
investors, the nature of the information
that investors receive, and the potential
from new entry or innovation in the
markets through which mutual fund
disclosures are transmitted from mutual
funds to investors. For example, lower
entry barriers that result from lower data
collection costs may increase
competition among third party
information providers and help spur
interactive data-related innovation. It is
also possible, however, that increased
competition from new market entrants
could reduce industry profit margins,
and, as a result, the quality of services
may suffer. For example, and
illustration purposes only, assume that
an Internet service company develops
an interactive data-based tool that easily
provides risk/return summary
information for free to all subscribers,
and it uses this product as a loss leader
to increase viewership and advertising
revenue. If the data provided is of the
same quality as data provided through
subscription to other available
commercial products, then there should
be no informational efficiency loss and
the quality of services should not be
impaired. However, if the incumbent
service providers provide a higher
quality of information that improves
investor interpretation beyond risk/
return summary information, but they
find that it is no longer profitable to
produce this information as a result of
subsidized products from inferior
providers, then valuable information
production may be lost.
For the reasons described more fully
above, we believe the liability
protections for interactive data are
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest and consistent with the
protection of investors. Moreover, the
protections are also consistent with the
purposes fairly intended by the policy
and provisions of the Investment
Company Act.
B. Changes to the Voluntary Program
The amendments no longer allow
mutual funds to submit risk/return
summary information in interactive data
format through the voluntary program
after the compliance date for the
mandatory rules and enable investment
companies that are registered under the
Investment Company Act, business
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development companies, and other
entities that report under the Exchange
Act and prepare their financial
statements in accordance with Article 6
of Regulation S–X to submit exhibits
containing a tagged schedule of
portfolio holdings without having to
submit other financial information in
interactive data format. The changes to
the voluntary program are intended to
help further evaluate the usefulness to
investors, third-party information
providers, investment companies, the
Commission, and the marketplace of
interactive data and, in particular, of
submitting portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format.
Because compliance with the
amendments is voluntary, the
Commission estimates that the impact of
the amendments will be limited.
However, because the submission of
portfolio holdings information in
interactive data format has the potential
to facilitate analysis of that information,
we believe that the amendments could
promote efficiency by allowing us and
others to gain experience with portfolio
holdings information in interactive data
format.
Further, submitting portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
has the potential to help streamline the
delivery of portfolio holdings
information, and provide investors and
others with improved tools to compare
funds and other entities. As with the
filing of risk/return summary
information in interactive data format,
we believe that the potential to
streamline the delivery of portfolio
holdings information and to provide
investors and others with improved
comparison tools could promote
efficiency and competition through
more efficient allocation of investments
by investors and more efficient
allocation of assets among competing
funds and other investment products.
In the future, companies that
currently provide tagging and
dissemination of EDGAR data may
experience decreased demand for their
services. The availability of interactive
data on the Commission’s electronic
filing system however, may provide
these companies with alternative
business opportunities. We do not
anticipate that the amendments will
have a significant impact on capital
formation. Finally, because the
amendments are designed to permit
mutual funds and other entities to
provide information in a format that we
believe will be more useful to investors,
we believe that the amendments are
appropriate in the public interest and
for the protection of investors.
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VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
This Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis has been prepared in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.292 It relates to the
amendments we are adopting that will
require mutual funds to provide risk/
return summary information to the
Commission and on their Web sites in
interactive data format and enable
investment companies and other entities
to submit exhibits through the voluntary
program containing a tagged schedule of
portfolio holdings without having to
submit other financial information in
interactive data format.
A. Need for the Rule
1. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
The main purpose of the amendments
is to make risk/return summary
information easier for investors to
analyze while assisting in automating
regulatory filings and business
information processing. Currently,
mutual funds are required to file their
registration statements in a traditional
format that provides static text-based
information. We believe that providing
the risk/return summary information
these filings contain in interactive data
format will:
• Enable investors and others to
search and analyze the information
dynamically;
• Facilitate comparison of mutual
fund performance; and
• Provide an opportunity to automate
regulatory filings and business
information processing with the
potential to increase the speed,
accuracy, and usability of risk/return
summary disclosure.
2. Changes to the Voluntary Program
The main purpose of the amendments
to the voluntary program is to help us
evaluate the usefulness to investors,
third party information providers,
funds, the Commission, and the
marketplace of interactive data and, in
particular, of submitting portfolio
holdings information in interactive data
format. We believe the changes to the
voluntary program will enable us to
further study the extent to which
interactive data enhance the
comparability of portfolio holdings
information, the usefulness of
interactive data for dissemination, and
our staff’s ability to review and assess
the accuracy and adequacy of that data.
The changes to the voluntary program
also will help us assess the effect of
292 5
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interactive data on the quality and
transparency of portfolio holdings
information, as well as the compatibility
of interactive data with the
Commission’s disclosure requirements.
More specifically, we believe that the
changes to the voluntary program will
better enable us to study the extent to
which interactive data will:
• Enable investors and others to
search and analyze the information
dynamically;
• Facilitate comparison of portfolio
holdings among funds and other
entities; and
• Possibly provide a significant
opportunity to reduce the resources
needed for data analysis.
In addition, we believe the changes to
the voluntary program will enhance our
ability to evaluate the:
• Impact on the staff’s ability to
review filings on a more timely and
efficient basis;
• Use of interactive data for risk
assessment and surveillance procedures;
and
• Compatibility of interactive data
with reporting quality, transparency,
and other Commission reporting
requirements.
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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 both the use of
technology to better inform mutual fund
investors and the Commission’s goal of
providing risk/return summary
information in an interactive data
format, but most commenters stated that
requiring mutual funds to provide
tagged risk/return summary information
at this time is premature.293 Two
commenters suggested that funds
should be phased into the mandatory
interactive data program based on fund
size.294 As discussed more extensively
below, however, we do not believe a
phase-in or alternate procedures for
small entities are warranted as such a
phase-in would detract from the
completeness and uniformity of tagged
risk/return summary information. We
continue to believe that the potential of
interactive data for enhancing investors’
access to mutual fund information
justifies implementation of this
initiative at this time.
293 See
supra notes 55 and 56 and accompanying
text.
294 See
´
letters of Data Communique and Schnase.
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C. Small Entities Subject to the Rules
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.295 Approximately 127 mutual
funds registered on Form N–1A meet
this definition.296 All of these mutual
funds will become subject to the rules
to require submission of risk/return
summary information using interactive
data. A smaller subset of these mutual
funds may voluntarily submit tagged
portfolio holdings information, but,
because submitting portfolio holdings
information will be voluntary, we
anticipate that only mutual fund
complexes with sufficient resources
would elect to participate. To date, no
small entity mutual funds have elected
to participate in the current voluntary
program.
D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
1. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
All mutual funds subject to the
amendments are required to submit
risk/return summary information to the
Commission in interactive data format
and, if they have a Web site, post the
interactive data on their Web site. We
believe that, in order to submit risk/
return summary information in
interactive data format, mutual funds in
general and small entities in particular
likely will need to prepare and then
submit the interactive data by
expending internal labor hours in
connection with either or both of:
• Purchasing, learning, and using
software packages designed to prepare
risk/return summary information in
interactive format; and
• Hiring and working with a
consultant or filing agent.
We believe that mutual funds will
incur relatively little cost in connection
with the requirement to post the
interactive data on their Web site
because the requirement applies only to
mutual funds that already have a Web
site.297
2. Changes to the Voluntary Program
The voluntary program is designed to
assist us in assessing the feasibility of
295 17
CFR 270.0–10.
estimate is based on analysis by the
Division of Investment Management staff of
publicly available data as of December 2007.
297 The internal labor and external costs required
to comply with the rules we are adopting are
discussed more fully in Sections III and IV above.
296 This
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7773
using interactive data on a broader
basis. Experience with the current
voluntary program indicates that the
cost of submitting portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format,
the associated burden on the
Commission’s electronic filing system,
and the possible effect of the proposed
changes to the voluntary program on
those entities that use the data from the
Commission’s electronic filing system
will be minimal.
No registrant will be required to
submit documents in interactive data
format under the changes we are
adopting to the voluntary program. The
submission of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format
will require a participant to tag the
portfolio holdings information already
provided in required disclosures and to
submit exhibits to its filing. Volunteers
may also need to purchase software or
retain a consultant to assist in creating
interactive data exhibits.298
E. Agency Action To Minimize the Effect
on Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs
us to consider significant alternatives
that would accomplish the stated
objective, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small
entities. In connection with the
amendments, the Commission
considered the following alternatives:
(1) The establishment of different
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.
