Supplement to Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment Advisers, 55155-55158 [2020-16338]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 172 / Thursday, September 3, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
(A) To approve any transaction
specified in § 230.145(a); or
(B) By any person or group of persons
for the purpose of opposing a
solicitation subject to this regulation by
any other person or group of persons.
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■ 4. Amend § 240.14a–9 by adding
paragraph e. to the Note to read as
follows:
§ 240.14a–9 False or misleading
statements.
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Note: * * *
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e. Failure to disclose material information
regarding proxy voting advice covered by
§ 240.14a–1(l)(1)(iii)(A), such as the proxy
voting advice business’s methodology,
sources of information, or conflicts of
interest.
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By the Commission.
Dated: July 22, 2020.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–16337 Filed 9–1–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 276
[Release No. IA–5547]
Supplement to Commission Guidance
Regarding Proxy Voting
Responsibilities of Investment
Advisers
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Guidance.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) is
publishing supplementary guidance
regarding the proxy voting
responsibilities of investment advisers
under its regulations issued under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the
‘‘Advisers Act’’) in light of the
Commission’s amendments to the rules
governing proxy solicitations under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Exchange Act’’).
DATES: Effective: September 3, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thankam A. Varghese, Senior Counsel;
or Holly Hunter-Ceci, Assistant Chief
Counsel, at (202) 551–6825 or IMOCC@
sec.gov, Chief Counsel’s Office, Division
of Investment Management, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE, Washington, DC 20549–8549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is publishing
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SUMMARY:
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supplementary guidance regarding the
proxy voting responsibilities of
investment advisers under 17 CFR
275.206(4)–6 [Rule 206(4)–6 under the
Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b]].1
I. Introduction
The Commission previously issued
guidance discussing how the fiduciary
duty and rule 206(4)–6 under the
Advisers Act relate to an investment
adviser’s exercise of voting authority on
behalf of clients and also provided
examples to help facilitate investment
advisers’ compliance with their
obligations in connection with proxy
voting.2 We are supplementing this
guidance in light of information gained
in connection with our ongoing review
of the proxy voting process and our
related regulations, including the
amendments to the proxy solicitation
rules under the Exchange Act that we
are issuing at this time.3
We expect that the Exchange Act
amendments adopted in Release No. 34–
89372 will result in improvements in
the mix of information that is available
to investors and material to a voting
decision. In particular, we expect
issuers will have access to proxy
advisory firm recommendations in a
timeframe that will permit those issuers
to make available to shareholders
additional information that may be
material to a voting decision in a more
systematic and timely manner than they
could previously.4 We also expect that
the amendments will result in the
1 Unless otherwise noted, when we refer to the
Advisers Act, or any paragraph of the Advisers Act,
we are referring to 15 U.S.C. 80b of the United
States Code, at which the Advisers Act is codified,
and when we refer to rules under the Advisers Act,
or any paragraph of these rules, we are referring to
title 17, part 275 of the Code of Federal Regulations
[17 CFR part 275], in which these rules are
published.
2 Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting
Responsibilities of Investment Advisers, Release
No. IA–5325 (Aug. 21, 2019), 84 FR 47420 (Sept.
10, 2019) (‘‘Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities’’).
3 See Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy
Voting Advice, Release No. 34–89372 (July 22,
2020) (‘‘Amendments to Proxy Solicitation Rules’’);
see also 17 CFR 240.14a–2(b)(9)(iv); see also
Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities, supra at n. 2. Proxy advisory firms
will not be required to comply with certain of the
amendments we are making to the proxy
solicitation rules until December 1, 2021. This
guidance addresses the application of the fiduciary
duty, Form ADV, and rule 206(4)–6 under the
Advisers Act to an investment adviser’s proxy
voting responsibilities in connection with current
practices, as well as any policies or procedures that
may be implemented by proxy advisory firms under
the final amendments.
