Order Making Fiscal Year 2009 Mid-Year Adjustment to the Fee Rates Applicable Under Sections 31(b) and (c) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 9644-9648 [E9-4738]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 42 / Thursday, March 5, 2009 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–59477/February 27, 2009]
Order Making Fiscal Year 2009 MidYear Adjustment to the Fee Rates
Applicable Under Sections 31(b) and
(c) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934
I. Background
Section 31 of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) requires
each national securities exchange and
national securities association to pay
transaction fees to the Commission.1
Specifically, Section 31(b) requires each
national securities exchange to pay to
the Commission fees based on the
aggregate dollar amount of sales of
certain securities transacted on the
exchange.2 Section 31(c) requires each
national securities association to pay to
the Commission fees based on the
aggregate dollar amount of sales of
certain securities transacted by or
through any member of the association
other than on an exchange.3
Sections 31(j)(1) and (3) require the
Commission to make annual
adjustments to the fee rates applicable
under Sections 31(b) and (c) for each of
the fiscal years 2003 through 2011, and
one final adjustment to fix the fee rates
for fiscal year 2012 and beyond.4
Section 31(j)(2) requires the
Commission, in certain circumstances,
to make a mid-year adjustment to the fee
rates in fiscal years 2002 through 2011.5
The annual and mid-year adjustments
are designed to adjust the fee rates in a
given fiscal year so that, when applied
to the aggregate dollar volume of sales
for the fiscal year, they are reasonably
likely to produce total fee collections
under Section 31 equal to the ‘‘target
offsetting collection amount’’ specified
in Section 31(l)(1) for that fiscal year.6
For fiscal year 2009, the target offsetting
collection amount is $1,023,000,000.7
II. Determination of the Need for a MidYear Adjustment in Fiscal 2009
Under Section 31(j)(2) of the
Exchange Act, the Commission must
make a mid-year adjustment to the fee
rates under Sections 31(b) and (c) in
fiscal year 2009 if it determines, based
on the actual aggregate dollar volume of
sales during the first five months of the
fiscal year, that the baseline estimate
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1 15
U.S.C. 78ee.
U.S.C. 78ee(b).
3 15 U.S.C. 78ee(c).
4 15 U.S.C. 78ee(j)(1) and (j)(3).
5 15 U.S.C. 78ee(j)(2).
6 15 U.S.C. 78ee(l)(1).
7 Id.
2 15
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III. Calculation of the Uniform Adjusted
Rate
Section 31(j)(2) specifies the method
for determining the mid-year adjustment
for fiscal 2009. Specifically, the
Commission must adjust the rates under
Sections 31(b) and (c) to a ‘‘uniform
adjusted rate that, when applied to the
revised estimate of the aggregate dollar
amount of sales for the remainder of
fiscal year 2009, is reasonably likely to
produce aggregate fee collections under
Section 31 (including fees collected
during such 5-month period and
assessments collected under Section
31(d)) that are equal to
$1,023,000,000.’’ 12 In other words, the
uniform adjusted rate is determined by
subtracting fees collected prior to the
effective date of the new rate and
assessments collected under Section
31(d) during all of fiscal year 2009 from
$1,023,000,000, which is the target
offsetting collection amount for fiscal
year 2009. That difference is then
divided by the revised estimate of the
aggregate dollar volume of sales for the
remainder of the fiscal year following
the effective date of the new rate.
The Commission estimates that it will
collect $190,542,394 in fees for the
period prior to the effective date of the
mid-year adjustment 13 and $8,640 in
assessments on round turn transactions
in security futures products during all of
fiscal year 2009. Using the methodology
referenced in Part II above, the
Commission estimates that the aggregate
dollar volume of sales for the remainder
of fiscal year 2009 following the
effective date of the new rate will be
$32,332,563,584,044. This amount
reflects more recent information on the
dollar amount of sales of securities than
was available at the time of the setting
of the initial fee rate for fiscal year 2009,
and indicates a significant reduction in
sales. Based on these estimates, and
employing the mid-year adjustment
mechanism established by statute, the
uniform adjusted rate is $25.70 per
million of the aggregate dollar amount
of sales of securities.14 The aggregate
8 The amount $113,703,210,464,919 is the
baseline estimate of the aggregate dollar amount of
sales for fiscal year 2009 calculated by the
Commission in its Order Making Fiscal 2009
Annual Adjustments to the Fee Rates Applicable
Under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 and
Sections 13(e), 14(g), 31(b) and 31(c) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Rel. No. 33–8916
(May 2, 2008), 73 FR 25795 (May 7, 2008).