1. Submission of Risk/Return Summary
Information Using Interactive Data
We believe that, as to small entities,
differing compliance, reporting or
timetable requirements, a partial or
complete exemption from the
requirements, or the use of performance
rather than design standards would be
inappropriate because these approaches
would detract from the long-term
completeness and uniformity of the
interactive data format risk/return
summary information database. Less
long-term completeness and uniformity
would reduce the extent to which the
amendments will enable investors and
others to search and analyze the
information dynamically; facilitate
298 Id.
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comparison of mutual fund information;
and, possibly, provide an opportunity to
automate regulatory filings and business
information processing with the
potential to increase the speed,
accuracy, and usability of risk/return
summary information disclosure. We
note that all mutual funds, including
small entities, are not required to
comply with the new requirements until
after January 1, 2011.299
2. Changes to the Voluntary Program
The purpose of the amendments is to
help us evaluate the usefulness to
investors, third-party information
providers, mutual funds and other
entities, the Commission, and the
marketplace of interactive data and, in
particular, of submitting portfolio
holdings information in interactive data
format. Submitting documents
containing portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format is
entirely voluntary.
We have considered different or
simpler procedures for small entities,
but for interactive data to provide
benefits such as ready comparability
there cannot be alternative procedures
in place for different entities. Similarly,
in order to achieve the benefits of
interactive data, use of a single
technology is necessary. If we determine
to require the filing of portfolio holdings
information in interactive data format in
the future, we will look to the results of
the voluntary program to find
alternatives to minimize any burden on
small entities.
VII. Statutory Authority
The Commission is adopting the
amendments outlined above under
Sections 5, 6, 7, 10, 19(a), and 28 of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g,
77j, 77s(a), and 77z–3]; Sections 3, 12,
13, 14, 15(d), 23(a), 35A, and 36 of the
Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. 78c, 78l, 78m,
78n, 78o(d), 78w(a), 78ll, and 78mm];
Sections 314 and 319 of the Trust
Indenture Act [15 U.S.C. 77nnn and
77sss]; and Sections 6(c), 8, 24, 30, and
38 of the Investment Company Act [15
U.S.C. 80a–6(c), 80a–8, 80a–24, 80a–29,
and 80a–37].
List of Subjects
17 CFR Parts 232 and 239
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Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
299 In this regard, in Section II.H. of this release
we note that the additional time is intended to
permit mutual funds to plan for and implement the
interactive data reporting process after having the
opportunity to experiment with the voluntary
program.
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16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
17 CFR Parts 230 and 274
Investment Companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
§ 230.497 Filing of investment company
prospectuses—number of copies.
*
Text of Rule and Form Amendments
For the reasons set forth above, the
Commission amends Title 17, Chapter II
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
■
PART 230—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITES 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.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 2. Amend § 230.485 by adding
paragraph (c)(3) to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(c) * * * Investment companies filing
on Form N–1A must, if applicable
pursuant to General Instruction C.3.(g)
of Form N–1A, include an Interactive
Data File (§ 232.11 of this chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * * Investment companies filing
on Form N–1A must, if applicable
pursuant to General Instruction C.3.(g)
of Form N–1A, include an Interactive
Data File (§ 232.11 of this chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 232—REGULATION S–T—
GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS
FOR ELECTRONIC FILINGS
4. The authority citation for Part 232
continues to read in part as follows:
■
§ 230.485 Effective date of post-effective
amendments filed by certain registered
investment companies.
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,
80a–30, 80a–37, and 7201 et seq. ; and 18
U.S.C. 1350.
*
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) A registrant’s ability to file a posteffective amendment, other than an
amendment filed solely for purposes of
submitting an Interactive Data File,
under paragraph (b) of this section is
automatically suspended if a registrant
fails to submit and post on its Web site
any Interactive Data File exhibit as
required by General Instruction C.3.(g)
of Form N–1A (§§ 239.15A and 274.11A
of this chapter). A suspension under
this paragraph (c)(3) shall become
effective at such time as the registrant
fails to submit or post an Interactive
Data File as required by General
Instruction C.3.(g) of Form N–1A. Any
such suspension, so long as it is in
effect, shall apply to any post-effective
amendment that is filed after the
suspension becomes effective, but shall
not apply to any post-effective
amendment that was filed before the
suspension became effective. Any
suspension shall apply only to the
ability to file a post-effective
amendment pursuant to paragraph (b) of
this section and shall not otherwise
affect any post-effective amendment.
Any suspension under this paragraph
(c)(3) shall terminate as soon as a
registrant has submitted and posted to
its Web site the Interactive Data File as
required by General Instruction C.3.(g)
of Form N–1A.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 230.497 by adding a
sentence at the end of paragraphs (c)
and (e) to read as follows:
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*
*
*
*
5. Further amend § 232.11 as
published at 74 FR 6813, February 10,
2009, by revising the definition of
‘‘Related Official Filing’’ to read as
follows:
■
§ 232.11
232.
Definition of terms used in part
*
*
*
*
*
Related Official Filing. The term
Related Official Filing means the ASCII
or HTML format part of the official
filing with which an Interactive Data
File appears as an exhibit or, in the case
of a filing on Form N–1A, the ASCII or
HTML format part of an official filing
that contains the information to which
an Interactive Data File corresponds.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Further amend § 232.202 as
published beginning at 74 FR 6813,
February 10, 2009, by revising Note 4 to
§ 232.202 to read as follows:
■
§ 232.202
Continuing hardship exemption.
*
*
*
*
*
Note 4 to § 232.202: Failure to submit or
post, as applicable, the Interactive Data File
as required by Rule 405 by the end of the
continuing hardship exemption if granted for
a limited period of time, will result in
ineligibility to use Forms S–3, S–8, and F–
3 (§§ 239.13, 239.16b and 239.33 of this
chapter), constitute a failure to have filed all
required reports for purposes of the current
public information requirements of Rule
144(c)(1) (§ 230.144(c)(1) of this chapter),
and, pursuant to Rule 485(c)(3), suspend the
ability to file post-effective amendments
under Rule 485(b) (§ 230.485 of this chapter).
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7. Further amend § 232.401 as
published at 74 FR 6814, February 10,
2009, by revising paragraph (a) to read
as follows:
■
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§ 232.401 XBRL-Related Document
submissions.
(a) Only an electronic filer that is an
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq.), a ‘‘business
development company’’ as defined in
section 2(a)(48) of that Act, or an entity
that reports under the Exchange Act and
prepares its financial statements in
accordance with Article 6 of Regulation
S–X (17 CFR 210.6–01 et seq.) is
permitted to participate in the voluntary
XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting
Language) program. An electronic filer
that participates in the voluntary XBRL
program may submit XBRL-Related
Documents (§ 232.11) in electronic
format as an exhibit to: the filing (other
than a Form N–1A (§ 239.15A and
§ 274.11A of this chapter)) to which the
XBRL-Related Documents relate; an
amendment to such filing, but, in the
case of a Form N–1A filing, an
amendment made only after the
effective date of the Form N–1A filing
to which the XBRL-Related Documents
relate; or, if the electronic filer is
eligible to file a Form 8–K (§ 249.308 of
this chapter) or a Form 6–K (§ 249.306
of this chapter), a Form 8–K or a Form
6–K, as applicable, that references the
filing to which the XBRL-Related
Documents relate if such Form 8–K or
Form 6–K is submitted no earlier than
the date of that filing. The XBRL-Related
Documents must comply with the
content and format requirements of this
section, be submitted as an exhibit to a
form that contains the disclosure
required by this section and be
submitted in accordance with the
EDGAR Filer Manual and, as applicable,
one of Item 601(b)(100) of Regulation S–
K (§ 229.601(b)(100) of this chapter),
Item 601(b)(100) of Regulation S–B
(§ 228.601(b)(100) of this chapter), Form
20–F (§ 249.220f of this chapter), Form
6–K or § 270.8b–33 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Amend § 232.401 by:
■ a. Removing ‘‘or’’ at the end of
paragraph (b)(1)(iii);
■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(iv);
■ c. Adding paragraph (b)(1)(v); and
■ d. Revising paragraph (d)(2),
introductory text.
The addition and revisions read as
follows:
§ 232.401 XBRL-Related Document
submissions.
*
*
*
(b) * * *
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*
*
16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
(1) * * *
(iv) The risk/return summary
information set forth in Items 2, 3, and
4 of Form N–1A provided that the filing
is submitted prior to January 1, 2011,
and, in the case of a Form N–1A filing
that includes more than one series (as
that term is used in rule 18f–2(a) under
the Investment Company Act (§ 270.18f–
2(a) of this chapter), a filer may include
in mandatory content complete risk/
return summary information for any one
or more of those series; or
(v) If the electronic filer is an
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq.), a ‘‘business
development company’’ as defined in
section 2(a)(48) of that Act, or an entity
that reports under the Exchange Act and
prepares its financial statements in
accordance with Article 6 of Regulation
S–X (17 CFR 210.6–01 et seq.), Schedule
I—Investments in Securities of
Unaffiliated Issuers (§ 210.12–12 of this
chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2) The disclosures required by
paragraph (d)(1) of this section must
appear within the XBRL-Related
Documents as a tagged data element
and, as applicable, in:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Further amend § 232.405 as
published beginning at 74 FR 6814,
February 10, 2009, by:
■ a. Revising Preliminary Note 1;
■ b. Revising paragraphs (a), (b) and (g);
and
■ c. Adding a sentence at the end of the
Note to § 232.405.
