Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 27546-27547 [2017-12361]
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27546
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 114 / Thursday, June 15, 2017 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Notice and request for
comments.
ACTION:
The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork burdens, invites
the general public and other Federal
agencies to comment on revisions in
2017 of a currently approved
information collection that is proposed
for approval by the Office of
Management and Budget. The Office of
International Affairs within the
Department of the Treasury is soliciting
comments concerning the revision of
the Annual Report of U.S. Ownership of
Foreign Securities, including Selected
Money Market Instruments. The next
such collection is an annual survey to
be conducted as of December 31, 2017.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before August 14, 2017
to be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Dwight Wolkow, International
Portfolio Investment Data Systems,
Department of the Treasury, Room 5422
MT, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20220. In view of
possible delays in mail delivery, you
may also wish to send a copy to Mr.
Wolkow by email (comments2TIC@
do.treas.gov) or FAX (202–622–2009).
Mr. Wolkow can also be reached by
telephone (202–622–1276).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of the proposed form and
instructions are available at Part II of the
Treasury International Capital (TIC)
Forms Web page ‘‘Forms SHL/SHLA &
SHC/SHCA’’, at: https://
www.treasury.gov/resource-center/datachart-center/tic/Pages/formssh.aspx#shc. The proposed forms
(called schedules) are unchanged from
the previous survey that was conducted
as of December 31, 2016 (SHC(2016)).
The ‘‘Current Actions’’ below are
changes in the previous instructions.
Requests for additional information
should be directed to Mr. Wolkow.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Treasury International Capital
(TIC) Form SHC/SHCA ‘‘U.S.
Ownership of Foreign Securities,
including Selected Money Market
Instruments.’’
OMB Control Number: 1505–0146.
Abstract: Form SHC/SHCA is part of
the Treasury International Capital (TIC)
reporting system, which is required by
law (22 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.; E.O. 11961;
31 CFR 129) and is used to conduct
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:10 Jun 14, 2017
Jkt 241001
annual surveys of U.S. residents’
ownership of foreign securities for
portfolio investment purposes. These
data are used by the U.S. Government in
the formulation of international
financial and monetary policies, and for
the computation of the U.S. balance of
payments accounts and of the U.S.
international investment position. These
data are also used to provide
information to the public and to meet
international reporting commitments.
The SHC/SHCA survey is part of an
internationally coordinated effort under
the auspices of the International
Monetary Fund to improve data on
securities worldwide. Most of the major
industrial and financial countries
conduct similar surveys.
The data collection includes large
benchmark surveys conducted every
five years, and smaller annual surveys
conducted in the non-benchmark years.
The data collected under an annual
survey are used in conjunction with the
results of the preceding benchmark
survey and of recent SLT reports to
make economy-wide estimates for that
non-benchmark year. Currently, the
determination of who must report in the
annual surveys is based primarily on the
data submitted during the preceding
benchmark survey and on data
submitted on SLT reports around June
of the survey year. The data requested
in the annual survey will generally be
the same as requested in the preceding
benchmark report. Form SHC is used for
the benchmark survey of all significant
U.S.-resident custodians and endinvestors regarding U.S. ownership of
foreign securities. In non-benchmark
years Form SHCA is used for the annual
surveys of primarily the very largest
U.S.-resident custodians and endinvestors.
Current Actions: No changes in the
forms (called schedules) are made from
the previous survey that was conducted
as of December 31, 2016. The proposed
changes in the instructions are:
(1) Because the next survey is an
annual survey (SHCA), section II.A in
the instructions, ‘‘Who Must Report’’, is
changed to begin with the following
paragraph ‘‘All U.S.-resident entities
that have been contacted by the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York to report
must file the SHCA report. (See Section
II.C, Exemptions.) All other entities are
exempt from reporting.’’ Elsewhere in
the instructions, all references to ‘‘SHC’’
(the benchmark survey of 2016) are
changed to ‘‘SHCA’’.