9 The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) and each exchange is required to
file a monthly report on Form R31 containing dollar
volume data on sales of securities subject to Section
31. The report is due on the 10th business day
following the month for which the exchange or
association provides dollar volume data.
10 Although Section 31(j)(2) indicates that the
Commission should determine the actual aggregate
dollar volume of sales for fiscal 2009 ‘‘based on the
actual aggregate dollar volume of sales during the
first 5 months of such fiscal year,’’ data are only
available for the first four months of the fiscal year
as of the date the Commission is required to issue
this order, i.e., March 1, 2009. Dollar volume data
on sales of securities subject to Section 31 for
February 2009 will not be available from the
exchanges and FINRA for several weeks.
11 See Appendix A.
12 U.S.C. 78ee(j)(2). The term ‘‘fees collected’’ is
not defined in Section 31. Because national
securities exchanges and national securities
associations are not required to pay the first
installment of Section 31 fees for fiscal 2009 until
March 15, the Commission will not ‘‘collect’’ any
fees in the first five months of fiscal 2009. See 15
U.S.C. 78ee(e). However, the Commission believes
that, for purposes of calculating the mid-year
adjustment, Congress, by stating in Section 31(j)(2)
that the ‘‘uniform adjusted rate * * * is reasonably
likely to produce aggregate fee collections under
Section 31 * * * that are equal to
[$1,023,000,000],’’ intended the Commission to
include the fees that the Commission will collect
based on transactions in the six months before the
effective date of the mid-year adjustment.
13 This calculation is based on the assumption
that the mid-year adjustment will go into effect on
April 1, 2009 pursuant to Section 31(j)(4)(B) of the
Exchange Act. However, see the discussion below
regarding the actual effective date of the mid-year
adjustment.
14 The calculation is as follows:
($1,023,000,000¥$190,542,394—$8,640)/
$32,332,563,584,044 = $0.0000257467. Round this
result to the seventh decimal point, yielding a rate
of $25.70 per million.
$113,703,210,464,919 is reasonably
likely to be 10% (or more) greater or less
than the actual aggregate dollar volume
of sales for fiscal year 2009.8 To make
this determination, the Commission
must estimate the actual aggregate dollar
volume of sales for fiscal year 2009.
Based on data provided by the
national securities exchanges and the
national securities association that are
subject to Section 31,9 the actual
aggregate dollar volume of sales during
the first four months of fiscal year 2009
was $24,218,758,303,585.10 Using these
data and a methodology for estimating
the aggregate dollar amount of sales for
the remainder of fiscal year 2009
(developed after consultation with the
Congressional Budget Office and the
OMB),11 the Commission estimates that
the aggregate dollar amount of sales for
the remainder of fiscal year 2009 to be
$42,139,232,747,921. Thus, the
Commission estimates that the actual
aggregate dollar volume of sales for all
of fiscal year 2009 will be
$66,357,991,051,506.
Because the baseline estimate of
$113,703,210,464,919 is more than 10%
greater than the $66,357,991,051,506
estimated actual aggregate dollar
volume of sales for fiscal year 2009,
Section 31(j)(2) of the Exchange Act
requires the Commission to issue an
order adjusting the fee rates under
Sections 31(b) and (c).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 42 / Thursday, March 5, 2009 / Notices
dollar amount of sales of securities
subject to Section 31 fees is illustrated
in Appendix A.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
IV. Effective Date of the Uniform
Adjusted Rate
Appendix A
Section 31(j)(4)(B) of the Exchange
Act provides that a mid-year adjustment
shall take effect on April 1 of the fiscal
year in which such rate applies.