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 232.405 Interactive Data File
submissions and postings.
Preliminary Note 1. Sections 405 and
406T of Regulation S–T (§§ 232.405 and
232.406T) apply to electronic filers that
submit or post Interactive Data Files.
Item 601(b)(101) of Regulation S–K
(§ 229.601(b)(101) of this chapter),
paragraph 101 of the Information Not
Required to be Delivered to Offerees or
Purchasers of both Form F–9 (§ 239.39
of this chapter) and Form F–10 (§ 239.40
of this chapter), Item 101 of the
Instructions as to Exhibits of Form 20–
F (§ 249.220f of this chapter), paragraph
B.7 of the General Instructions to Form
40–F (§ 249.240f of this chapter),
paragraph C.6 of the General
Instructions to Form 6–K (§ 249.306 of
this chapter), and General Instruction
C.3.(g) of Form N–1A (§§ 239.15A and
274.11A of this chapter) specify when
electronic filers are required or
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
7775
permitted to submit or post an
Interactive Data File (§ 232.11), as
further described in the Note to
§ 232.405.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Content, format, submission and
posting requirements—General. An
Interactive Data File must:
(1) Comply with the content, format,
submission and Web site posting
requirements of this section;
(2) Be submitted only by an electronic
filer either required or permitted to
submit an Interactive Data File as
specified by Item 601(b)(101) of
Regulation S–K, paragraph 101 of the
Information Not Required to be
Delivered to Offerees or Purchasers of
either Form F–9 or Form F–10, Item 101
of the Instructions as to Exhibits of
Form 20–F, paragraph B.7 of the General
Instructions to Form 40–F, paragraph
C.6 of the General Instructions to Form
6–K, or General Instruction C.3.(g) of
Form N–1A, as applicable, as an exhibit
to:
(i) A form that contains the disclosure
required by this section; or
(ii) If the electronic filer is not an
open-end management investment
company registered under the
Investment Company Act, an
amendment to a form that contains the
disclosure required by this section if the
amendment is filed no more than 30
days after the earlier of the due date or
filing date of the form and the
Interactive Data File is the first
Interactive Data File the electronic filer
submits or the first Interactive Data File
the electronic filer submits that
complies or is required to comply,
whichever occurs first, with paragraphs
(d)(1) through (d)(4), (e)(1), and (e)(2) of
this section;
(3) Be submitted in accordance with
the EDGAR Filer Manual and, as
applicable, Item 601(b)(101) of
Regulation S–K, paragraph 101 of the
Information Not Required to be
Delivered to Offerees or Purchasers of
either Form F–9 or Form F–10, Item 101
of the Instructions as to Exhibits of
Form 20–F, paragraph B.7 of the General
Instructions to Form 40–F, paragraph
C.6 of the General Instructions to Form
6–K, or General Instruction C.3.(g) of
Form N–1A; and
(4) Be posted on the electronic filer’s
corporate Web site, if any, in accordance
with, as applicable, Item 601(b)(101) of
Regulation S–K, paragraph 101 of the
Information Not Required to be
Delivered to Offerees or Purchasers of
either Form F–9 or Form F–10, Item 101
of the Instructions as to Exhibits of
Form 20–F, paragraph B.7 of the General
Instructions to Form 40–F, paragraph
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7776
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 32 / Thursday, February 19, 2009 / Rules and Regulations
C.6 of the General Instructions to Form
6–K, or General Instruction C.3.(g) of
Form N–1A.
(b)(1) Content—categories of
information presented. If the electronic
filer is not an open-end management
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
an Interactive Data File must consist of
only a complete set of information for
all periods required to be presented in
the corresponding data in the Related
Official Filing, no more and no less,
from all of the following categories:
(i) The complete set of the electronic
filer’s financial statements (which
includes the face of the financial
statements and all footnotes); and
(ii) All schedules set forth in Article
12 of Regulation S–X (§§ 210.12–01—
210.12–29) related to the electronic
filer’s financial statements.
Note to paragraph (b)(1): It is not
permissible for the Interactive Data File to
present only partial face financial statements,
such as by excluding comparative financial
information for prior periods.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
(2) If the electronic filer is an openend management investment company
registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, an Interactive
Data File must consist of only a
complete set of information for all
periods required to be presented in the
corresponding data in the Related
Official Filing, no more and no less,
from the risk/return summary
information set forth in Items 2, 3, and
4 of Form N–1A.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Posting. Any electronic filer that
maintains a corporate Web site and is
required to submit an Interactive Data
File must post that Interactive Data File
on that Web site by the end of the
calendar day on the earlier of the date
the Interactive Data File is submitted or
is required to be submitted, and, if the
electronic filer is not an open-end
management company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
the Interactive Data File must remain
accessible on that Web site for at least
a 12-month period. For an electronic
filer that is an open-end management
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
General Instruction C.3.(g) of Form
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:12 Feb 18, 2009
Jkt 217001
N–1A specifies the period of time for
which an Interactive Data File must
remain accessible on a company’s Web
site.
Note to § 232.405: * * * For an issuer that
is an open-end management investment
company registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, General Instruction
C.3.(g) of Form N–1A specifies the
circumstances under which an Interactive
Data File must be submitted as an exhibit and
be posted to the company’s Web site, if any.
PART 239—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
10. The authority citation for Part 239
continues to read in part 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.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 274—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
ACT OF 1940
11. The authority citation for Part 274
continues to read in part as follows:
■
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.
*
*
*
*
*
12. Amend Form N–1A (referenced in
§§ 239.15A and 274.11A) by adding a
paragraph (g) to General Instruction C.3.
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
*
*
*
*
*
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
C.
*
3.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Interactive Data File.
(i) An Interactive Data File (§ 232.11
of this chapter) is required to be
submitted to the Commission and
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
posted on the Fund’s Web site, if any,
in the manner provided by Rule 405 of
Regulation S–T (§ 232.405 of this
chapter) for any registration statement
or post-effective amendment thereto on
Form N–1A that includes or amends
information provided in response to
Items 2, 3, or 4. The Interactive Data File
must be submitted as an amendment to
the registration statement to which the
Interactive Data File relates. The
amendment must be submitted after the
registration statement or post-effective
amendment that contains the related
information becomes effective but not
later than 15 business days after the
effective date of that registration
statement or post-effective amendment.
(ii) An Interactive Data File is
required to be submitted to the
Commission and posted on the Fund’s
Web site, if any, in the manner provided
by Rule 405 of Regulation S–T for any
form of prospectus filed pursuant to rule
497(c) or (e) under the Securities Act [17
CFR 230.497(c) or (e)] that includes
information provided in response to
Items 2, 3, or 4 that varies from the
registration statement. The Interactive
Data File may be submitted with or up
to 15 business days subsequent to the
filing made pursuant to rule 497.
(iii) An Interactive Data File is
required to be posted on the Fund’s Web
site for as long as the registration
statement or post-effective amendment
to which the Interactive Data File relates
remains current.
(iv) An Interactive Data File must be
submitted as an exhibit to Form N–1A,
under paragraph (i) of this Instruction,
or as an exhibit to the filing made
pursuant to rule 497, under paragraph
(ii) of this Instruction. The Interactive
Data File must be submitted in such a
manner that will permit the information
for each series and, for any information
that does not relate to all of the classes
in a filing, each class of the Fund to be
separately identified.
Dated: February 11, 2009.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–3359 Filed 2–18–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
E:\FR\FM\19FER2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 32 (Thursday, February 19, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7748-7776]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-3359]
[[Page 7747]]
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Part II
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, and 274
Interactive Data for Mutual Fund Risk/Return Summary; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 32 / Thursday, February 19, 2009 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 7748]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 230, 232, 239, and 274
[Release Nos. 33-9006, 34-59391, 39-2462, IC-28617; File Number S7-12-
08]
RIN 3235-AK13
Interactive Data for Mutual Fund Risk/Return Summary
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: We are adopting rule amendments requiring mutual funds to
provide risk/return summary information in a form that is intended to
improve its usefulness to investors. Under the rules, risk/return
summary information could be downloaded directly into spreadsheets,
analyzed in a variety of ways using commercial off-the-shelf software,
and used within investment models in other software formats. Mutual
funds will provide the risk/return summary section of their
prospectuses to the Commission and on their Web sites in interactive
data format using the eXtensible Business Reporting Language
(``XBRL''). The interactive data will be provided as exhibits to
registration statements and as exhibits to prospectuses with risk/
return summary information that varies from the registration statement.
The rules are intended not only to make risk/return summary information
easier for investors to analyze but also to assist in automating
regulatory filings and business information processing. Interactive
data has the potential to increase the speed, accuracy, and usability
of mutual fund disclosure, and eventually reduce costs. We also are
adopting rules to permit investment companies to submit portfolio
holdings information in our interactive data voluntary program without
being required to submit other financial information.
DATES: Effective Date: July 15, 2009. Compliance Date: January 1, 2011.
