Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers Operating Through the Internet, 50076-50096 [2023-16287]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 1, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(3) The following service information was
approved for IBR on [DATE 35 DAYS AFTER
PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE].
(i) Airbus Service Bulletin A320–32–1441,
Revision 02, dated August 23, 2022.
(ii) Safran Service Bulletin 200–32–321,
Revision 4, dated November 3, 2021.
(iii) Safran Service Bulletin 201–32–68,
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approved for IBR on August 1, 2019 (84 FR
30579, June 27, 2019).
(i) Airbus Service Bulletin A320–32–1441,
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(ii) Messier-Dowty Service Bulletin 200–
32–286, Revision 3, dated October 3, 2008.
(iii) Messier-Dowty Service Bulletin 201–
32–43, Revision 3, dated October 3, 2008.
(iv) Safran Service Bulletin 200–32–321,
Revision 2, dated October 3, 2017.
(v) Safran Service Bulletin 201–32–68,
Revision 2, dated October 3, 2017.
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FR 5362, January 18, 2017).
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2014.
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Issued on July 25, 2023.
Victor Wicklund,
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Division, Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–16189 Filed 7–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 275 and 279
[Release No. IA–6354; File No. S7–13–23]
RIN 3235–AN31
Exemption for Certain Investment
Advisers Operating Through the
Internet
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
is proposing amendments to the rule
under the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 that exempts certain investment
advisers that provide advisory services
through the internet (‘‘internet
investment advisers’’) from the
prohibition on Commission registration,
as well as related amendments to Form
ADV. The proposed amendments are
designed to modernize the rule’s
conditions to account for the evolution
in technology and the investment
advisory industry since the adoption of
the rule.
DATES: Comments should be received on
or before October 2, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
SUMMARY:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/proposed.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number S7–
13–23 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments to Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–13–23. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method of submission. The
Commission will post all comments on
the Commission’s Website (https://
www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml).
Comments are also available for website
viewing and printing in the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549,
on official business days between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Operating
conditions may limit access to the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
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Do not include personal identifiable
information in submissions; you should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. We may
redact in part or withhold entirely from
publication submitted material that is
obscene or subject to copyright
protection.
Studies, memoranda, or other
substantive items may be added by the
Commission or staff to the comment file
during this rulemaking. A notification of
the inclusion in the comment file of any
such materials will be made available
on the Commission’s website. To ensure
direct electronic receipt of such
notifications, sign up through the ‘‘Stay
Connected’’ option at www.sec.gov to
receive notifications by email.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Blair B. Burnett, Senior Counsel,
Investment Company Rulemaking
Office; Michael Schrader, Senior
Counsel, Chief Counsel’s Office; or
Sirimal R. Mukerjee, Senior Special
Counsel, or Melissa Roverts Harke,
Assistant Director, Investment Adviser
Rulemaking Office, Division of
Investment Management, at (202) 551–
6787 or IArules@sec.gov, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–8549.
The
Commission is proposing for public
comment amendments to 17 CFR
275.203A–2(e) (‘‘rule 203A–2(e)’’) under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
(‘‘Advisers Act’’ or ‘‘Act’’) [15 U.S.C.
80b–1 et seq.] and corresponding
amendments to 17 CFR 279.1 (Form
ADV) under the Advisers Act.1
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Current Rule 203A–2(e)
B. Need for Reform and Overview of Rule
Proposal
II. Discussion
A. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
1. Operational Interactive Website
2. Elimination of De Minimis Non-Internet
Client Exception
III. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Baseline and Affected Parties
1. Regulatory Baseline
2. Current Use of the Internet Adviser
Exemption
3. Increased Reliance on the Internet
Adviser Exemption
1 15 U.S.C. 80b. Unless otherwise noted, when we
refer to the Advisers Act, or any section of the
Advisers Act, we are referring to 15 U.S.C. 80b, at
which the Advisers Act is codified, and when we
refer to rules under the Advisers Act, or any section
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.