However, it is possible that the effective
date will be delayed this fiscal year
because of the lapse of appropriation
provision in Section 31(k) of the
Exchange Act. That section provides
that, if on the first day of the fiscal year
a regular appropriation to the
Commission has not been enacted, the
Commission shall continue to collect
fees at the rate in effect during the
preceding fiscal year, until 30 days after
the date such a regular appropriation is
enacted. Therefore, the exchanges and
the national securities association that
are subject to Section 31 fees must pay
fees under Sections 31(b) and (c) at the
uniform adjusted rate of $25.70 per
million for sales of securities transacted
on the later of (i) April 1, 2009, or (ii)
30 days after the date on which a regular
appropriation to the Commission for
fiscal year 2009 is enacted. This fee rate
will remain in place until the fee rate for
fiscal year 2010 takes effect.15
V. Conclusion
Accordingly, pursuant to Section 31
of the Exchange Act,16
It is hereby ordered that each of the
fee rates under Sections 31(b) and (c) of
the Exchange Act shall be $25.70 per
$1,000,000 of the aggregate dollar
amount of sales of securities subject to
these sections, effective on the later of
(i) April 1, 2009, or (ii) 30 days after the
date on which a regular appropriation to
the Commission for fiscal year 2009 is
enacted.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
15 Section 31(j)(1) and Section 31(g) of the
Exchange Act require the Commission to issue an
order no later than April 30, 2009, adjusting the fee
rates applicable under Sections 31(b) and (c) for
fiscal 2010. These fee rates for fiscal 2010 will be
effective on the later of October 1, 2009 or thirty
days after the date of enactment of the
Commission’s regular appropriation for fiscal 2010.
16 15 U.S.C. 78ee.
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A. Baseline estimate of the aggregate
dollar amount of sales.
First, calculate the average daily
dollar amount of sales (ADS) for each
month in the sample (January 1999–
January 2009). The data obtained from
the exchanges and FINRA are presented
in Table A. The monthly aggregate
dollar amount of sales from all
exchanges and FINRA is contained in
column C.
Next, calculate the change in the
natural logarithm of ADS from monthto-month. The average monthly change
in the logarithm of ADS over the entire
sample is 0.007 and the standard
deviation 0.130. Assume the monthly
percentage change in ADS follows a
random walk. The expected monthly
percentage growth rate of ADS is 1.6
percent.
Now, use the expected monthly
percentage growth rate to forecast total
dollar volume. For example, one can use
the ADS for January 2009
($233,508,979,959) to forecast ADS for
February 2009 ($237,184,035,788 =
$233,508,979,959 × 1.016).17 Multiply
by the number of trading days in
February 2009 (19) to obtain a forecast
of the total dollar volume for the month
($4,506,496,679,977). Repeat the
method to generate forecasts for
subsequent months.
The forecasts for total dollar volume
are in column G of Table A. The
following is a more formal
(mathematical) description of the
procedure:
1. Divide each month’s total dollar
volume (column C) by the number of
trading days in that month (column B)
to obtain the average daily dollar
volume (ADS, column D).
2. For each month t, calculate the
change in ADS from the previous month
as Dt = log (ADSt/ADSt¥1), where log (x)
denotes the natural logarithm of x.
3. Calculate the mean and standard
deviation of the series {D1, D2, * * *,
17 The value 1.016 has been rounded. All
computations are done with the unrounded value.
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9645
D120}. These are given by μ = 0.007 and
s = 0.130, respectively.
4. Assume that the natural logarithm
of ADS follows a random walk, so that
Ds and Dt are statistically independent
for any two months s and t.
5. Under the assumption that Dt is
normally distributed, the expected value
of ADSt/ADSt¥1 is given by exp (μ + s2/
2), or on average ADSt = 1.016 × ADSt¥1.
6. For February 2009, this gives a
forecast ADS of 1.016 ×
$233,508,979,959 = $237,184,035,788.
Multiply this figure by the 19 trading
days in February 2009 to obtain a total
dollar volume forecast of
$4,506,496,679,977.
7. For March 2009, multiply the
February 2009 ADS forecast by 1.016 to
obtain a forecast ADS of
$240,916,931,086. Multiply this figure
by the 22 trading days in March 2009 to
obtain a total dollar volume forecast of
$5,300,172,483,900.
8. Repeat this procedure for
subsequent months.
B. Using the forecasts from A to
calculate the new fee rate.
1. Determine the actual and projected
aggregate dollar volume of sales
between 10/1/08 and 3/31/09 to be
$34,025,427,467,462. Multiply this
amount by the fee rate of $5.60 per
million dollars in sales during this
period and get an estimate of
$190,542,394 in actual and projected
fees collected during 10/1/08 and 3/31/
09.
2. Estimate the amount of assessments
on security futures products collected
during 10/1/08 and 9/30/09 to be $8,640
by summing the amounts collected
through January of $3,096 with
projections of a 1.6% monthly increase
in subsequent months.