4 See infra at n. 6. While 17 CFR 240.14a–2(b)
uses the term ‘‘proxy voting advice business,’’ we
use the term ‘‘proxy advisory firm’’ in this release.
This is consistent with the Commission Guidance
on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, which this release
supplements.
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55155
availability of that additional
information being made known to proxy
advisory firms and their clients in a
timely manner, including because proxy
advisory firms, as a condition to the
availability of the exemptions in 17 CFR
240.14a–2(b)(1) and (b)(3), must adopt
policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to provide
investment advisers and other clients
with a mechanism by which they can
reasonably be expected to become aware
of that additional information prior to
making voting decisions. Accordingly,
we are providing supplementary
guidance to assist investment advisers
in assessing how to consider the
additional information that may become
more readily available to them as a
result of these amendments, including
in circumstances where the investment
adviser utilizes a proxy advisory firm’s
electronic vote management system that
‘‘pre-populates’’ the adviser’s proxies
with suggested voting recommendations
and/or for voting execution services.
The supplementary guidance also
addresses disclosure obligations and
considerations that may arise when
investment advisers use such services
for voting.
II. Supplemental Guidance Regarding
Investment Advisers’ Proxy Voting
Responsibilities
Question 2.1: In some cases, proxy
advisory firms assist clients, including
investment advisers, with voting
execution, including through an
electronic vote management system that
allows the proxy advisory firm to: (1)
Populate each client’s votes shown on
the proxy advisory firm’s electronic
voting platform with the proxy advisory
firm’s recommendations based on that
client’s voting instructions to the firm
(‘‘pre-population’’); and/or (2)
automatically submit the client’s votes
to be counted (‘‘automated voting’’). Prepopulation and automated voting
generally occur prior to the submission
deadline for proxies to be voted at the
shareholder meeting. In various
circumstances, an investment adviser,
in the course of conducting a reasonable
investigation into matters on which it
votes,5 may become aware that an issuer
that is the subject of a voting
recommendation intends to file or has
filed additional soliciting materials with
the Commission setting forth the
issuer’s views regarding the voting
recommendation. These materials may
or may not reasonably be expected to
affect the investment adviser’s voting
5 See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities, text at notes 15 and 37 and in
response to Question 4.
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determination.6 In addition, these
materials may become available after or
around the same time that the
investment adviser’s votes have been
pre-populated but before the submission
deadline for proxies to be voted at the
shareholder meeting.7 In these
circumstances, what steps should an
investment adviser take to demonstrate
that it is making voting determinations
in a client’s best interest?
Response: The Commission in its
prior guidance discussed a number of
steps that an investment adviser could
take to demonstrate that it is making
voting determinations in a client’s best
interest.8 These include additional steps
when an investment adviser utilizes a
proxy advisory firm, such as assessing
pre-populated votes shown on the proxy
advisory firm’s electronic voting
platform and considering additional
information that may become available
before the relevant votes are cast.
Together with those steps, an
investment adviser should consider
whether its policies and procedures,
including any policies and procedures
with respect to automated voting of
proxies, are reasonably designed to
ensure that it exercises voting authority
in its client’s best interest. An
investment adviser should consider, for
example, whether its policies and
procedures address circumstances
where the investment adviser has
become aware that an issuer intends to
file or has filed additional soliciting
materials with the Commission after the
6 For example, we expect that 17 CFR 240.14a–
2(b)(9)(ii)(A) will result in issuers being made aware
of recommendations by proxy voting advice
businesses (the term used in the rule for what we
refer to here as proxy advisory firms) in a timeframe
that will permit those issuers to make any views
regarding those recommendations available in a
more systematic and timely manner than was
previously the case. 17 CFR 240.14a–2(b)(9)(ii)(B)
also requires that proxy voting advice businesses
adopt policies and procedures reasonably designed
to provide their clients, including investment
advisers, with a mechanism by which they can
reasonably be expected to become aware of those
views. See Amendments to Proxy Solicitation
Rules, supra at n. 3; see also 17 CFR 240.14a–
2(b)(9)(iv) (providing a non-exclusive safe harbor
pursuant to which proxy voting advice businesses
will be deemed to satisfy the principle-based
requirement of Rule 14a–2(b)(9)(ii)(B)).