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C. Benefits and Costs and Effects on
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
1. Benefits
2. Costs
3. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and
Capital Formation
D. Reasonable Alternatives
1. Allowing Fewer Non-internet Clients
2. Alternative Definitions of ‘‘Interactive
website’’
3. Eliminating the Internet Adviser
Exemption
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Introduction
B. Rule 203A–2(e) Recordkeeping
Requirement
C. Form ADV
D. Total Hour Burden Associated With
Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
E. Request for Comments
V. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
A. Reason for and Objectives of the
Proposed Action
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
B. Legal Basis
C. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and
Rule Amendments
1. Small Entities Subject to Amendments to
the Internet Adviser Rule
D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and
Other Compliance Requirements
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting
Federal Rules
F. Significant Alternatives
G. Solicitation of Comments
VI. Consideration of Impact on the Economy
Statutory Authority
I. Background
We are proposing amendments to rule
203A–2(e) (‘‘Internet Adviser
Exemption’’) under the Advisers Act.
The Internet Adviser Exemption
provides an exemption from the
prohibition on registration with the
Commission that may otherwise affect
certain advisers seeking to register with
us. The proposed amendments are
designed to modernize the Internet
Adviser Exemption’s conditions to
account for the evolution in technology
and the investment advisory industry
since the adoption of the rule over
twenty years ago. The proposal would
also amend Form ADV to conform
certain instructions and definitions to
the amended rule and would also
require additional representations
regarding an internet investment
adviser’s reliance on the rule.
On January 1, 1997, the National
Securities Markets Improvement Act of
1996 (‘‘NSMIA’’) amended the Advisers
Act to divide the responsibility for
regulating investment advisers between
the Commission and state securities
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authorities.2 Congress allocated to state
securities authorities the primary
responsibility for regulating smaller
advisory firms and allocated to the
Commission the primary responsibility
for regulating larger advisers.3 Section
303 of NSMIA amended the Advisers
Act to include section 203A 4 to effect
this division of responsibility by
generally prohibiting advisers from
registering with the Commission unless
they either have assets under
management of not less than $25
million or advise a registered
investment company,5 and preempt
state adviser statutes regarding
registration, licensing, or qualification
as to advisers registered with the
Commission.6 Advisers prohibited from
registering with the Commission remain
subject to the regulation of state
securities authorities.7 The ‘‘$25 million
assets under management’’ test was
designed by Congress to distinguish
investment advisers with a national
presence from those that are essentially
local businesses.8 Congress expressed
that its goal in enacting the statute was
to more efficiently allocate the
Commission’s limited resources by
allowing the Commission to concentrate
its regulatory responsibilities on larger
advisers with national businesses, and
to reduce the burden to investment
advisers of the overlapping and
duplicative regulation between Federal
and State regulators.9 Congress
furthered this objective on July 21, 2010
with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (‘‘Dodd2 National Securities Markets Improvement Act of
1996, Public Law 104–290, 110 Stat. 3416 (1996)
(codified in various sections of 15 U.S.C.).
3 See S. Rep. No. 293, 104th Cong., 2d Sess. 3–
4 (1996) (‘‘Senate Report’’), at 4.
4 Public Law 104–290, Sec. 303; see also section
203A of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b–3a].
5 Section 203A(a)(1) of the Advisers Act [15
U.S.C. 80b–3a(a)(1)].
6 Section 203A(b) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C.
80b–3a(b)].
7 Section 222 of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b–
18a]. The prohibition in section 203A against
registration with the Commission applies to
advisers whose principal office and place of
business is in a United States jurisdiction that has
enacted an investment adviser statute. See Rules
Implementing Amendments to the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Act
Release No. 1633 (May 15, 1997) [62 FR 28112 (May
22, 1997)], at text accompanying n.83.
8 See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 4–5 (‘‘The
states should play an important and logical role in
regulating small investment advisers whose
activities are likely to be concentrated in their home
state.’’).