3. Determine the projected aggregate
dollar volume of sales between 4/1/09
and 9/30/09 to be $32,332,563,584,044.
4. The rate necessary to collect the
target $1,023,000,000 in fee revenues is
then calculated as:
($1,023,000,000¥$190,542,394
¥$8,640)÷$32,332,563,584,044 =
0.0000257467.
5. Round the result to the seventh
decimal point, yielding a rate of
0.0000257000 (or $25.70 per million).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 42 / Thursday, March 5, 2009 / Notices
9648
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 42 / Thursday, March 5, 2009 / Notices
BILLING CODE 8011–01–C
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
[Release No. 34–59469; File No. SR–
NYSE–2009–19]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; Notice of
Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change Amending Rule
300.10T To Provide a Grace Period
Under That Rule for NYSE Alternext
U.S. LLC Member Organizations That
Have Applied for a Trading License to
Comply With Certain Exchange Rules
February 27, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on February
24, 2009, the New York Stock Exchange,
LLC (‘‘NYSE’’ or the ‘‘Exchange’’) filed
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared by NYSE. NYSE has
designated the proposed rule change as
constituting a non-controversial rule
change under Rule 19b–4(f)(6) under the
Act,3 which renders the proposal
effective upon filing with the
Commission. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to amend
Rule 300.10T to provide a grace period
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(6).
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of
and basis for the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of these statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
The self-regulatory organization has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
The Exchange proposes to amend
NYSE Rule 300.10T to provide for a sixmonth grace period for NYSE Alternext
US LLC (‘‘NYSE Alternext’’) member
organizations that have applied for, but
not received a trading license, to comply
with certain Exchange rules. The
Exchange adopted Rule 300.10T to
provide a grace period for certain NYSE
Alternext member organizations seeking
to trade equities at the Exchange to
comply with the Exchange membership
requirements. The proposed amendment
seeks to clarify the rule to reflect the
original purpose of the provision. The
Exchange is submitting this proposed
filing to conform NYSE Rule 300.10T to
corresponding changes to Rule
300.10T—NYSE Alternext Equities, as
proposed by NYSE Alternext.4
1 15
2 17
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4 See SR–NYSEALTR–2009–16 (formally
submitted on February 24, 2009). Because NYSE
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Background of Merger
As described more fully in a filing
submitted by the American Stock
Exchange LLC (‘‘Amex’’) (the ‘‘Merger
filing’’),5 NYSE Euronext acquired The
Amex Membership Corporation
(‘‘AMC’’) pursuant to an Agreement and
Plan of Merger, dated January 17, 2008
(the ‘‘Merger’’). In connection with the
Merger, Amex, a subsidiary of AMC,
became a subsidiary of NYSE Euronext
and was renamed NYSE Alternext U.S.
LLC, and continues to operate as a
national securities exchange registered
under Section 6 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the
‘‘Act’’).6 The effective date of the Merger
was October 1, 2008.
As described more fully in the Merger
filing, in connection with the Mergers,
Amex demutualized by separating all
trading rights from equity ownership in
Amex. As part of the demutualization,
all trading rights appurtenant to the
Amex Regular Members’ memberships
or Options Principal Members’ (‘‘OPM’’)
memberships were cancelled.
Immediately following the closing of the
Mergers, those persons and entities that
were authorized to trade on the Amex
before the closing of the Mergers were
deemed to have satisfied applicable
qualification requirements necessary to
trade in NYSE Alternext’s demutualized
marketplace and were issued a permit at
no cost to trade on NYSE Alternext (‘‘86
Trinity Permit’’). The 86 Trinity Permit
authorizes owners, lessees or nominees
of Amex Regular Members or OPMs,
Amex limited trading permit holders,
and Amex associate members who were
Alternext’s perspective of its member organizations
differs from those of the NYSE, the rule text
proposed by the NYSE is not identical to that
proposed by NYSE Alternext, but is the same in
substance.
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 58673
(September 29, 2008), 73 FR 57707 (October 3,
2008) (SR–NYSE–2008–60 and SR–Amex 2008–62)
(approving the Merger).
6 15 U.S.C. 78f.
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under that rule for NYSE Alternext US
LLC member organizations that have
applied for a trading license to comply
with certain Exchange rules.