Section II.H. of this release contains information on the effective
date and the compliance date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brent J. Fields, Assistant Director,
Office of Disclosure and Review, Mark H. Berman, Senior Special
Counsel, Office of Special Projects, Tara R. Buckley, Senior Counsel,
Office of Chief Counsel, Deborah D. Skeens, Senior Counsel, and Alberto
H. Zapata, Senior Counsel, Office of Disclosure Regulation, Division of
Investment Management, at (202) 551-6784, 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 485 \1\ and 497 \2\
under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act''), rules 11,\3\
202,\4\ 401,\5\ and 405 \6\ of Regulation S-T,\7\ and Form N-1A \8\
under the Securities Act and the Investment Company Act of 1940
(``Investment Company Act'').\9\
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\1\ 17 CFR 230.485.
\2\ 17 CFR 230.497.
\3\ 17 CFR 232.11.
\4\ 17 CFR 232.202.
\5\ 17 CFR 232.401.
\6\ The Commission recently added new rule 405 to Regulation S-T
[17 CFR 232.405] in a separate release. See Securities Act Release
No. 9002 (Jan. 30, 2009) [74 FR 6776 (Feb. 10, 2009)] (``Interactive
Data Adopting Release'').
\7\ 17 CFR 232.10 et seq.
\8\ 17 CFR 239.15A and 274.11A.
\9\ The Commission proposed these rule and form amendments in
June 2008. See Securities Act Release No. 8929 (June 10, 2008) [73
FR 35442 (June 23, 2008)] (``Proposing Release'').
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Table of Contents
Executive Summary
I. Introduction and Backgroud
A. Commission Initiatives to Update the Public Disclosure
Process
B. Current Filing Technology and Interactive Data
II. Discussion
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary Information Using
Interactive Data
B. Content and Submission Requirements for Interactive Risk/
Return Summary Information
C. Web Site Posting of Interactive Data
D. Consequences of Non-Compliance and Hardship Exemption
E. Interactive Data List of Tags and Commission Viewer
F. Application of Federal Securities Laws
G. Changes to the Voluntary Program
H. Compliance Date
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
IV. Cost/Benefit Analysis
V. Consideration of Burden on Competition and Promotion of
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
VII. Statutory Authority
Text of Rule and Form Amendments
Executive Summary
The principal elements of the rule amendments we are adopting today
are as follows:
Open-end management investment companies (``mutual
funds'') \10\ must submit to the Commission a new exhibit with their
risk/return summary information in interactive data format, beginning
with initial registration statements, and post-effective amendments
that are annual updates to effective registration statements that
become effective after January 1, 2011.\11\
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\10\ 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)].
\11\ We have adjusted the compliance date to provide mutual
funds sufficient time to become familiar with interactive data. See
infra Section II.H. Interactive data will be required as an exhibit
to a registration statement or post-effective amendment thereto that
contains risk/return summary information and to any form of
prospectus filed pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) under the Securities
Act [17 CFR 230.497(c) or (e)] that contains risk/return summary
information that varies from the registration statement. Interactive
data will not be required as an exhibit to a post-effective
amendment that does not contain risk/return summary information or
to a form of prospectus filed pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) that
does not contain risk/return summary information that varies from
the registration statement.
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An interactive data file submitted with a registration
statement must be filed as a post-effective amendment under rule 485(b)
under the Securities Act \12\ and must be filed after effectiveness of
the related filing, but no later than 15 business days after the
effective date of the related filing. An interactive data file required
to be submitted with a form of prospectus filed pursuant to rule 497(c)
or (e) under the Securities Act may be submitted with the filing or
subsequent thereto, but no later than 15 business days after the filing
made pursuant to rule 497.
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\12\ A post-effective amendment filed under rule 485(b) under
the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.485(b)] may become effective
immediately upon filing. A post-effective amendment may only 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Risk/return summary information in interactive data format
must be provided as an exhibit identified in General Instruction
C.3.(g).(iv) of Form N-1A.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Form N-1A is the form used by mutual funds to register
under the Investment Company Act and to offer securities under the
Securities Act.
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The rules do not alter the requirements to provide risk/
return summary information with the traditional format filings.\14\
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\14\ When we extended the voluntary program to the mutual fund
risk/return summary, we stated in the adopting release that the
interactive data submission would be supplemental to filings and not
replace the required traditional electronic format of the
information it contains. We also said that volunteers would be
required to continue to file their traditional electronic filings.
See Part II.A. of Securities Act Release No. 8823 (July 11, 2007)
[72 FR 39290, 39292 (July 17, 2007)].
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A mutual fund required to provide risk/return summary
information in interactive data format to the Commission also is
required to post that information in interactive data format on its Web
site not later than the end of the calendar day it submitted or was
required to submit the interactive data
[[Page 7749]]
exhibit to the Commission, whichever is earlier.\15\
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\15\ The Web site posting requirement applies only to the extent
a mutual fund already maintains a Web site.
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If a mutual fund does not submit or post interactive data
as required, the fund's ability to file post-effective amendments to
its registration statement under rule 485(b) under the Securities Act
will be automatically suspended until the fund submits and posts the
interactive data as required.
Mutual funds providing risk/return summary information in
interactive data format are required to use the most recent list of
tags released by XBRL U.S.\16\ as required by Regulation S-T and the
EDGAR Filer Manual.\17\ Mutual funds also are required to tag a limited
number of document and entity identifier elements, such as the form
type and the fund's name. As with interactive data for the risk/return
summary, these document and entity identifier elements must be
formatted using the appropriate list of tags as required by Regulation
S-T and the EDGAR Filer Manual.
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\16\ The appropriate list of tags for document and entity
identifier elements will be a list released by XBRL U.S., see infra
note 46, and will be required to be used by all issuers required to
submit interactive data.
\17\ Rule 405 of Regulation S-T directly sets forth the basic
tagging requirements and indirectly sets forth the rest of the
tagging requirements through the requirement to comply with the
EDGAR Filer Manual, which is available on the Commission's Web site
at: https://www.sec.gov/info/edgar/edmanuals.htm. Consistent with
rule 405, the EDGAR Filer Manual contains the technical tagging
requirements. See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6
(adopting rule 405 of Regulation S-T). Currently, we are in the
process of updating the EDGAR Filer Manual to reflect changes in the
tagging requirements applicable to financial statements. See
Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6. We anticipate that
similar updates to address revisions in the tagging requirements
applicable to fund risk/return summary information and portfolio
holdings will be finalized during 2009.
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New rule 406T of Regulation S-T \18\ addresses the
liability for an interactive data file and provides that an interactive
data file is:
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\18\ See Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6
(adopting rule 406T of Regulation S-T).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[cir] Subject to the anti-fraud provisions of Section 17(a)(1) of
the Securities Act, Section 10(b) of and rule 10b-5 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act''), and Section 206(1)
of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Investment Advisers Act''),
except as provided below;
[cir'] Deemed not filed or part of a registration statement or
prospectus for purposes of Sections 11 or 12 of the Securities Act, is
deemed not filed for purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange Act or
Section 34(b) of the Investment Company Act, and otherwise is not
subject to liability under these sections;
[cir] Deemed filed for purposes of (and, as a result, benefit from)
rule 103 of Regulation S-T; \19\ and
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\19\ The interactive data file is deemed filed for purposes of
rule 103 of Regulation S-T [17 CFR 232.103] and, as a result, in
general, the mutual fund would not be subject to liability for
electronic transmission errors beyond its control if the mutual fund
corrects the problem through an amendment as soon as reasonably
practicable after the fund becomes aware of the problem. Interactive
data files are deemed filed for purposes of rule 103 regardless of
whether they are eligible for the modified treatment provided by
rule 406T at the time submitted. Rule 406T expressly provides that
interactive data files are deemed filed for purposes of rule 103 to
remove any negative inference that otherwise might be drawn due to
the fact that rule 406T deems interactive data files to be not filed
for other specified purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[cir] Subject to liability for a failure to comply with rule 405 of
Regulation S-T,\20\ but shall be deemed to have complied with rule 405
and would not be subject to liability under the anti-fraud provisions
set forth above or under any other liability provision if the
electronic filer:
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\20\ See supra note 17.
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[dec222] Makes a good faith attempt to comply with rule 405; and
[dec222] after the electronic filer becomes aware that the
interactive data file fails to comply with rule 405, promptly amends
the interactive data file to comply with rule 405.
These liability provisions will apply only until October
31, 2014, and, thereafter, an interactive data file will be subject to
the same liability provisions as the related official filing.
The voluntary program is being modified to allow for
participation by mutual funds with respect to risk/return summary
information up until January 1, 2011, but continue to permit investment
companies to participate with respect to financial statement
information thereafter. As a result, the voluntary program will
continue after the compliance date of these rule amendments for the
financial statements of investment companies that are registered under
the Investment Company Act, business development companies,\21\ and
other entities that report under the Exchange Act and prepare their
financial statements in accordance with Article 6 of Regulation S-X.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Business development companies are a category of closed-end
investment companies that are not required to register under the
Investment Company Act. See Section 2(a)(48) of the Investment
Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(48)].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registered investment companies, business development
companies, and other entities that report under the Exchange Act and
prepare their financial statements in accordance with Article 6 of
Regulation S-X are permitted to submit exhibits under the voluntary
program containing a tagged schedule of portfolio holdings without
having to submit other financial information in interactive data
format.