9 See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 2–4 (stating
‘‘[r]ecognizing the limited resources of both the
Commission and the states, the Committee believes
that eliminating overlapping regulatory
responsibilities will allow the regulators to make
the best use of their scarce resources to protect
clients of investment advisers.’’).
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Frank Act’’),10 which amended certain
provisions of the Advisers Act,
including section 203A, to, among other
things, reallocate primary responsibility
for oversight of investment advisers by
delegating generally to the states
responsibility over certain mid-sized
advisers—i.e., subject to certain
exceptions, those that have between $25
million and $100 million of assets under
management.11
Congress has recognized, however,
that it would be more efficient to
regulate some advisers at the Federal
level despite managing less than the
minimum thresholds in assets under
management and gave the Commission
authority to enable advisers to register
with us if the prohibition would be
‘‘unfair, a burden on interstate
commerce, or otherwise inconsistent
with the purposes of [section 203A].’’ 12
In exercising this authority, the
Commission in 2002 adopted the
Internet Adviser Exemption, which
relieves certain advisers that provide
advisory services primarily through the
internet from the burdens of multiple
state regulation and allows them to
register with the Commission.13
A. Current Rule 203A–2(e)
The Internet Adviser Exemption was
designed to create a narrow exemption
from the prohibition on registration for
certain advisers (‘‘internet investment
advisers’’), which typically do not
manage the assets of their clients or
advise a registered investment company,
and thus do not meet the statutory
thresholds for registration with the
Commission.14 These advisers,
10 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law No. 111–203, 124 Stat.
1376 (2010).
11 Unlike a small adviser, a mid-sized adviser is
not prohibited from registering with the
Commission: (i) if the adviser is not required to be
registered as an investment adviser with the
securities commissioner (or any agency or office
performing like functions) of the state in which it
maintains its principal office and place of business;
(ii) if registered, the adviser would not be subject
to examination as an investment adviser by that
securities commissioner; or (iii) if the adviser is
required to register in 15 or more states. See section
410 of the Dodd-Frank Act; section 203A of the
Advisers Act.
12 Section 203A(c) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C.
80b–3a(c)]. See also Senate Report, supra note 3, at
5 and 15.
13 See Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers
Operating Through the Internet, Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 2028 (Dec. 12, 2002) [67
FR 19500 (Dec. 18, 2002)], at section I (‘‘2002
Adopting Release’’). The exercise of our exemptive
authority enables registration with the Commission
and preempts most state law with respect to the
exempted advisers that register with us. See rule
203A–2.
14 See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13. The
Commission originally adopted the Internet Adviser
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therefore, ‘‘do not fall neatly into the
model assumed by Congress when it
added [s]ection 203A to the Act to
divide regulatory authority over
advisers.’’ 15 The Commission
concluded that, ‘‘as applied to these
advisers, the application of the
prohibition on Commission registration
would be ‘‘unfair, a burden on interstate
commerce, or otherwise inconsistent
with the purposes of [section 203A].’’ 16
Under the current Internet Adviser
Exemption, an adviser is exempt from
the prohibition on Commission
registration if the adviser:
• Provides investment advice to all of
its clients exclusively through an
interactive website, except it may
provide investment advice to fewer than
15 clients through other means during
the preceding 12 months;
• Maintains a record demonstrating
that it provides investment advice to its
clients exclusively through an
interactive website in accordance with
the limits described in the bullet point
above; and
• Does not control, is not controlled
by, and is not under common control
with, another investment adviser
registered with the Commission solely
in reliance on an adviser registered
under the Internet Adviser Exemption.
As the 2002 Adopting Release
explained, absent the Internet Adviser
Exemption, Internet investment advisers
would likely incur the burden of
temporarily registering in multiple
states and later withdrawing. State
investment adviser registration statutes
generally obligate advisers to register in
every state in which the adviser obtains
more than a de minimis number of
clients. The 2002 Adopting Release
reasoned that because internet
investment advisers provide investment
advice to their clients through an
interactive website, they are likely to
have no physical local presence in a
community or state, with little or no inperson contact with advisory clients.