[FR Doc. E9–4738 Filed 3–4–09; 8:45 am]
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 42 (Thursday, March 5, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9644-9648]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-4738]
[[Page 9644]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-59477/February 27, 2009]
Order Making Fiscal Year 2009 Mid-Year Adjustment to the Fee
Rates Applicable Under Sections 31(b) and (c) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
I. Background
Section 31 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange
Act'') requires each national securities exchange and national
securities association to pay transaction fees to the Commission.\1\
Specifically, Section 31(b) requires each national securities exchange
to pay to the Commission fees based on the aggregate dollar amount of
sales of certain securities transacted on the exchange.\2\ Section
31(c) requires each national securities association to pay to the
Commission fees based on the aggregate dollar amount of sales of
certain securities transacted by or through any member of the
association other than on an exchange.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee.
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee(b).
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 31(j)(1) and (3) require the Commission to make annual
adjustments to the fee rates applicable under Sections 31(b) and (c)
for each of the fiscal years 2003 through 2011, and one final
adjustment to fix the fee rates for fiscal year 2012 and beyond.\4\
Section 31(j)(2) requires the Commission, in certain circumstances, to
make a mid-year adjustment to the fee rates in fiscal years 2002
through 2011.\5\ The annual and mid-year adjustments are designed to
adjust the fee rates in a given fiscal year so that, when applied to
the aggregate dollar volume of sales for the fiscal year, they are
reasonably likely to produce total fee collections under Section 31
equal to the ``target offsetting collection amount'' specified in
Section 31(l)(1) for that fiscal year.\6\ For fiscal year 2009, the
target offsetting collection amount is $1,023,000,000.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee(j)(1) and (j)(3).
\5\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee(j)(2).
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee(l)(1).
\7\ Id.
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II. Determination of the Need for a Mid-Year Adjustment in Fiscal 2009
Under Section 31(j)(2) of the Exchange Act, the Commission must
make a mid-year adjustment to the fee rates under Sections 31(b) and
(c) in fiscal year 2009 if it determines, based on the actual aggregate
dollar volume of sales during the first five months of the fiscal year,
that the baseline estimate $113,703,210,464,919 is reasonably likely to
be 10% (or more) greater or less than the actual aggregate dollar
volume of sales for fiscal year 2009.\8\ To make this determination,
the Commission must estimate the actual aggregate dollar volume of
sales for fiscal year 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The amount $113,703,210,464,919 is the baseline estimate of
the aggregate dollar amount of sales for fiscal year 2009 calculated
by the Commission in its Order Making Fiscal 2009 Annual Adjustments
to the Fee Rates Applicable Under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act
of 1933 and Sections 13(e), 14(g), 31(b) and 31(c) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, Rel. No. 33-8916 (May 2, 2008), 73 FR 25795
(May 7, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on data provided by the national securities exchanges and the
national securities association that are subject to Section 31,\9\ the
actual aggregate dollar volume of sales during the first four months of
fiscal year 2009 was $24,218,758,303,585.\10\ Using these data and a
methodology for estimating the aggregate dollar amount of sales for the
remainder of fiscal year 2009 (developed after consultation with the
Congressional Budget Office and the OMB),\11\ the Commission estimates
that the aggregate dollar amount of sales for the remainder of fiscal
year 2009 to be $42,139,232,747,921. Thus, the Commission estimates
that the actual aggregate dollar volume of sales for all of fiscal year
2009 will be $66,357,991,051,506.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(``FINRA'') and each exchange is required to file a monthly report
on Form R31 containing dollar volume data on sales of securities
subject to Section 31. The report is due on the 10th business day
following the month for which the exchange or association provides
dollar volume data.
\10\ Although Section 31(j)(2) indicates that the Commission
should determine the actual aggregate dollar volume of sales for
fiscal 2009 ``based on the actual aggregate dollar volume of sales
during the first 5 months of such fiscal year,'' data are only
available for the first four months of the fiscal year as of the
date the Commission is required to issue this order, i.e., March 1,
2009. Dollar volume data on sales of securities subject to Section
31 for February 2009 will not be available from the exchanges and
FINRA for several weeks.
\11\ See Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the baseline estimate of $113,703,210,464,919 is more than
10% greater than the $66,357,991,051,506 estimated actual aggregate
dollar volume of sales for fiscal year 2009, Section 31(j)(2) of the
Exchange Act requires the Commission to issue an order adjusting the
fee rates under Sections 31(b) and (c).