7 Unless otherwise indicated, our reference to the
term ‘‘meeting’’ throughout Question 2.1 is
intended to include an issuer’s solicitation of
written consents or authorizations in lieu of a
shareholder meeting. For example, if the issuer is
seeking the necessary shareholder approval for a
matter through a solicitation of written consents or
authorizations in lieu of a vote at a shareholder
meeting, our guidance addresses the additional
information that may become available after the
proxy advisory firm’s recommendations have been
pre-populated but before the written consents or
authorizations have been submitted.
8 See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities, 84 FR 47420, at 47423 (Question
No. 2).
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investment adviser has received the
proxy advisory firm’s voting
recommendation but before the
submission deadline. In such cases, if
an issuer files such additional
information sufficiently in advance of
the submission deadline and such
information would reasonably be
expected to affect the investment
adviser’s voting determination, the
investment adviser would likely need to
consider such information prior to
exercising voting authority in order to
demonstrate that it is voting in its
client’s best interest.9 In addition,
because the timing of pre-population
and automated voting may result in
proxy advisory firms possessing nonpublic information regarding how an
investment adviser intends to vote a
client’s securities, the investment
adviser should also consider reviewing
its agreements with any proxy advisory
firms to determine whether the
agreements would permit the proxy
advisory firms to utilize this
information in a manner that would not
be in the best interest of the investment
adviser’s client.10
In its prior guidance, the Commission
also discussed how an investment
adviser and its client may agree on the
scope of the investment adviser’s
authority and responsibilities to vote
proxies on behalf of that client.11 The
Commission explained that an
investment adviser may agree with its
client to the scope of voting
arrangements but that scoping the
relationship requires the investment
adviser to make full and fair disclosure
and the client to provide informed
consent. Differences in agreements
between investment advisers and their
clients as to the scope of the advisory
relationship may result in a variety of
arrangements for voting client
securities, which may address, for
example, parameters around the method
of voting execution.
An investment adviser also has an
obligation, as a result of its duty of
loyalty to clients, to make full and fair
9 Whether such information would reasonably be
expected to affect an investment adviser’s voting
determination for a client may depend, in part, on
the agreed upon scope of the investment adviser’s
authority and responsibilities to vote proxies on
behalf of that client, as discussed in response to
Question 1 of the Commission Guidance on Proxy
Voting Responsibilities. See Commission Guidance
on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, 84 FR 47420, at
47422 (Question No. 1).
10 For example, the investment adviser may want
to consider the extent to which the proxy advisory
firm would be permitted to share this information
(including information on aggregated voting
intentions of the firm’s clients) with third parties.
11 See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities, 84 FR 47420, at 47422 (Question
No. 1).
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disclosure to its clients of all material
facts relating to the advisory
relationship.12 These include material
facts related to the exercise of voting
authority with respect to client
securities. The Commission recently
explained that, ‘‘[i]n order for disclosure
to be full and fair, it should be
sufficiently specific so that a client is
able to understand the material fact or
conflict of interest and make an
informed decision whether to provide
consent.’’ 13 Further, rule 206(4)–6 and
Form ADV require an investment
adviser to describe to clients its voting
policies and procedures.14
In light of the above, we believe that
an investment adviser that uses
automated voting should consider
disclosing: (1) The extent of that use and
under what circumstances it uses
automated voting; and (2) how its
policies and procedures address the use
of automated voting in cases where it
becomes aware before the submission
deadline for proxies to be voted at the
shareholder meeting that an issuer
intends to file or has filed additional
soliciting materials with the
Commission regarding a matter to be
voted upon. In addition, an investment
adviser should also consider whether its
policies and procedures are reasonably
designed to address these disclosures.