We intend to monitor implementation and, if necessary, make
appropriate adjustments to the adopted amendments.
I. Introduction and Background
A. Commission Initiatives To Update the Public Disclosure Process
Over the last several decades, developments in technology and
electronic data communication have facilitated greater transparency in
the form of easier access to, and analysis of, financial reporting and
disclosures. Technological developments also have significantly
decreased the time and cost of filing disclosure documents with us.
Most notably, in 1993 we began to require electronic filing on our
Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval System
(``EDGAR'').\22\ Since then, widespread use of the Internet has vastly
decreased the time and expense of accessing disclosure filed with us.
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\22\ In 1993, we began to require domestic issuers to file most
documents electronically. Securities Act Release No. 6977 (Feb. 23,
1993) [58 FR 14628 (Mar. 18, 1993)]. Electronic filing began with a
pilot program in 1984. Securities Act Release No. 6539 (June 27,
1984) [49 FR 28044 (July 10, 1984)].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We continue to update our filing standards and systems as
technologies improve, consistent with our goal to promote efficient and
transparent capital markets. Most recently, we unveiled the Interactive
Data Electronic Applications database (``IDEA''), which will initially
supplement and eventually replace EDGAR, and which is designed to take
full advantage of interactive technology in order to provide investors
with better and more useful financial disclosures.\23\ Also, since 2003
we have required electronic filing of certain ownership reports filed
on Forms 3,\24\ 4,\25\ and 5 \26\ in a format that provides interactive
data, and recently we adopted similar rules governing the filing of
Form D.\27\ In addition, recently we have encouraged, and in some cases
required, mutual funds and public reporting companies to provide
[[Page 7750]]
disclosures and communicate with investors using the Internet.\28\
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\23\ See SEC Announces Successor to EDGAR Database, Securities
and Exchange Commission Press Release, Aug. 19, 2008, available at:
https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-179.htm.
\24\ 17 CFR 249.103 and 274.202.
\25\ 17 CFR 249.104 and 274.203.
\26\ 17 CFR 249.105.
\27\ 17 CFR 239.500.
\28\ See, e.g., Investment Company Act Release No. 28584 (Jan.
13, 2009) [74 FR 4546 (Jan. 26, 2009)] (``Summary Prospectus
Adopting Release''); Exchange Act Release No. 57172 (Jan. 18, 2008)
[73 FR 4450 (Jan. 25, 2008)]; Exchange Act Release No. 56135 (July
26, 2007) [72 FR 42222 (Aug. 1, 2007)]; Exchange Act Release No.
55146 (Jan. 22, 2007) [72 FR 4148 (Jan. 29, 2007)]; Securities Act
Release No. 8591 (July 19, 2005) [70 FR 44722 (Aug. 3, 2005)].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, we also implemented a voluntary filer program, started
in 2005,\29\ that has allowed us to evaluate certain uses of
interactive data. The voluntary program allows companies to submit
financial statements on a supplemental basis in interactive format as
exhibits to specified filings under the Exchange Act and the Investment
Company Act. Over 100 operating companies participated in the voluntary
program. These companies span a wide range of industries and company
characteristics, and have a total market capitalization of over $2
trillion. Companies that participated in the program were still
required to file their financial statements in American Standard Code
for Information Interchange (``ASCII'') or HyperText Markup Language
(``HTML'').\30\ Four mutual fund complexes participated in the
voluntary program and have submitted financial statement information in
interactive data format.\31\
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\29\ Securities Act Release No. 8529 (Feb. 3, 2005) [70 FR 6556
(Feb. 8, 2005)] (``Voluntary Program Adopting Release'').
\30\ HTML is a standardized language commonly used to present
text and other information on Web sites.
\31\ These four fund complexes made 23 submissions representing
12 mutual funds.
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In 2007, we extended the program to enable mutual funds voluntarily
to submit in interactive data format supplemental information contained
in the risk/return summary section of their prospectuses.\32\ The risk/
return summary contains information about a fund's investment
objectives and strategies, costs, risks, and past performance.\33\
Twenty-five mutual funds from a variety of fund families have submitted
risk/return summary information in interactive data format. These funds
represent 15 fund complexes, and consist of a range of fund types,
including 14 equity funds, two balanced funds, five bond funds, and
four money market funds. The funds participating in the voluntary
program also include larger and smaller funds.\34\
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\32\ Securities Act Release No. 8823 (July 11, 2007) [72 FR
39290 (July 17, 2007)] (``Risk/Return Voluntary Program Adopting
Release'').
\33\ Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N-1A.
\34\ Based on industry assets as of September 2008, four of the
five largest fund complexes have submitted tagged risk/return
summary information as part of the voluntary filing program. Lipper-
Directors' Analytical Data, Reuters Sept. 2008. As of September
2008, the two smallest mutual funds participating in the voluntary
program had net assets of approximately $41 million and $17 million.
Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the establishment of the voluntary program for mutual fund
risk/return summary information, the Commission has continued its
evaluation of interactive data, including interactive data submitted by
mutual funds. The Commission's evaluation of interactive data has
included the hosting of three roundtables on the topic of interactive
data reporting,\35\ as well as the creation, in April 2008 of a viewer
that allowed investors to read, analyze, and compare the interactive
risk/return summary data submitted by mutual funds.\36\
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\35\ See materials available at https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/
xbrl/xbrl-meetings.shtml.
\36\ As discussed in Section I.B. infra, information in
interactive data format is intended to be processed by software
applications and is not readable by humans without a viewer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, prior to launching the risk/return viewer, Commission
staff reviewed all of the interactive data files submitted to the
Commission to help ensure the accuracy of the interactive risk/return
summary data displayed on the Commission's Web site, and the staff
communicated with the filers in order to identify and correct any
technical issues with the submissions.\37\ Further, as noted below,
Commission staff also surveyed voluntary program participants for
specific data regarding the costs of preparing and submitting risk/
return summary information in interactive data, including software
costs and internal and external labor costs.\38\ Six of the
participating mutual funds responded, providing data in response to
this voluntary program questionnaire. These six respondents represent
mutual fund complexes whose assets comprise a range of approximately
.01% to 12% of all the assets of the mutual funds that will be required
to submit interactive data.\39\
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\37\ See infra Section II.E.3. (discussing the Commission's
risk/return summary interactive data viewer).
\38\ See Section III. below. Of the 22 mutual funds that
participated in the voluntary program at the time the Commission
proposed these amendments, nine were provided questionnaires on the
details of their cost experience, and six responses were collected
representing the cost data for ten funds.
\39\ Based on total mutual fund assets of $10.6 trillion.
Lipper-Directors' Analytical Data, Reuters Sept. 2008.
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In a companion release, we recently adopted rules requiring
companies, other than investment companies that are registered under
the Investment Company Act, business development companies, and other
entities that report under the Exchange Act and prepare their financial
statements in accordance with Article 6 of Regulation S-X, to submit
financial information to the Commission in interactive data format.\40\
In this release, as part of our continuing efforts to assist investors
who use Commission disclosures, as well as filers of that disclosure,
we are adopting rule amendments to require that mutual fund risk/return
summary information be provided in a format that makes the information
interactive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra, note 6.
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B. Current Filing Technology and Interactive Data
Companies filing electronically are required to file their
registration statements and periodic reports in ASCII or HTML
format.\41\ Also, to a limited degree, our electronic filing system
uses other formats for internal processing and document-type
identification. For example, our system uses eXtensible Markup Language
(``XML'') to process reports of beneficial ownership of equity
securities on Forms 3, 4, and 5 under Section 16(a) of the Exchange
Act.\42\
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\41\ Rule 301 of Regulation S-T [17 CFR 232.301] requires
electronic filings to comply with the EDGAR Filer Manual, and
Section 5.2 of the EDGAR Filer Manual requires that electronic
filings be in ASCII or HTML format. Rule 104 of Regulation S-T [17
CFR 232.104] permits filers to submit voluntarily as an adjunct to
their official filings in ASCII or HTML unofficial PDF copies of
filed documents. Unless otherwise stated, we refer to filings in
ASCII or HTML as traditional format filings.
\42\ 15 U.S.C. 78p(a).
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Electronic formats such as HTML, XML, and XBRL are open standards
\43\ that define or ``tag'' data using standard definitions. The tags
establish a consistent structure of identity and context. This
consistent structure can be recognized and processed by a variety of
different software applications. In the case of HTML, the standardized
tags enable Web browsers to present Web sites' embedded text and
information in a predictable format. In the case of XBRL, software
applications, such as databases, financial reporting systems, and
spreadsheets, recognize and process tagged information.