Accordingly, the adviser’s clients can
come from any state, at any time. As a
result, an internet investment adviser
would have to, as a practical matter,
register in multiple states to ensure that
its registration will be in place when or
if it obtains the requisite number of
clients from any particular state.
Further, an internet investment adviser
Exemption as rule 203A–2(f) and redesignated it as
rule 203A–2(e) effective Sept. 19, 2011. See Rules
Implementing Amendments to the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Act
Release No. 3221 (June 22, 2011) [76 FR 42949 (July
19, 2011)] (‘‘2011 Redesignation’’).
15 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section II (citing Section 203A(c)).
16 Id.
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may subsequently become eligible for an
existing exemption under 17 CFR
275.203A–2(d) (‘‘rule 203A–2(d)’’),
permitting Commission registration for
advisers otherwise obligated to register
in at least 15 states, but typically not
before the adviser had already incurred
the burden of registering, and
potentially deregistering, in multiple
states.17
From the adoption of the Internet
Adviser Exemption through December
31, 2022, approximately 845 advisers
have relied on the exemption as a basis
for registration with the Commission.18
Of these advisers, 718 initially
registered exclusively in reliance on the
Internet Adviser Exemption. As of
December 31, 2022, approximately 256
advisers were relying exclusively on the
Internet Adviser Exemption. The
exemption has been used with
increasing frequency recently, with 149
of the 256 advisers relying exclusively
on the exemption registering after 2015.
B. Need for Reform and Overview of
Rule Proposal
The asset management industry has
experienced substantial growth and
change since the rule was adopted over
twenty years ago. Assets under
management have more than
quadrupled since the adoption of the
rule.19 Similarly, since the adoption of
the rule advisers are increasingly using
technology to interact with clients,
including through email, websites,
mobile applications, investor portals,
text messages, chatbots and other
similar means.20 The use of technology
17 17 CFR 275.203A–2(d). An investment adviser
relying on the multi-state exemption would not be
eligible for that exemption until the adviser had
obtained the requisite number of clients in 15 states
to trigger its registration obligations in those states.
Under the rule, an investment adviser relying on
this exemption must represent that it has reviewed
its obligations under state and Federal law and has
concluded that it is required to register as an
investment adviser with the securities authorities of
at least 15 states. At the time the Internet Adviser
Exemption was adopted, the ‘‘multi-state adviser
exemption’’ enabled an investment adviser who
was required to register as an investment adviser
with 30 or more states to register with the
Commission. See 2002 Adopting Release, supra
note 13, at section II.A. Effective September 19,
2011, the Commission amended the multi-state
exemption to enable Commission registration for
advisers otherwise obligated to register in at least
15 states, rather than 30 states, and renumbered the
multi-state exemption rule 203A–2(e) as rule 203A–
2(d). See 2011 Redesignation, supra note 14, at
section II.A.5.c and n.118.
18 Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
19 There were approximately $23.6 trillion
regulatory assets under management among
registered investment advisers as of Dec. 2003 and
approximately $115 trillion assets under
management as of Dec. 2022. Based on analysis of
Form ADV data.
20 See, e.g., Andrew Osterland, Technology is
redefining that client-financial advisor relationship
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is now central to how many investment
advisers provide their products and
services to clients.21 For example, the
growth of services available on digital
platforms, such as those offered by
online brokerage firms and roboadvisers, has multiplied the
opportunities for retail investors, in
particular, to invest in and trade
securities. This increased accessibility
has been one of the many factors
associated with the increase of retail
investor participation in U.S. securities
markets in recent years.22 Concomitant
with the growth in assets under
management and the broader evolution
and adoption of technology in the
investment advisory industry, we have
seen an uptick in the number of advisers
seeking to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption.23 We recognize that
investment advisers are increasingly
utilizing a wide range of technologies in
their businesses. The Internet Adviser
Exemption, however, was intended as a
narrow exemption for entities that are in
the business of exclusively providing
(Oct. 14, 2019), https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/14/
technology-is-redefining-that-client-financialadvisor-relationship.html (‘‘Easy-to-use client
portals have become essential to provide investors
with the ability to see their accounts, exchange
secure emails with their advisor and share
documents.’’).