Depending on the facts and
circumstances, these disclosures may be
necessary for the investment adviser to
provide sufficiently specific information
so that a client is able to understand the
role of automated voting in the
investment adviser’s exercise of voting
authority. In those cases, the client may
not, without this disclosure, have
sufficiently specific information to
provide informed consent with respect
to the use of automated voting as a
means of exercising voting authority
either (a) for purposes of agreeing to the
scope of the relationship or (b) as it
relates to the investment adviser’s
obligation, under its duty of loyalty, to
provide full and fair disclosure relating
to the advisory relationship. In this
regard, an investment adviser should
also consider its obligations under rule
12 See Commission Interpretation Regarding
Standard of Conduct for Investment Advisers,
Release No. IA–5248 (June 5, 2019), 84 FR 33669,
at 33675 (July 12, 2019) (‘‘[t]o meet its duty of
loyalty, an adviser must make full and fair
disclosure to its clients of all material facts relating
to the advisory relationship.’’) (internal citations
omitted).
13 See id., text at note 59.
14 Rule 206(4)–6(c) requires investment advisers
to describe their voting policies and procedures to
clients. See also Form ADV, Part 2A, Item 17
(requiring an adviser to briefly describe voting
policies and procedures where it has, or will accept,
authority to vote client securities).
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206(4)–6 and Form ADV as they relate
to the investment adviser’s voting
policies and procedures. Accordingly,
an investment adviser should carefully
review its disclosures with respect to
these matters in order to ascertain
whether it has provided its clients with
the disclosure necessary for the clients
to provide informed consent with
respect to the use of automated voting
as a means of exercising voting
authority and for the adviser to satisfy
its obligations under rule 206(4)–6 and
Form ADV.
III. Other Matters
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act,15 the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has designated this
guidance as not a ‘‘major rule,’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 276
Securities.
Amendments to the Code of Federal
Regulations
For the reasons set out above, the
Commission is amending title 17,
chapter II, of the Code of Federal
Regulations as set forth below:
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PART 276—INTERPRETATIVE
RELEASES RELATING TO THE
INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF 1940
AND GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS THEREUNDER
1. The authority citation for part 276
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80b et seq.
2. Amend the table by adding an entry
for Release No. IA–5547 at the end of
the table to read as follows:
■
U.S.C. 801 et seq.
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 172 / Thursday, September 3, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Subject
Release No.
Date
Federal Register volume
and page
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Supplement to Commission Guidance Regarding the
Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment Advisers.
*
IA–5547 .............................
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September 3, 2020 ............
*
[Insert FR citation of publication]
By the Commission.
Dated: July 22, 2020.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–16338 Filed 9–2–20; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 172 (Thursday, September 3, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 55155-55158]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-16338]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 276
[Release No. IA-5547]
Supplement to Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting
Responsibilities of Investment Advisers
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Guidance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is
publishing supplementary guidance regarding the proxy voting
responsibilities of investment advisers under its regulations issued
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the ``Advisers Act'') in
light of the Commission's amendments to the rules governing proxy
solicitations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Exchange
Act'').
DATES: Effective: September 3, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thankam A. Varghese, Senior Counsel;
or Holly Hunter-Ceci, Assistant Chief Counsel, at (202) 551-6825 or
[email protected], Chief Counsel's Office, Division of Investment
Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549-8549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is publishing supplementary
guidance regarding the proxy voting responsibilities of investment
advisers under 17 CFR 275.206(4)-6 [Rule 206(4)-6 under the Advisers
Act [15 U.S.C. 80b]].\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Unless otherwise noted, when we refer to the Advisers Act,
or any paragraph of the Advisers Act, we are referring to 15 U.S.C.