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\43\ The term ``open standard'' is generally applied to
technological specifications that are widely available to the
public, royalty-free, at minimal or no cost.
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XBRL was derived from the XML standard. It was developed and
continues to be supported by XBRL International, a consortium of
approximately 550 organizations representing many elements of the
financial reporting community worldwide in more than 20 jurisdictions,
national and regional.
[[Page 7751]]
XBRL U.S., the international organization's U.S. jurisdiction
representative, is a non-profit organization \44\ that includes
companies, public accounting firms, software developers, filing agents,
data aggregators, stock exchanges, regulators, financial services
companies, and industry associations.\45\
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\44\ XBRL U.S. is a 501(c)(6) organization. Internal Revenue
Code Section 501(c)(6) applies to ``Business leagues, chambers of
commerce, real-estate boards, boards of trade, or professional
football leagues (whether or not administering a pension fund for
football players), not organized for profit and no part of the net
earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder
or individual.'' See 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(6).
\45\ XBRL U.S. supports efforts to promote interactive financial
and business data specific to the U.S.
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Risk/return summary information in interactive format requires a
standard list of tags. These tags are similar to definitions in an
ordinary dictionary, and they cover a variety of concepts that can be
read and understood by software applications. For the risk/return
summary, a mutual fund will use the most recent list of tags for risk/
return summary information released by XBRL U.S.\46\ This list of tags
contains descriptive labels, authoritative references to Commission
regulations where applicable, and other elements, all of which provide
the contextual information necessary for interactive data \47\ to be
recognized and processed by software.\48\
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\46\ Unless stated otherwise, when we refer to the ``list of
tags for risk/return summary information'' we mean the interactive
data list of tags released and maintained by XBRL U.S., including
any modifications. This list was initially developed by the
Investment Company Institute (``ICI''), which is a national
association of the U.S. investment company industry.
\47\ The rules define the interactive data in machine-readable
format required to be submitted as the ``interactive data file,''
which will be required with every interactive data submission. See
Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6 (adopting new
definitions under 17 CFR 232.11).
\48\ For example, contextual information identifies the entity
to which it relates, usually by using the filer's Central Index Key
(``CIK'') number. A hypothetical filer converting its traditional
electronic disclosure of total annual fund operating expenses of
0.73% must create interactive data that identifies what the 0.73%
represents, total annual fund operating expenses, and that the
number is a percentage. The contextual information includes other
information as necessary; for example, the date of the prospectus to
which it relates and the series and class to which it applies.
A mutual fund may issue multiple ``series'' of shares, each of
which is preferred over all other series in respect of assets
specifically allocated to that series. Rule 18f-2 under the
Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.18f-2]. Each series is, in
effect, a separate investment portfolio.
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.
Rule 18f-3 under the Investment Company Act [17 CFR 270.18f-3].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The initial risk/return summary list of tags received
acknowledgement from XBRL International in June 2007,\49\ and was used
by mutual funds participating in the Commission's voluntary program.
More recently, XBRL U.S. has updated the architecture of the list of
tags for risk/return summary information and conformed the list of tags
to changes we recently adopted to the risk/return summary disclosure
requirements.\50\ The list was recently issued for public comment,\51\
and it is expected to be finalized and submitted to XBRL International
for acknowledgement by the end of January 2009. Related documents, such
as the architecture and technical guides, also are due to be released
publicly by the end of January 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ The list of tags is available on XBRL International's Web
site at: https://xbrl.org/Taxonomy/rr-summarydocument-20070516-
acknowledged.htm.
There are two levels of XBRL tag recognition: (1)
``Acknowledgement'' is formal recognition that a list of tags
complies with XBRL specifications, including testing by a defined
set of validation tools; and (2) ``approval'' is a formal
recognition requiring more detailed quality assurance and testing,
including compliance with official XBRL guidelines for the type of
tag list under review, creation of a number of instance documents,
and an open review period after acknowledgement. For more
information regarding the XBRL tag list recognition process, see
``Taxonomy Recognition Process'' on the XBRL International Web site
available at: https://www.xbrl.org/TaxonomyRecognition/.
\50\ See infra Section II.E.1. (discussing the list of tags for
risk/return summary information); Summary Prospectus Adopting
Release, supra note 28.
\51\ XBRL U.S. released the updated list of tags for risk/return
summary information for public comment on October 21, 2008. The list
is available on the XBRL U.S. Web site at: https://xbrl.us/
imtaxonomies/Pages/default.aspx. See XBRL U.S. Announces Public
Review of Data Tags for Mutual Fund Risk/Return Summary and Schedule
of Investments, available on the XBRL U.S. Web site at: https://
xbrl.us/press/Pages/20081021.aspx. The comment period closed on
November 24, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data tags are applied to risk/return summary information by using
commercially available software that guides a preparer to tag
information in the risk/return summary, such as line item costs in a
mutual fund's fee table, with the appropriate tags in the standard
list. This involves locating an element in the list of tags that
represents the particular disclosure that is to be tagged.
Occasionally, because mutual funds have some flexibility in preparing
the risk/return summary, particularly the narrative portions, it is
possible that a mutual fund may wish to use a non-standard disclosure
that is not included in the standard list of tags. In this situation, a
fund will create a company-specific element, called an extension.
Alternatively, a mutual fund may choose to outsource the tagging
process.
Because mutual fund risk/return summary information in interactive
data format is intended to be processed by software applications, the
unprocessed interactive data is not readable by humans. Thus, viewers
are necessary to convert, or ``render,'' the interactive data file to
human readable format. Some viewers, for example, may be compared to
Web browsers that are used to read HTML files.
The Commission's Web site currently provides links to viewers that
allow the public to read mutual fund and other company disclosures
submitted using interactive data. One of these viewers allows users to
view and compare mutual fund risk/return summary information, including
investment objectives and strategies, costs, risks, and past
performance, that is submitted in interactive data format.\52\ These
viewers are intended to demonstrate the capability of software to
present interactive data in human-readable form and to provide open
source software to give developers a free resource they can use as is
or build upon. As noted above, software also is able to process
interactive data so as to automate and, as a result, facilitate access
to and analysis of tagged data. In addition, we are aware of other
applications under development that may provide additional and advanced
functionality.\53\
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\52\ A mutual fund information viewer for the voluntary program
is available at: https://a.viewerprototype1.com/viewer.
\53\ A list of interactive data products and service providers
is available at: https://xbrl.us/Vendors/Pages/default-expand.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Discussion
The Commission received 16 comment letters on the proposed rule
amendments, including comments from trade associations, fund complexes,
a data aggregator, technology service providers, and individual
investors and professionals.\54\ The commenters
[[Page 7752]]
generally supported both the use of technology to better inform mutual
fund investors and the Commission's goal of providing risk/return
summary information in interactive data format.\55\ Most commenters,
however, stated that requiring mutual funds to provide tagged risk/
return summary information is premature.\56\ As discussed below,
commenters also raised other concerns regarding the proposal, including
concerns regarding the adequacy of the existing technology necessary to
create and submit interactive data files,\57\ what information should
be required to be tagged,\58\ the proposed compliance date,\59\ and the
potential liability of mutual funds under the federal securities laws
related to tagged risk/return summary information.\60\
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\54\ See comment letters of the American Bar Association
(``ABA'') (Aug. 18, 2008); James J. Angel, Ph.D, C.F.A. (``Angel'')
(Aug. 4, 2008); Gary J. Coles (``Coles'') (July 25, 2008); Committee
of Annuity Insurers (``Annuity Insurers'') (July 23, 2008);
Confluence (Aug. 1, 2008); Data Communiqu[eacute], Inc. (``Data
Communiqu[eacute]'') (July 31, 2008); Federated Investors, Inc.
(``Federated'') (Aug. 12, 2008); Robert Gilmore, C.P.A.
(``Gilmore'') (July 31, 2008); Walter C. Hamscher (``Hamscher'')
(July 31, 2008); ICI (Aug. 1, 2008); Lipper (July 29, 2008);
OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (``Oppenheimer'') (Aug. 4, 2008); Lorna A.
Schnase (``Schnase'') (July 25, 2008); Jay Starkman, C.P.A.
(``Starkman'') (July 30, 2008); T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (``T.
Rowe Price'') (Aug. 1, 2008); and The Vanguard Group, Inc.
(``Vanguard'') (Aug. 1, 2008). Comment letters received in response
to the Proposing Release are available at: https://www.sec.gov/
comments/s7-12-08/s71208.shtml or from our Public Reference Room at
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549.
\55\ Twelve commenters generally supported tagging risk/return
summary information in interactive data format. See letters of ABA,
Angel, Annuity Insurers, Confluence, Data Communiqu[eacute],
Gilmore, Hamscher, ICI, Lipper, Oppenheimer, T. Rowe Price, and
Vanguard. Three commenters did not support requiring interactive
disclosure of risk/return summary data. See letters of Federated,
Schnase, and Starkman. One commenter expressed no explicit opinion
on the matter. See letter of Coles.