(2) In section II.A.(2) ‘‘Who Must
Report/End-Investors’’, the list is edited
to show ‘‘Intermediate Holding
Companies’’ (IHCs), which are defined
by Regulation YY, 12 CFR 252, to clarify
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
that IHCs should follow the same
consolidation rules that are applicable
to Bank Holding Companies (BHCs),
Financial Holding Companies (FHCs),
and Savings and Loan Holding
Companies. In addition, IHCs are
mentioned in the line-by-line
instructions for Schedule 1 (section
IV.A.8.5) and Schedule 2 (section
IV.B.15.6).
(3) In section II.A.2 ‘‘End-Investors’’
and in section III.C.3.(a) under the
subsection ‘‘How to Report Hedge
Funds and other alternative investment
vehicles’’, the list of legal entities is
expanded to include fund
‘‘administrators’’.
(4) The section II.A.2 ‘‘End-Investors’’,
section III.A ‘‘Reportable Foreign
Securities/Equity Interests’’, section
III.C.1 ‘‘Funds and Related Holdings’’
and the new section III.C.3.(c) ‘‘Direct
investment exception for certain private
funds’’ are all revised to list out
separately ‘‘certain private funds’’,
which are a subgroup of the class of
financial entities defined by the
Securities and Exchange Commission as
private funds on Form PF: ‘‘any issuer
that would be an investment company
as defined in section 3 of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 but for section
3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of . . . [that] Act.’’. In
cooperation with the Bureau of
Economic Analysis (BEA) effective for
TIC reports beginning as of January 2017
and afterwards, reporters of investments
in certain private funds that meet the
definition of direct investment (that is,
ownership by one person of 10 percent
or more of the voting interest of a
business enterprise) but display
characteristics of portfolio investment
(specifically, investors who do not
intend to control or influence the
management of an operating company)
are required to report through the
Treasury International Capital (TIC)
reporting system, where other related
portfolio investments are already being
reported, and not to report on BEA’s
direct investment surveys. Specifically,
cross-border investments by or into
private funds are included in TIC
reports regardless of ownership share if
they meet BOTH of the following two
criteria: (i) The private fund does not
own, directly or indirectly through
another business enterprise, an
‘‘operating company’’—i.e., a business
enterprise that is not a private fund or
a holding company—in which the U.S.
parent owns at least 10 percent of the
voting interest, and (ii) If the private
fund is owned indirectly (through one
or more other business enterprises),
there are no ‘‘operating companies’’
between the U.S. parent and the
indirectly-owned private fund. Direct
E:\FR\FM\15JNN1.SGM
15JNN1
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 114 / Thursday, June 15, 2017 / Notices
investment in operating companies,
including investment by and through
private funds, will continue to be
reported to BEA. Guidance on the
decision to report investments in certain
private funds or between entities of
certain private funds in the TIC system
or in BEA surveys can be found at:
https://www.bea.gov/privatefunds; use
the tool labeled ‘‘U.S. Investments in
Foreign Private Funds’’. This change in
reporting requirements aligns the U.S.
direct investment and portfolio
investment data more closely with the
intent of the investment with respect to
management control. In addition, it
reduces burden for respondents, many
of whom previously reported both to the
TIC reporting system and to BEA’s
direct investment reporting system.
Note: this change applies also to these
other TIC forms if the reporting
requirements of the form are met: BC,
BL–1, BL–2, BQ–1, BQ–2, BQ–3, D, S,
SLT, and SHL/SHLA.
(5) Section III.G ‘‘Direct Investment’’
has been, in effect, expanded to be equal
to the detailed description of direct
investment in the TIC GLOSSARY.
(6) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 1’’ (section IV.A in the
instructions), the phrase in parentheses
in line 20 is clarified and reads
‘‘(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 =
security types 1, 2, 3, or 4)’’.
(7) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 1’’ (section IV.A in the
instructions), the phrase in parentheses
in line 21 is clarified and reads
‘‘(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 =
security types 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or 11)’’.
(8) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 1’’ (section IV.A in the
instructions), the phrase in parentheses
in line 22 is clarified and reads
‘‘(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 =
security types 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or 11)’’.