80b of the United States Code, at which the Advisers Act is
codified, and when we refer to rules under the Advisers Act, or any
paragraph of these rules, we are referring to title 17, part 275 of
the Code of Federal Regulations [17 CFR part 275], in which these
rules are published.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Introduction
The Commission previously issued guidance discussing how the
fiduciary duty and rule 206(4)-6 under the Advisers Act relate to an
investment adviser's exercise of voting authority on behalf of clients
and also provided examples to help facilitate investment advisers'
compliance with their obligations in connection with proxy voting.\2\
We are supplementing this guidance in light of information gained in
connection with our ongoing review of the proxy voting process and our
related regulations, including the amendments to the proxy solicitation
rules under the Exchange Act that we are issuing at this time.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities
of Investment Advisers, Release No. IA-5325 (Aug. 21, 2019), 84 FR
47420 (Sept. 10, 2019) (``Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting
Responsibilities'').
\3\ See Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy Voting Advice,
Release No. 34-89372 (July 22, 2020) (``Amendments to Proxy
Solicitation Rules''); see also 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(9)(iv); see also
Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, supra at n. 2.
Proxy advisory firms will not be required to comply with certain of
the amendments we are making to the proxy solicitation rules until
December 1, 2021. This guidance addresses the application of the
fiduciary duty, Form ADV, and rule 206(4)-6 under the Advisers Act
to an investment adviser's proxy voting responsibilities in
connection with current practices, as well as any policies or
procedures that may be implemented by proxy advisory firms under the
final amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We expect that the Exchange Act amendments adopted in Release No.
34-89372 will result in improvements in the mix of information that is
available to investors and material to a voting decision. In
particular, we expect issuers will have access to proxy advisory firm
recommendations in a timeframe that will permit those issuers to make
available to shareholders additional information that may be material
to a voting decision in a more systematic and timely manner than they
could previously.\4\ We also expect that the amendments will result in
the availability of that additional information being made known to
proxy advisory firms and their clients in a timely manner, including
because proxy advisory firms, as a condition to the availability of the
exemptions in 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(1) and (b)(3), must adopt policies
and procedures that are reasonably designed to provide investment
advisers and other clients with a mechanism by which they can
reasonably be expected to become aware of that additional information
prior to making voting decisions. Accordingly, we are providing
supplementary guidance to assist investment advisers in assessing how
to consider the additional information that may become more readily
available to them as a result of these amendments, including in
circumstances where the investment adviser utilizes a proxy advisory
firm's electronic vote management system that ``pre-populates'' the
adviser's proxies with suggested voting recommendations and/or for
voting execution services. The supplementary guidance also addresses
disclosure obligations and considerations that may arise when
investment advisers use such services for voting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See infra at n. 6. While 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b) uses the term
``proxy voting advice business,'' we use the term ``proxy advisory
firm'' in this release. This is consistent with the Commission
Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, which this release
supplements.
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II. Supplemental Guidance Regarding Investment Advisers' Proxy Voting
Responsibilities
Question 2.1: In some cases, proxy advisory firms assist clients,
including investment advisers, with voting execution, including through
an electronic vote management system that allows the proxy advisory
firm to: (1) Populate each client's votes shown on the proxy advisory
firm's electronic voting platform with the proxy advisory firm's
recommendations based on that client's voting instructions to the firm
(``pre-population''); and/or (2) automatically submit the client's
votes to be counted (``automated voting''). Pre-population and
automated voting generally occur prior to the submission deadline for
proxies to be voted at the shareholder meeting. In various
circumstances, an investment adviser, in the course of conducting a
reasonable investigation into matters on which it votes,\5\ may become
aware that an issuer that is the subject of a voting recommendation
intends to file or has filed additional soliciting materials with the
Commission setting forth the issuer's views regarding the voting
recommendation. These materials may or may not reasonably be expected
to affect the investment adviser's voting
[[Page 55156]]
determination.\6\ In addition, these materials may become available
after or around the same time that the investment adviser's votes have
been pre-populated but before the submission deadline for proxies to be
voted at the shareholder meeting.\7\ In these circumstances, what steps
should an investment adviser take to demonstrate that it is making
voting determinations in a client's best interest?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities,
text at notes 15 and 37 and in response to Question 4.