21 We note that the Commission is also proposing
rules requiring broker-dealers and investment
advisers to eliminate or neutralize certain conflicts
of interest associated with their use of technologies
that optimize for, predict, guide, forecast, or direct
investment-related behaviors or outcomes, directly
or indirectly. These proposed rules derive, in part,
from the Commission’s recognition that investment
advisers in their interactions with investors are
increasingly using, among other technologies,
predictive data analytics, artificial intelligence,
including machine learning, deep learning, neural
networks, natural language processing, and large
language models, as well as other technologies that
make use of historical or real-time data, lookup
tables, or correlation matrices. See Conflicts of
Interest Associated with the Use of Predicative Data
Analytics by Broker-Dealers and Investment
Advisers, Investment Advisers Act Release No.
6353 (July 26, 2023).
22 See, e.g., Maggie Fitzgerald, Retail Investors
Continue to Jump Into the Stock Market After
GameStop Mania, CNBC (Mar. 10, 2021), https://
www.cnbc.com/2021/03/10/retail-investor-ranks-inthe-stock-market-continue-to-surge.html (providing
year-over-year app download statistics for
Robinhood, Webull, Sofi, Coinbase, TD Ameritrade,
Charles Schwab, E-Trade, and Fidelity from 2018–
2020, and monthly figures for Jan. and Feb. 2021);
John Gittelsohn, Schwab Boosts New Trading
Accounts 31% After Fees Go to Zero, Bloomberg
(Nov. 14, 2019), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/
articles/2019-11-14/schwab-boosts-brokerageaccounts-by-31-after-fees-cut-to-zero (noting that
Charles Schwab opened 142,000 new trading
accounts in Oct., a 31% jump over Sept.’s pace).
23 Based on Form ADV data, the number of
advisers relying exclusively on the exemption has
grown from approximately 107 advisers as of Dec.
2015 to 256 advisers as of Dec. 2022.
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investment advice through an
interactive website.24
Our examination staff has observed
numerous compliance deficiencies by
advisers relying on the rule.25 For
example, in 2021 the staff noted that,
‘‘[n]early half of the [examined] advisers
claiming reliance on the Internet
Adviser Exemption were ineligible to
rely on the exemption, and many were
not otherwise eligible for SECregistration.’’ 26 As part of the
examinations described in the Risk
Alert, the staff observed advisers relying
on this exemption that did not have an
interactive website. In addition, the staff
observed advisers relying on this
exemption that provided advisory
personnel who could expand upon the
investment advice provided by the
adviser’s interactive website or
otherwise provide investment advice to
clients, such as financial planning,
outside of the adviser’s interactive
website.27 Advisers registered under
rule 203A–2(e) providing advice to 15 or
more clients other than through the
adviser’s interactive website during the
preceding twelve months may not rely
on this exemption.28
24 See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section II.A.
25 See Observations from Examinations of
Advisers that Provide Electronic Investment Advice
(Nov. 9, 2021), https://www.sec.gov/files/exams-eiarisk-alert.pdf (‘‘Risk Alert’’). Staff documents
(including those cited herein) represent the views
of Commission staff and are not a rule, regulation,
or statement of the Commission. The Commission
has neither approved nor disapproved the content
of these documents and, like all staff statements,
they have no legal force or effect, do not alter or
amend applicable law, and create no new or
additional obligations for any person.
26 Id. at 8. The Risk Alert noted that this has been
a common finding for many years. Id. at n.28. The
Commission has cancelled the registration of
advisers claiming reliance on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for not satisfying the requisite
conditions and also brought actions against them.