(9) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 1’’ (section IV.A in the
instructions), the phrase in parentheses
in line 23 is clarified and reads
‘‘(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 =
security type 12)’’.
(10) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 2’’, the third part of the
note for Type 8 in line 8 is changed to
read ‘‘(3) Short-term sovereign debt
securities should be reported as type 11;
and (4) . . .’’
(11) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 2’’, the note for ‘‘Type 11’’
in line 11 is changed to read ‘‘Type 11
should include all debt other than assetbacked securities that is not covered in
types 5–10, including short-term
sovereign debt securities.’’
(12) In the ‘‘Line-by-Line Instructions
for Schedule 3’’ (section IV.C in the
instructions), subpart 3 ‘‘Custodian
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14:10 Jun 14, 2017
Jkt 241001
Code’’ is expanded to add the last line
with bullet items ‘‘If you are not
required to submit Schedule 2 records,
please submit up to two additional
Schedule 3 reports:
• Using custodian code 77, submit
summary data on foreign securities held
directly with foreign resident
custodians, including foreign-resident
offices of U.S. banks or U.S. broker/
dealers, and with foreign-resident
central securities depositories.
• Using custodian code 88, submit
summary data on foreign securities held
directly, managed directly, or held with
U.S.-resident central securities
depositories (and for which no U.S.resident custodian is used).’’
In addition, codes 77 and 88 are
included in Appendix F: ‘‘List of
Custodian Codes’’.
(13) Some other clarifications may be
made in other parts of the instructions.
The changes will improve overall
survey reporting.
Type of Review: Revision of currently
approved data collection.
Affected Public: Business/Financial
Institutions.
Form: TIC SHC/SHCA, Schedules 1, 2
and 3 (1505–0146).
Estimated Number of Respondents:
An annual average (over five years) of
306, but this varies widely from about
785 in benchmark years (once every five
years) to about 190 in other years (four
out of every five years).
Estimated Average Time per
Respondent: An annual average (over
five years) of about 174 hours, but this
will vary widely from respondent to
respondent. (a) In the year of a
benchmark survey, which is conducted
once every five years, it is estimated that
exempt respondents will require an
average of 17 hours; custodians of
securities providing security-by-security
information will require an average of
361 hours, but this figure will vary
widely for individual custodians; endinvestors providing security-by-security
information will require an average of
121 hours; and end-investors and
custodians employing U.S. custodians
will require an average of 41 hours. (b)
In a non-benchmark year, which occurs
four years out of every five years:
Custodians of securities providing
security-by-security information will
require an average of 546 hours (because
only the largest U.S.-resident custodians
will report), but this figure will vary
widely for individual custodians; endinvestors providing security-by-security
information will require an average of
146 hours; and reporters entrusting their
foreign securities to U.S. custodians will
require an average of 49 hours. The
exemption level, which applies only in
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Frm 00086
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
27547
benchmark years when filing schedules
2 or 3 or both, for custodians and for
end-investors is the holding of less than
$200 million in reportable foreign
securities owned by U.S. residents. For
schedule 2, end-investors should
exclude securities that are held with
their unaffiliated U.S.-resident
custodians.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: An annual average (over five
years) of 53,260 hours.
Frequency of Response: Annual.
Request for Comments: Comments
submitted in response to this notice will
be summarized and/or included in the
request for Office of Management and
Budget approval. All comments will
become a matter of public record. The
public is invited to submit written
comments concerning: (a) Whether the
Survey is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Office of International Affairs within the
Department of the Treasury, including
whether the information collected will
have practical uses; (b) the accuracy of
the above estimate of the burdens; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, usefulness
and clarity of the information to be
collected; (d) ways to minimize the
reporting and/or record keeping burdens
on respondents, including the use of
information technologies to automate
the collection of the data requested; and
(e) estimates of capital or start-up costs
of operation, maintenance and purchase
of services to provide the information
requested.