\6\ For example, we expect that 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(9)(ii)(A)
will result in issuers being made aware of recommendations by proxy
voting advice businesses (the term used in the rule for what we
refer to here as proxy advisory firms) in a timeframe that will
permit those issuers to make any views regarding those
recommendations available in a more systematic and timely manner
than was previously the case. 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(9)(ii)(B) also
requires that proxy voting advice businesses adopt policies and
procedures reasonably designed to provide their clients, including
investment advisers, with a mechanism by which they can reasonably
be expected to become aware of those views. See Amendments to Proxy
Solicitation Rules, supra at n. 3; see also 17 CFR 240.14a-
2(b)(9)(iv) (providing a non-exclusive safe harbor pursuant to which
proxy voting advice businesses will be deemed to satisfy the
principle-based requirement of Rule 14a-2(b)(9)(ii)(B)).
\7\ Unless otherwise indicated, our reference to the term
``meeting'' throughout Question 2.1 is intended to include an
issuer's solicitation of written consents or authorizations in lieu
of a shareholder meeting. For example, if the issuer is seeking the
necessary shareholder approval for a matter through a solicitation
of written consents or authorizations in lieu of a vote at a
shareholder meeting, our guidance addresses the additional
information that may become available after the proxy advisory
firm's recommendations have been pre-populated but before the
written consents or authorizations have been submitted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The Commission in its prior guidance discussed a number
of steps that an investment adviser could take to demonstrate that it
is making voting determinations in a client's best interest.\8\ These
include additional steps when an investment adviser utilizes a proxy
advisory firm, such as assessing pre-populated votes shown on the proxy
advisory firm's electronic voting platform and considering additional
information that may become available before the relevant votes are
cast. Together with those steps, an investment adviser should consider
whether its policies and procedures, including any policies and
procedures with respect to automated voting of proxies, are reasonably
designed to ensure that it exercises voting authority in its client's
best interest. An investment adviser should consider, for example,
whether its policies and procedures address circumstances where the
investment adviser has become aware that an issuer intends to file or
has filed additional soliciting materials with the Commission after the
investment adviser has received the proxy advisory firm's voting
recommendation but before the submission deadline. In such cases, if an
issuer files such additional information sufficiently in advance of the
submission deadline and such information would reasonably be expected
to affect the investment adviser's voting determination, the investment
adviser would likely need to consider such information prior to
exercising voting authority in order to demonstrate that it is voting
in its client's best interest.\9\ In addition, because the timing of
pre-population and automated voting may result in proxy advisory firms
possessing non-public information regarding how an investment adviser
intends to vote a client's securities, the investment adviser should
also consider reviewing its agreements with any proxy advisory firms to
determine whether the agreements would permit the proxy advisory firms
to utilize this information in a manner that would not be in the best
interest of the investment adviser's client.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, 84
FR 47420, at 47423 (Question No. 2).
\9\ Whether such information would reasonably be expected to
affect an investment adviser's voting determination for a client may
depend, in part, on the agreed upon scope of the investment
adviser's authority and responsibilities to vote proxies on behalf
of that client, as discussed in response to Question 1 of the
Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities. See Commission
Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities, 84 FR 47420, at 47422
(Question No. 1).
\10\ For example, the investment adviser may want to consider
the extent to which the proxy advisory firm would be permitted to
share this information (including information on aggregated voting
intentions of the firm's clients) with third parties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its prior guidance, the Commission also discussed how an
investment adviser and its client may agree on the scope of the
investment adviser's authority and responsibilities to vote proxies on
behalf of that client.\11\ The Commission explained that an investment
adviser may agree with its client to the scope of voting arrangements
but that scoping the relationship requires the investment adviser to
make full and fair disclosure and the client to provide informed
consent. Differences in agreements between investment advisers and
their clients as to the scope of the advisory relationship may result
in a variety of arrangements for voting client securities, which may
address, for example, parameters around the method of voting execution.