III. Calculation of the Uniform Adjusted Rate
Section 31(j)(2) specifies the method for determining the mid-year
adjustment for fiscal 2009. Specifically, the Commission must adjust
the rates under Sections 31(b) and (c) to a ``uniform adjusted rate
that, when applied to the revised estimate of the aggregate dollar
amount of sales for the remainder of fiscal year 2009, is reasonably
likely to produce aggregate fee collections under Section 31 (including
fees collected during such 5-month period and assessments collected
under Section 31(d)) that are equal to $1,023,000,000.'' \12\ In other
words, the uniform adjusted rate is determined by subtracting fees
collected prior to the effective date of the new rate and assessments
collected under Section 31(d) during all of fiscal year 2009 from
$1,023,000,000, which is the target offsetting collection amount for
fiscal year 2009. That difference is then divided by the revised
estimate of the aggregate dollar volume of sales for the remainder of
the fiscal year following the effective date of the new rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ U.S.C. 78ee(j)(2). The term ``fees collected'' is not
defined in Section 31. Because national securities exchanges and
national securities associations are not required to pay the first
installment of Section 31 fees for fiscal 2009 until March 15, the
Commission will not ``collect'' any fees in the first five months of
fiscal 2009. See 15 U.S.C. 78ee(e). However, the Commission believes
that, for purposes of calculating the mid-year adjustment, Congress,
by stating in Section 31(j)(2) that the ``uniform adjusted rate * *
* is reasonably likely to produce aggregate fee collections under
Section 31 * * * that are equal to [$1,023,000,000],'' intended the
Commission to include the fees that the Commission will collect
based on transactions in the six months before the effective date of
the mid-year adjustment.
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The Commission estimates that it will collect $190,542,394 in fees
for the period prior to the effective date of the mid-year adjustment
\13\ and $8,640 in assessments on round turn transactions in security
futures products during all of fiscal year 2009. Using the methodology
referenced in Part II above, the Commission estimates that the
aggregate dollar volume of sales for the remainder of fiscal year 2009
following the effective date of the new rate will be
$32,332,563,584,044. This amount reflects more recent information on
the dollar amount of sales of securities than was available at the time
of the setting of the initial fee rate for fiscal year 2009, and
indicates a significant reduction in sales. Based on these estimates,
and employing the mid-year adjustment mechanism established by statute,
the uniform adjusted rate is $25.70 per million of the aggregate dollar
amount of sales of securities.\14\ The aggregate
[[Page 9645]]
dollar amount of sales of securities subject to Section 31 fees is
illustrated in Appendix A.
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\13\ This calculation is based on the assumption that the mid-
year adjustment will go into effect on April 1, 2009 pursuant to
Section 31(j)(4)(B) of the Exchange Act. However, see the discussion
below regarding the actual effective date of the mid-year
adjustment.
\14\ The calculation is as follows: ($1,023,000,000-
$190,542,394--$8,640)/$32,332,563,584,044 = $0.0000257467. Round
this result to the seventh decimal point, yielding a rate of $25.70
per million.
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IV. Effective Date of the Uniform Adjusted Rate
Section 31(j)(4)(B) of the Exchange Act provides that a mid-year
adjustment shall take effect on April 1 of the fiscal year in which
such rate applies. However, it is possible that the effective date will
be delayed this fiscal year because of the lapse of appropriation
provision in Section 31(k) of the Exchange Act. That section provides
that, if on the first day of the fiscal year a regular appropriation to
the Commission has not been enacted, the Commission shall continue to
collect fees at the rate in effect during the preceding fiscal year,
until 30 days after the date such a regular appropriation is enacted.
Therefore, the exchanges and the national securities association that
are subject to Section 31 fees must pay fees under Sections 31(b) and
(c) at the uniform adjusted rate of $25.70 per million for sales of
securities transacted on the later of (i) April 1, 2009, or (ii) 30
days after the date on which a regular appropriation to the Commission
for fiscal year 2009 is enacted. This fee rate will remain in place
until the fee rate for fiscal year 2010 takes effect.\15\
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\15\ Section 31(j)(1) and Section 31(g) of the Exchange Act
require the Commission to issue an order no later than April 30,
2009, adjusting the fee rates applicable under Sections 31(b) and
(c) for fiscal 2010. These fee rates for fiscal 2010 will be
effective on the later of October 1, 2009 or thirty days after the
date of enactment of the Commission's regular appropriation for
fiscal 2010.