Dwight Wolkow,
Administrator, International Portfolio
Investment Data Systems.
[FR Doc. 2017–12361 Filed 6–14–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Advisory Committee: National
Academic Affiliations Council; Notice
of Meeting
The Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) gives notice under the Federal
Advisory Committee Act, 5 U.S.C. App.
2 that a meeting of the VA National
Academic Affiliations Council (NAAC)
will be held July 12, 2017–July 13, 2017
in Washington DC. The July 12, 2017
session will be held in the Sonny
Montgomery Conference Center, Room
230, 810 Vermont Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20420. This session
will begin at 9:00 a.m. and end at 4:45
p.m. The July 13, 2017 session will held
in Room HVC–201AB of the U.S.
Capitol Visitors Center, First Street NE.,
E:\FR\FM\15JNN1.SGM
15JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 114 (Thursday, June 15, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 27546-27547]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-12361]
[[Page 27546]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Proposed Collection; Comment Request
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of the Treasury, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to comment on revisions in 2017 of a currently
approved information collection that is proposed for approval by the
Office of Management and Budget. The Office of International Affairs
within the Department of the Treasury is soliciting comments concerning
the revision of the Annual Report of U.S. Ownership of Foreign
Securities, including Selected Money Market Instruments. The next such
collection is an annual survey to be conducted as of December 31, 2017.
DATES: Written comments should be received on or before August 14, 2017
to be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments to Dwight Wolkow, International
Portfolio Investment Data Systems, Department of the Treasury, Room
5422 MT, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20220. In view of
possible delays in mail delivery, you may also wish to send a copy to
Mr. Wolkow by email (comments2TIC@do.treas.gov) or FAX (202-622-2009).
Mr. Wolkow can also be reached by telephone (202-622-1276).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Copies of the proposed form and
instructions are available at Part II of the Treasury International
Capital (TIC) Forms Web page ``Forms SHL/SHLA & SHC/SHCA'', at: https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/tic/Pages/forms-sh.aspx#shc. The proposed forms (called schedules) are unchanged from
the previous survey that was conducted as of December 31, 2016
(SHC(2016)). The ``Current Actions'' below are changes in the previous
instructions. Requests for additional information should be directed to
Mr. Wolkow.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Treasury International Capital (TIC) Form SHC/SHCA ``U.S.
Ownership of Foreign Securities, including Selected Money Market
Instruments.''
OMB Control Number: 1505-0146.
Abstract: Form SHC/SHCA is part of the Treasury International
Capital (TIC) reporting system, which is required by law (22 U.S.C.
3101 et seq.; E.O. 11961; 31 CFR 129) and is used to conduct annual
surveys of U.S. residents' ownership of foreign securities for
portfolio investment purposes. These data are used by the U.S.
Government in the formulation of international financial and monetary
policies, and for the computation of the U.S. balance of payments
accounts and of the U.S. international investment position. These data
are also used to provide information to the public and to meet
international reporting commitments. The SHC/SHCA survey is part of an
internationally coordinated effort under the auspices of the
International Monetary Fund to improve data on securities worldwide.
Most of the major industrial and financial countries conduct similar
surveys.
The data collection includes large benchmark surveys conducted
every five years, and smaller annual surveys conducted in the non-
benchmark years. The data collected under an annual survey are used in
conjunction with the results of the preceding benchmark survey and of
recent SLT reports to make economy-wide estimates for that non-
benchmark year. Currently, the determination of who must report in the
annual surveys is based primarily on the data submitted during the
preceding benchmark survey and on data submitted on SLT reports around
June of the survey year. The data requested in the annual survey will
generally be the same as requested in the preceding benchmark report.
Form SHC is used for the benchmark survey of all significant U.S.-
resident custodians and end-investors regarding U.S. ownership of
foreign securities. In non-benchmark years Form SHCA is used for the
annual surveys of primarily the very largest U.S.-resident custodians
and end-investors.