See, e.g., Ajenifuja Investments, LLC; Order
Cancelling Registration Pursuant to Section 203(h)
of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 5110 (Feb. 12, 2019)
(‘‘Ajenifuja’’) (finding that the adviser was
registered as an internet investment adviser for over
three years and in that time period did not have an
interactive website and did not demonstrate any
other basis for registration eligibility); Strategic
Options, LLC; Order Denying a Request for Hearing
and Cancelling Registration Pursuant to Section
203(h) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940,
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 5689 (Feb. 24,
2021) (finding that since its registration in 2015, the
registrant has not had, and does not have, any
clients for which it provides investment advice
through an interactive website). See also In re.
RetireHub, Inc., Investment Advisers Act Release
No. 3337 (Dec. 15, 2011) (settled) (‘‘RetireHub’’)
(alleging that the adviser was never an internet
investment adviser because, over the course of its
registration, it did not provide investment advice
exclusively through an interactive website, advised
more clients than permitted through personal
contact, or both).
27 Risk Alert, supra note 25, at 8.
28 See rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
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Moreover, the Internet Adviser
Exemption is unavailable to an internet
investment adviser if another adviser in
a control relationship with the internet
investment adviser relies on the Internet
investment adviser’s registration under
the rule as the basis for its own
registration.29 The staff observed that
some advisers’ affiliates were operating
as unregistered investment advisers,
because the affiliates were operationally
integrated with the registered advisers,
and the Internet Adviser Exemption
prohibited those affiliates from relying
on the internet investment adviser’s
registration as a basis for their own
registration.30
As discussed above, the exemption
has been used with increasing frequency
recently.31 At the same time, the
frequency of registration withdrawals
and cancellations of internet investment
advisers also has increased since the
rule’s adoption, which has affected the
cumulative growth in the number of
advisers relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption.32 For example,
approximately 64 percent of the
advisers withdrawing their registration
under the rule have done so since 2017,
while only approximately 36 percent of
the withdrawing advisers did so from
the rule’s adoption in 2002 through
2016.33
Given that internet investment
advisers may have characteristics that
distinguish them from other types of
investment advisers contemplated by
Congress when it added section 203A to
the Act, the Commission established a
‘‘narrow exemption,’’ allowing certain
investment advisers to register with the
Commission despite managing less than
the minimum threshold in assets under
29 See rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iii); see also 2002
Adopting Release, supra note 13 (discussing that
this provision is meant to address the concern that
an internet investment adviser intent on evading
the restrictions on non-internet clients under the
rule might attempt to organize a subsidiary firm to
serve its non-internet clients, and assert rule 203A–
2(b) as a basis to register the subsidiary with the
Commission, even though the subsidiary does not
manage the minimum amount of client assets
required for registration with the Commission).
30 See Risk Alert, supra note 25, at 8.
31 See supra note 23.
32 As an example, the Commission has cancelled
the registration of internet investment advisers after
finding the firms are no longer in existence, not
engaged in business as an investment adviser, or
prohibited from registering as an investment adviser
under section 203A of the Act (and related rules).
See supra note 26. The Commission also has
revoked the registration of an internet investment
adviser on the basis that it was ineligible to rely on
the exemption. See In re. Boveda Asset
Management, Inc., Investment Advisers Act Release
No. 6016 (May 6, 2022) (referencing SEC v. Boveda
Asset Management, Inc. and George Kenneth
Witherspoon, Jr., 1:21–cv–05321–SCJ (N. D. GA)
(Apr. 27, 2022) (‘‘Boyeda’’)).