\56\ See letters of ABA, Confluence, Data Communiqu[eacute],
Federated, Gilmore, ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase, T. Rowe Price, and
Vanguard.
\57\ See letters of Confluence, Federated, Gilmore, ICI,
Oppenheimer, Schnase, Starkman, and T. Rowe Price.
\58\ See letters of ABA, Confluence, Data Communiqu[eacute],
Federated, and Schnase.
\59\ See letters of Confluence, Data Communiqu[eacute],
Federated, Gilmore, ICI, Oppenheimer, Schnase, T. Rowe Price, and
Vanguard.
\60\ See letters of ABA, Federated, ICI, Oppenheimer, and
Schnase.
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For the reasons discussed below, we continue to believe that the
enormous potential of interactive data for enhancing investors' access
to mutual fund information justifies implementation of this initiative.
Therefore, we are adopting the proposed amendments with some
modifications to address commenters' concerns. The rule amendments are
intended to make risk/return summary information easier for investors
to analyze and to assist in automating regulatory filings and business
information processing.
A. Submission of Risk/Return Summary Information Using Interactive Data
We are adopting, as proposed, rule amendments that require mutual
funds to submit a complete set of their risk/return summary
information, set forth in Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N-1A,\61\ in
interactive data format.\62\ In addition, mutual funds are required to
provide document and entity identifier tags, such as the form type and
the fund's name. As was the case in the voluntary program, the new
requirement for interactive data reporting is intended to be disclosure
neutral in that we do not intend the rules to result in mutual funds
providing more, less, or different disclosure for any given disclosure
item, regardless of whether the format is ASCII, HTML, or XBRL.
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\61\ Recently, the Commission adopted amendments to Form N-1A,
see Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28, under which
the risk/return summary information, formerly contained in Items 2
and 3 of Form N-1A, was reconfigured in Items 2, 3, and 4 of Form N-
1A. We apply the tagging rules to the information required by
amended Form N-1A.
\62\ See Item 405(b)(2) of Regulation S-T.
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We are adopting these rule amendments because the submission of
interactive risk/return summary information at this time is an
important next step in increasing the accessibility of this information
to mutual fund investors and others. Requiring mutual funds to submit
the risk/return summary section of their prospectuses using interactive
data format will enable investors, analysts, and the Commission staff
to capture and analyze that information more quickly and at less cost
than is possible using the same information provided in a static
format. Any investor with a computer and an Internet connection will
have the ability to acquire and download interactive data that have
generally been available only to intermediaries and third-party
analysts. The interactive data rule amendments do not change disclosure
requirements under the federal securities laws and regulations, but
will add a requirement to include risk/return summary information in an
interactive data format as an exhibit. Thus, requiring that filers
provide risk/return summary information using interactive data will not
otherwise alter at all the disclosure or formatting standards of mutual
fund prospectuses. These filings will continue to be available as they
are today for those who prefer to view the traditional text-based
document.
Interactive data can create new ways for investors, analysts, and
others to retrieve and use the information. For example, users of risk/
return summary information will be able to download cost and
performance information directly into spreadsheets, analyze it using
commercial off-the-shelf software, or use it within investment models
in other software formats. Through interactive data, what is currently
static, text-based information can be dynamically searched and
analyzed, facilitating the comparison of mutual fund cost, performance,
and other information across multiple classes of the same fund and
across the more than 8,000 mutual funds currently available.\63\
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\63\ Investment Company Institute, 2008 Investment Company Fact
Book, at 15 (2008), available at: https://www.icifactbook.org/pdf/
2008_factbook.pdf (as of year-end 2007, there were 8,752 mutual
funds).
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Interactive data also provides an opportunity to automate
regulatory filings and business information processing, with the
potential to increase the speed, accuracy, and usability of mutual fund
disclosure. Such automation may eventually reduce costs. A mutual fund
that uses a standardized interactive data format at earlier stages of
its reporting cycle may reduce the need for repetitive data entry and,
therefore, the likelihood of human error. In this way, interactive data
may improve the quality of information while reducing its cost. Also,
to the extent investors currently are required to pay for access to
mutual fund risk/return summary information that has been extracted and
reformatted into an interactive data format by third-party sources, the
availability of interactive data in Commission filings may allow
investors to avoid additional costs associated with third-party
sources.
As noted above, although most commenters generally supported the
concept of interactive disclosure of risk/return summary
information,\64\ they also asserted that this initiative is
premature.\65\ In particular, several commenters urged the Commission
to defer requiring mutual funds to submit interactive risk/return
summary information because pending Commission proposals related to a
mutual fund summary prospectus and exchange-traded funds (``ETFs'')
would change the information in the risk/return summary.\66\ Related to
those comments, commenters also asserted that: (1) The list of tags for
risk/return summary information would require updating if the proposed
changes to the risk/return summary are adopted; (2) the
[[Page 7753]]
list of tags' architecture needed to be updated; and (3) related tools
are not sufficiently developed.\67\ Commenters also stated that
implementation is premature because more information needs to be
collected from the current voluntary program.\68\
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\64\ See supra note 55.
\65\ See supra note 56.
\66\ See letters of Data Communique, Federated, ICI,
Oppenheimer, Schnase, T. Rowe Price, and Vanguard. The Commission
proposed revisions to Form N-1A's risk/return summary disclosure
requirements as part of two separate rulemaking initiatives. See
Investment Company Act Release No. 28064 (Nov. 21, 2007) [72 FR
67790 (Nov. 30, 2007)] (proposing amendments intended to enhance
mutual fund disclosure of certain key information, including risk/
return summary information, by, among other things, permitting
mutual funds to provide such information in the form of a summary
prospectus if certain conditions are satisfied) (``Summary
Prospectus Initiative''); and Investment Company Act Release No.
28193 (Mar. 11, 2008) [73 FR 14618 (Mar. 18, 2008)] (proposing
amendments to the mutual fund risk/return summary to provide certain
information relating specifically to ETFs) (``ETF Initiative'').
\67\ See letters of Confluence, Federated, ICI, Oppenheimer,
Schnase, and T. Rowe Price.
\68\ See letters of Federated, ICI, and Schnase.
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While we are sensitive to these commenters' concerns, they do not
warrant delay in this important initiative, particularly given recent
progress related to these comments. First, the Commission recently
adopted amendments to Form N-1A related to the Summary Prospectus
Initiative and the ETF Initiative.\69\ These amendments do not
significantly alter the content requirements of the risk/return summary
section, consisting of limited modifications to the disclosure in the
Fee Table.\70\ Mutual funds will not be required to comply with these
new Form N-1A disclosure requirements until January 1, 2010,\71\
providing almost one year for them to revise their disclosure. Second,
as discussed further below,\72\ revisions to the list of tags for risk/
return summary information to account for these limited disclosure
changes and revisions to the architecture have been issued for public
comment and are expected to be finalized by the end of January 2009.
Again, this will provide mutual funds with substantial time to prepare
to tag their risk/return summary information. Third, while the
Commission's current viewer permits the rendering of tagged risk/return
summary information, progress has been made to develop a more advanced
tool that will allow issuers to test their tagged exhibits prior to
submitting them to the Commission.\73\ This upgrade to the viewer will
be phased in, but should be completed during mid-2009.
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\69\ These amendments were presented to the Commission at an
open meeting on November 19, 2008. See Summary Prospectus Adopting
Release, supra note 28. Form N-1A changes related to both the
Summary Prospectus Initiative and the ETF Initiative were adopted
together in the Summary Prospectus Adopting Release.
In the Summary Prospectus Initiative, we requested comment on
whether the proposed linking requirements for documents posted on an
Internet Web site should be modified. See Summary Prospectus
Initiative, supra note 66. We received one comment on this issue
opposing the modification of the proposed linking requirements. See
letter of Data Communique. The linking requirements were adopted as
proposed. See Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28.
\70\ These amendments include: (1) Requiring mutual funds that
offer discounts on front-end sales charges for volume purchases (so-
called ``breakpoint discounts'') to include a brief narrative
disclosure alerting investors to the availability of those
discounts, see Item 3 of Form N-1A; Instruction 1(b) to Item 3 of
Form N-1A; (2) revising the parenthetical heading for ``Annual Fund
Operating Expenses'' in the Fee Table to read ``expenses that you
pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment,'' see
Item 3 of Form N-1A; (3) requiring mutual funds, other than money
market funds, to include brief disclosure regarding portfolio
turnover immediately following the fee table example, see
Instruction 5 to Item 3 of Form N-1A; and (4) permitting mutual
funds to place two additional captions in the Fee Table 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, see Instruction 3(e)
to Item 3 of Form N-1A. The amendments also require modification for
ETFs to the narrative explanation preceding the Fee Table to clarify
that investors may pay brokerage commissions not reflected in the
Fee Table. Instruction 1(e)(i) and (ii) to Item 3 of Form N-1A.
\71\ See Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28.
\72\ See infra Section II.E.1. (discussing the list of tags for
risk/return summary information).