Current Actions: No changes in the forms (called schedules) are
made from the previous survey that was conducted as of December 31,
2016. The proposed changes in the instructions are:
(1) Because the next survey is an annual survey (SHCA), section
II.A in the instructions, ``Who Must Report'', is changed to begin with
the following paragraph ``All U.S.-resident entities that have been
contacted by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to report must file
the SHCA report. (See Section II.C, Exemptions.) All other entities are
exempt from reporting.'' Elsewhere in the instructions, all references
to ``SHC'' (the benchmark survey of 2016) are changed to ``SHCA''.
(2) In section II.A.(2) ``Who Must Report/End-Investors'', the list
is edited to show ``Intermediate Holding Companies'' (IHCs), which are
defined by Regulation YY, 12 CFR 252, to clarify that IHCs should
follow the same consolidation rules that are applicable to Bank Holding
Companies (BHCs), Financial Holding Companies (FHCs), and Savings and
Loan Holding Companies. In addition, IHCs are mentioned in the line-by-
line instructions for Schedule 1 (section IV.A.8.5) and Schedule 2
(section IV.B.15.6).
(3) In section II.A.2 ``End-Investors'' and in section III.C.3.(a)
under the subsection ``How to Report Hedge Funds and other alternative
investment vehicles'', the list of legal entities is expanded to
include fund ``administrators''.
(4) The section II.A.2 ``End-Investors'', section III.A
``Reportable Foreign Securities/Equity Interests'', section III.C.1
``Funds and Related Holdings'' and the new section III.C.3.(c) ``Direct
investment exception for certain private funds'' are all revised to
list out separately ``certain private funds'', which are a subgroup of
the class of financial entities defined by the Securities and Exchange
Commission as private funds on Form PF: ``any issuer that would be an
investment company as defined in section 3 of the Investment Company
Act of 1940 but for section 3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of . . . [that] Act.''.
In cooperation with the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) effective for
TIC reports beginning as of January 2017 and afterwards, reporters of
investments in certain private funds that meet the definition of direct
investment (that is, ownership by one person of 10 percent or more of
the voting interest of a business enterprise) but display
characteristics of portfolio investment (specifically, investors who do
not intend to control or influence the management of an operating
company) are required to report through the Treasury International
Capital (TIC) reporting system, where other related portfolio
investments are already being reported, and not to report on BEA's
direct investment surveys. Specifically, cross-border investments by or
into private funds are included in TIC reports regardless of ownership
share if they meet BOTH of the following two criteria: (i) The private
fund does not own, directly or indirectly through another business
enterprise, an ``operating company''--i.e., a business enterprise that
is not a private fund or a holding company--in which the U.S. parent
owns at least 10 percent of the voting interest, and (ii) If the
private fund is owned indirectly (through one or more other business
enterprises), there are no ``operating companies'' between the U.S.
parent and the indirectly-owned private fund. Direct
[[Page 27547]]
investment in operating companies, including investment by and through
private funds, will continue to be reported to BEA. Guidance on the
decision to report investments in certain private funds or between
entities of certain private funds in the TIC system or in BEA surveys
can be found at: https://www.bea.gov/privatefunds; use the tool labeled
``U.S. Investments in Foreign Private Funds''. This change in reporting
requirements aligns the U.S. direct investment and portfolio investment
data more closely with the intent of the investment with respect to
management control. In addition, it reduces burden for respondents,
many of whom previously reported both to the TIC reporting system and
to BEA's direct investment reporting system. Note: this change applies
also to these other TIC forms if the reporting requirements of the form
are met: BC, BL-1, BL-2, BQ-1, BQ-2, BQ-3, D, S, SLT, and SHL/SHLA.
(5) Section III.G ``Direct Investment'' has been, in effect,
expanded to be equal to the detailed description of direct investment
in the TIC GLOSSARY.
(6) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 1'' (section
IV.A in the instructions), the phrase in parentheses in line 20 is
clarified and reads ``(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 = security
types 1, 2, 3, or 4)''.
(7) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 1'' (section
IV.A in the instructions), the phrase in parentheses in line 21 is
clarified and reads ``(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 = security
types 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or 11)''.