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V. Conclusion
Accordingly, pursuant to Section 31 of the Exchange Act,\16\
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\16\ 15 U.S.C. 78ee.
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It is hereby ordered that each of the fee rates under Sections
31(b) and (c) of the Exchange Act shall be $25.70 per $1,000,000 of the
aggregate dollar amount of sales of securities subject to these
sections, effective on the later of (i) April 1, 2009, or (ii) 30 days
after the date on which a regular appropriation to the Commission for
fiscal year 2009 is enacted.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
Appendix A
A. Baseline estimate of the aggregate dollar amount of sales.
First, calculate the average daily dollar amount of sales (ADS) for
each month in the sample (January 1999-January 2009). The data obtained
from the exchanges and FINRA are presented in Table A. The monthly
aggregate dollar amount of sales from all exchanges and FINRA is
contained in column C.
Next, calculate the change in the natural logarithm of ADS from
month-to-month. The average monthly change in the logarithm of ADS over
the entire sample is 0.007 and the standard deviation 0.130. Assume the
monthly percentage change in ADS follows a random walk. The expected
monthly percentage growth rate of ADS is 1.6 percent.
Now, use the expected monthly percentage growth rate to forecast
total dollar volume. For example, one can use the ADS for January 2009
($233,508,979,959) to forecast ADS for February 2009 ($237,184,035,788
= $233,508,979,959 x 1.016).\17\ Multiply by the number of trading days
in February 2009 (19) to obtain a forecast of the total dollar volume
for the month ($4,506,496,679,977). Repeat the method to generate
forecasts for subsequent months.
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\17\ The value 1.016 has been rounded. All computations are done
with the unrounded value.
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The forecasts for total dollar volume are in column G of Table A.
The following is a more formal (mathematical) description of the
procedure:
1. Divide each month's total dollar volume (column C) by the number
of trading days in that month (column B) to obtain the average daily
dollar volume (ADS, column D).
2. For each month t, calculate the change in ADS from the previous
month as [Delta]t = log (ADSt/ADSt-1),
where log (x) denotes the natural logarithm of x.
3. Calculate the mean and standard deviation of the series
{[Delta]1, [Delta]2, * * *,
[Delta]120{time} . These are given by [mu] = 0.007 and
[sigma] = 0.130, respectively.
4. Assume that the natural logarithm of ADS follows a random walk,
so that [Delta]s and [Delta]t are statistically
independent for any two months s and t.
5. Under the assumption that [Delta]t is normally
distributed, the expected value of ADSt/ADSt-1 is
given by exp ([mu] + [sigma]2/2), or on average
ADSt = 1.016 x ADSt-1.
6. For February 2009, this gives a forecast ADS of 1.016 x
$233,508,979,959 = $237,184,035,788. Multiply this figure by the 19
trading days in February 2009 to obtain a total dollar volume forecast
of $4,506,496,679,977.
7. For March 2009, multiply the February 2009 ADS forecast by 1.016
to obtain a forecast ADS of $240,916,931,086. Multiply this figure by
the 22 trading days in March 2009 to obtain a total dollar volume
forecast of $5,300,172,483,900.
8. Repeat this procedure for subsequent months.
B. Using the forecasts from A to calculate the new fee rate.
1. Determine the actual and projected aggregate dollar volume of
sales between 10/1/08 and 3/31/09 to be $34,025,427,467,462. Multiply
this amount by the fee rate of $5.60 per million dollars in sales
during this period and get an estimate of $190,542,394 in actual and
projected fees collected during 10/1/08 and 3/31/09.
2. Estimate the amount of assessments on security futures products
collected during 10/1/08 and 9/30/09 to be $8,640 by summing the
amounts collected through January of $3,096 with projections of a 1.6%
monthly increase in subsequent months.
3. Determine the projected aggregate dollar volume of sales between
4/1/09 and 9/30/09 to be $32,332,563,584,044.
4. The rate necessary to collect the target $1,023,000,000 in fee
revenues is then calculated as: ($1,023,000,000-$190,542,394 -$8,640)/
$32,332,563,584,044 = 0.0000257467.
5. Round the result to the seventh decimal point, yielding a rate
of 0.0000257000 (or $25.70 per million).
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[FR Doc. E9-4738 Filed 3-4-09; 8:45 am]
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