\73\ See infra Section II.E.3. (discussing the Commission's
risk/return summary interactive data viewer).
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Finally, the Commission has been exploring, via the voluntary
program, the use of interactive data for several years, including the
submission of tagged financial information and risk/return summary
information. Twenty-five mutual funds have submitted over 40 exhibits
tagged with interactive data, giving the Commission experience in
adapting to the technology. In addition, over 100 operating companies
have submitted financial statements tagged in interactive data format.
Each submission has enabled issuers to gain experience with submitting
tagged documents and enabled the Commission to refine its technology
infrastructure to accept and efficiently render these interactive
exhibits. Moreover, given the extended compliance date discussed below,
mutual funds will have almost two years to resolve technical issues and
may continue participating in the voluntary program in the interim to
gain more experience submitting interactive data.
In addition to the recommendations to delay this initiative, some
commenters expressed concern that limiting the interactive data filing
requirement to only risk/return summary information could lead
investors to place undue emphasis on this information,\74\ and several
commenters suggested that the Commission consider expanding this
tagging requirement to include non-risk/return disclosures in the new
mutual fund summary prospectus.\75\ Two of these commenters recommended
that all items in the summary prospectus should be tagged.\76\ We
believe that implementation of our interactive data initiative should
begin with the mutual fund risk/return summary, but we will continue to
evaluate the benefits of tagging all items in the summary prospectus,
as well as other information.
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\74\ See letters of ABA, Data Communique, and Federated. See
also related discussion concerning commenters' suggestion that
cautionary legends be permitted, infra Section II.B.
\75\ See letters of Confluence, Data Communique, and Schnase;
see also discussion of Summary Prospectus Initiative, supra note 66,
and Summary Prospectus Adopting Release, supra note 28.
\76\ See letters of Confluence and Schnase.
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Several commenters questioned whether XBRL is the appropriate
standard format for interactive data disclosure, asserting that it is
not sufficiently developed at this time.\77\ Specifically, commenters
asserted that there are a limited number of commercial software
products that are compatible with XBRL,\78\ and that rendering and
validating are still expensive and problematic issues.\79\ One
commenter also expressed concern that endorsing XBRL could have the
effect of stifling competition for other languages, although this
commenter acknowledged that she was unaware of other languages that are
likely to become competitive with XBRL.\80\
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\77\ See letters of Gilmore, Schnase, and Starkman.
\78\ See letter of Starkman.
\79\ See letter of Gilmore.
\80\ See letter of Schnase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we acknowledge that XBRL is an evolving technology, we
believe it is the appropriate interactive data format with which to
supplement ASCII and HTML. Our experience with the voluntary program,
including feedback from company, accounting, and software communities,
points to XBRL as the appropriate open standard for the purposes of
this rule.\81\ XBRL data will be compatible with a wide range of open
source and proprietary XBRL software applications. As discussed above,
many XBRL-related products exist for analysts, investors, filers, and
others to create and compare disclosures more easily, the development
process will likely be hastened by mutual fund disclosure using
interactive data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See note 58 of the Proposing Release, supra note 9.
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Several other factors support our views regarding XBRL's broad and
growing acceptance, internationally as well as in the U.S. For example,
the Advisory Committee on Improvements to Financial Reporting
(``CIFiR'') \82\
[[Page 7754]]
presented its final recommendations to the Commission in its final
report issued in August 2008,\83\ which includes a recommendation that
the Commission, over the long term, require the filing of financial and
non-financial information using XBRL once specified conditions are
satisfied.\84\ We believe that sufficient progress has been made
regarding each of these conditions.\85\ Also, XBRL has been used by
other U.S. agencies,\86\ and several foreign securities regulators have
adopted voluntary or required XBRL reporting.\87\
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\82\ The Commission established CIFiR to examine the U.S.
financial reporting system, with the goals of reducing unnecessary
complexity and making information more useful and understandable for
investors. See SEC Establishes Advisory Committee to Make U.S.
Financial Reporting System More User-Friendly for Investors,
Securities and Exchange Commission Press Release, June 27, 2007,
available at: https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2007/2007-123.htm.
CIFiR conducted open meetings on March 13-14, 2008 and May 2,
2008, in which it heard reactions from an invited panel of
participants to CIFiR's proposal regarding required filing of
financial information using interactive data. Archived Webcasts of
the meetings are available at https://sec.gov/about/offices/oca/
acifr.shtml. The panelists presented their views and engaged with
CIFiR members regarding issues relating to requiring interactive
data tagged financial statements, including tag list and
technological developments, implications for large and small public
companies, needs of investors, necessity of assurance and
verification of such tagged financial statements, and legal
implications arising from such tagging.
\83\ See Final Report of the Advisory Committee on Improvements
to Financial Reporting to the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission (August 1, 2008), (``CIFiR Report''), available at:
https://www.sec.gov/about/offices/oca/acifr/acifr-finalreport.pdf.
\84\ Id. at 98. The recommendation appears in chapter 4 of the
CIFiR Report.
\85\ See discussion at note 135, and accompanying text, of
Interactive Data Adopting Release, supra note 6.
\86\ Since 2005, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(``FDIC''), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency have required the
insured institutions that they oversee to file their quarterly
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (called ``Call
Reports'') in interactive data format using XBRL. Call Reports,
which include data about an institution's balance sheet and income
statement, are used by these federal agencies to assess the
financial health and risk profile of the financial institution.
\87\ For example, such countries include Canada, China, Israel,
Japan, Korea, and Thailand.
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B. Content and Submission Requirements for Interactive Risk/Return
Summary Information
We are adopting, as proposed, the requirement that an interactive
data file must be submitted to the Commission for any registration
statement or post-effective amendment thereto on Form N-1A that
includes or amends information provided in response to Items 2, 3, or
4.\88\ In response to commenters' concerns,\89\ however, we are
modifying our rules to encompass changes to risk/return summary
information that mutual funds may make pursuant to rule 497 under the
Securities Act.\90\ Specifically, in the Proposing Release, we asked
for comment on whether mutual funds should be required to submit tagged
risk/return summary information for prospectuses submitted pursuant to
rule 497 under the Securities Act. Rule 497 sets out general filing
requirements for fund prospectuses and provides, among other things,
that funds must file any prospectus that contains information that
varies from that in the registration statement.\91\ Commenters
addressing the matter uniformly recommended that updates to interactive
risk/return summary information should be required when such
information is revised in a filing made pursuant to rule 497 under the
Securities Act,\92\ asserting that failure to do so could: (1)
Compromise the integrity of the entire interactive data program; \93\
(2) result in a rendered file containing different information from the
current prospectus, potentially leading to liability; \94\ and (3)
result in investors accessing stale tagged data.\95\
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\88\ See rule 405(b)(2) of Regulation S-T; General Instruction
C.3.(g).(i) of Form N-1A. We are also adopting technical amendments
to rule 405 that reflect this requirement. As previously noted, rule
405 of Regulation S-T directly sets forth the basic tagging
requirements and indirectly sets forth the rest of the tagging
requirements through the requirement to comply with the EDGAR Filer
Manual. Consistent with rule 405, the EDGAR Filer Manual will
contain the detailed tagging requirements.
\89\ See infra note 96 and accompanying discussion.
\90\ 17 CFR 230.497.
\91\ Specifically, (1) rule 497(c) under the Securities Act
requires mutual funds to file, within five days after the effective
date of a registration statement or the commencement of a public
offering after the effective date of a registration statement,
whichever occurs later, ten copies of each form of prospectus and
form of statement of additional information (``SAI'') used after the
effective date; and (2) rule 497(e) under the Securities Act
provides that, after the effective date of a registration statement,
no prospectus that purports to comply with Section 10 of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j] or SAI that varies from any form of
prospectus or form of SAI filed pursuant to rule 497(c) shall be
used until filed with the Commission.
\92\ See letters of Data Communiqu[eacute], ICI, and Schnase.
\93\ See letter of Data Communiqu[eacute].
\94\ See letter of ICI.
\95\ See letter of Schnase.
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We agree with commenters' concerns that failure to include changes
to risk/return summary information in filings made pursuant to rule 497
could result in investors and others accessing outdated interactive
data. For that reason we are modifying the proposed rules, in response
to the commenters' recommendations, to require that an interactive data
file must be submitted to the Commission for any form of prospectus
filed pursuant to rule 497(c) or (e) under the Securities Act that
includes information provided in response to Items 2, 3, or 4 that
varies from the registration statement.\96\
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\96\ See General Instruction C.3.(g).(ii) of Form N-1A. We also
revised paragraphs (c) and (e) of rule 497 to clarify that mutual
funds must, if applicable pursuant to General Instruction C.3.(g) of
Form N-1A, include an interactive data file.
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We also are adopting, as proposed, the requirement that an
interactive data file to a Form N-1A filing, whether the filing is an
initial registration statement or a post-effective amendment thereto,
must be submitted as an amendment to the registration statement to
which the interactive data file relates and must be submitted after the
registration statement or post-effective amendment that contains the
related information becomes effective but not lat