(8) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 1'' (section
IV.A in the instructions), the phrase in parentheses in line 22 is
clarified and reads ``(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 = security
types 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or 11)''.
(9) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 1'' (section
IV.A in the instructions), the phrase in parentheses in line 23 is
clarified and reads ``(records with Schedule 2, Item 12 = security type
12)''.
(10) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 2'', the third
part of the note for Type 8 in line 8 is changed to read ``(3) Short-
term sovereign debt securities should be reported as type 11; and (4) .
. .''
(11) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 2'', the note
for ``Type 11'' in line 11 is changed to read ``Type 11 should include
all debt other than asset-backed securities that is not covered in
types 5-10, including short-term sovereign debt securities.''
(12) In the ``Line-by-Line Instructions for Schedule 3'' (section
IV.C in the instructions), subpart 3 ``Custodian Code'' is expanded to
add the last line with bullet items ``If you are not required to submit
Schedule 2 records, please submit up to two additional Schedule 3
reports:
Using custodian code 77, submit summary data on foreign
securities held directly with foreign resident custodians, including
foreign-resident offices of U.S. banks or U.S. broker/dealers, and with
foreign-resident central securities depositories.
Using custodian code 88, submit summary data on foreign
securities held directly, managed directly, or held with U.S.-resident
central securities depositories (and for which no U.S.-resident
custodian is used).''
In addition, codes 77 and 88 are included in Appendix F: ``List of
Custodian Codes''.
(13) Some other clarifications may be made in other parts of the
instructions.
The changes will improve overall survey reporting.
Type of Review: Revision of currently approved data collection.
Affected Public: Business/Financial Institutions.
Form: TIC SHC/SHCA, Schedules 1, 2 and 3 (1505-0146).
Estimated Number of Respondents: An annual average (over five
years) of 306, but this varies widely from about 785 in benchmark years
(once every five years) to about 190 in other years (four out of every
five years).
Estimated Average Time per Respondent: An annual average (over five
years) of about 174 hours, but this will vary widely from respondent to
respondent. (a) In the year of a benchmark survey, which is conducted
once every five years, it is estimated that exempt respondents will
require an average of 17 hours; custodians of securities providing
security-by-security information will require an average of 361 hours,
but this figure will vary widely for individual custodians; end-
investors providing security-by-security information will require an
average of 121 hours; and end-investors and custodians employing U.S.
custodians will require an average of 41 hours. (b) In a non-benchmark
year, which occurs four years out of every five years: Custodians of
securities providing security-by-security information will require an
average of 546 hours (because only the largest U.S.-resident custodians
will report), but this figure will vary widely for individual
custodians; end-investors providing security-by-security information
will require an average of 146 hours; and reporters entrusting their
foreign securities to U.S. custodians will require an average of 49
hours. The exemption level, which applies only in benchmark years when
filing schedules 2 or 3 or both, for custodians and for end-investors
is the holding of less than $200 million in reportable foreign
securities owned by U.S. residents. For schedule 2, end-investors
should exclude securities that are held with their unaffiliated U.S.-
resident custodians.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: An annual average (over five
years) of 53,260 hours.
Frequency of Response: Annual.
Request for Comments: Comments submitted in response to this notice
will be summarized and/or included in the request for Office of
Management and Budget approval. All comments will become a matter of
public record. The public is invited to submit written comments
concerning: (a) Whether the Survey is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the Office of International Affairs
within the Department of the Treasury, including whether the
information collected will have practical uses; (b) the accuracy of the
above estimate of the burdens; (c) ways to enhance the quality,
usefulness and clarity of the information to be collected; (d) ways to
minimize the reporting and/or record keeping burdens on respondents,
including the use of information technologies to automate the
collection of the data requested; and (e) estimates of capital or
start-up costs of operation, maintenance and purchase of services to
provide the information requested.
Dwight Wolkow,
Administrator, International Portfolio Investment Data Systems.
[FR Doc. 2017-12361 Filed 6-14-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-P