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\11\ See Commission Guidance on Proxy Voting Responsibilities,
84 FR 47420, at 47422 (Question No. 1).
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An investment adviser also has an obligation, as a result of its
duty of loyalty to clients, to make full and fair disclosure to its
clients of all material facts relating to the advisory
relationship.\12\ These include material facts related to the exercise
of voting authority with respect to client securities. The Commission
recently explained that, ``[i]n order for disclosure to be full and
fair, it should be sufficiently specific so that a client is able to
understand the material fact or conflict of interest and make an
informed decision whether to provide consent.'' \13\ Further, rule
206(4)-6 and Form ADV require an investment adviser to describe to
clients its voting policies and procedures.\14\
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\12\ See Commission Interpretation Regarding Standard of Conduct
for Investment Advisers, Release No. IA-5248 (June 5, 2019), 84 FR
33669, at 33675 (July 12, 2019) (``[t]o meet its duty of loyalty, an
adviser must make full and fair disclosure to its clients of all
material facts relating to the advisory relationship.'') (internal
citations omitted).
\13\ See id., text at note 59.
\14\ Rule 206(4)-6(c) requires investment advisers to describe
their voting policies and procedures to clients. See also Form ADV,
Part 2A, Item 17 (requiring an adviser to briefly describe voting
policies and procedures where it has, or will accept, authority to
vote client securities).
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In light of the above, we believe that an investment adviser that
uses automated voting should consider disclosing: (1) The extent of
that use and under what circumstances it uses automated voting; and (2)
how its policies and procedures address the use of automated voting in
cases where it becomes aware before the submission deadline for proxies
to be voted at the shareholder meeting that an issuer intends to file
or has filed additional soliciting materials with the Commission
regarding a matter to be voted upon. In addition, an investment adviser
should also consider whether its policies and procedures are reasonably
designed to address these disclosures. Depending on the facts and
circumstances, these disclosures may be necessary for the investment
adviser to provide sufficiently specific information so that a client
is able to understand the role of automated voting in the investment
adviser's exercise of voting authority. In those cases, the client may
not, without this disclosure, have sufficiently specific information to
provide informed consent with respect to the use of automated voting as
a means of exercising voting authority either (a) for purposes of
agreeing to the scope of the relationship or (b) as it relates to the
investment adviser's obligation, under its duty of loyalty, to provide
full and fair disclosure relating to the advisory relationship. In this
regard, an investment adviser should also consider its obligations
under rule
[[Page 55157]]
206(4)-6 and Form ADV as they relate to the investment adviser's voting
policies and procedures. Accordingly, an investment adviser should
carefully review its disclosures with respect to these matters in order
to ascertain whether it has provided its clients with the disclosure
necessary for the clients to provide informed consent with respect to
the use of automated voting as a means of exercising voting authority
and for the adviser to satisfy its obligations under rule 206(4)-6 and
Form ADV.
III. Other Matters
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act,\15\ the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has designated this guidance as not
a ``major rule,'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
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\15\ 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
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List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 276
Securities.
Amendments to the Code of Federal Regulations
For the reasons set out above, the Commission is amending title 17,
chapter II, of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth below:
PART 276--INTERPRETATIVE RELEASES RELATING TO THE INVESTMENT
ADVISERS ACT OF 1940 AND GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS THEREUNDER
0
1. The authority citation for part 276 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80b et seq.
0
2. Amend the table by adding an entry for Release No. IA-5547 at the
end of the table to read as follows:
[[Page 55158]]
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Federal Register volume
Subject Release No. Date and page
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* * * * * * *
Supplement to Commission Guidance IA-5547................ September 3, 2020...... [Insert FR citation of
Regarding the Proxy Voting publication]
Responsibilities of Investment
Advisers.
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By the Commission.
Dated: July 22, 2020.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-16338 Filed 9-2-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P