33 Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
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management.34 This narrow exemption
was intended to divide regulatory
authority over advisers that, unlike
state-registered advisers, have no local
presence and whose advisory activities
are not limited to one or a few states.35
While some advisers have used the
exemption as intended, others have
used this exemption by registering with
the Commission while failing to satisfy
the conditions of the exemption. As
discussed above, some of these advisers
have not provided investment advice to
any clients through an interactive
website, in some cases for three or four
years.36 Advisers with very limited or
zero clients are more akin to local
businesses that can be effectively
regulated by one or a few states,
consistent with Congress’s intent in
NSMIA’s amendments to the Advisers
Act.37 Moreover, some of the advisers
relying on this exemption provided
advisory personnel who could expand
upon the investment advice provided by
the adviser’s interactive website or
otherwise provide investment advice to
clients without consideration of the 15
non-internet clients per 12-month
period de minimis exception within the
Internet Adviser Exemption.38 Certain
of these advisers have failed to produce
copies of books and records required for
advisers relying on the exemption,
including books and records necessary
to demonstrate compliance with the
exception for providing non-interactive
website-based advice to fewer than 15
clients in a 12-month period.39 The
number of registration applications and
approvals under this exemption have
increased, while the number of
cancellations, withdrawals, and
registration reliance changes resulting
from an inability to meet the conditions
of the rule also increased. Accordingly,
in 2021 the Commission issued a
request for information and comments
34 See
supra note 14 and accompanying text.
2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section II.
36 See supra note 26.
37 See also infra section III.B.2, stating that as of
Dec. 2022, 266 advisers rely on the internet adviser
exemption. Of those advisers, 101 (38%), report
zero clients. The median number of reported clients
is six. The data comes from Form ADV filings
received by the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
38 See RetireHub, supra note 26 (finding that
RetireHub employed on-campus representatives at
the university who were made available to provide
investment advice to university employees).
39 See Boyeda, supra note 32 (finding that the
firm violated section 204(a) of the Advisers Act by
failing to furnish to the Commission copies of books
and records that the firm was required to make,
keep, and provide to representatives of the
Commission pursuant to an examination).
35 See
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on the Internet Adviser Exemption,
among other areas.40
We believe that the ‘‘narrow
exemption’’ created over twenty years
ago should be amended to reflect its
intended, narrow use in light of
technological advances and changes in
the investment adviser industry.41 In
addition, this would further the investor
protection objectives that Congress
expressed when designing section 203A
of the Advisers Act by better allocating
the Commission’s limited oversight and
examination resources to those advisers
that should be subject to national
rules.42 In light of these observations
and as discussed in more detail below,
we are proposing certain targeted
amendments to rule 203A–2(e) with
certain corresponding amendments to
Form ADV.
II. Discussion
A. Proposed Amendments to Rule
203A–2(e)
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Using the authority provided by
section 203A(c) of the Act, we are
proposing amendments to the internet
Adviser Exemption to reflect
developments since the adoption of the
rule. The amendments we are proposing
to the internet Adviser Exemption
would require internet investment
advisers relying on the internet Adviser
Exemption to at all times have an
‘‘operational’’ interactive website.43 We
also are proposing to eliminate the de
minimis exception in the current rule
that permits internet investment
advisers to have fewer than 15 noninternet clients in any 12-month period.
In light of the widespread use of the
internet, as well as the relative ease of
building and maintaining a website and
applications, we propose requiring that
internet investment advisers have an
operational interactive website at all
times during which the internet
investment adviser relies on the Internet
Adviser Exemption. We also propose
that this exemption should only be
available to those advisers that provide
advice exclusively to clients through an
operational interactive website.
40 See Request for Information and Comments on
Broker-Dealer and Investment Adviser Digital
Engagement Practices, Related Tools and Methods,
and Regulatory Considerations and Potential
Approaches, Exchange Act Release No. 92766 (Aug.
27, 2021) [86 FR 49067 (Sept. 1, 2021)] (‘‘2021
RFC’’). The Commission received numerous
comments in response to the 2021 RFC, which we
considered in developing this proposal. Comment
letters received in response to the 2021 RFC are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-1021/s71021.htm.
41 See supra note 21 and accompanying text.
42 See supra note 9.
43 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
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The Commission intended the
Internet Adviser Exemption to be a
narrow exemption for certain
investment advisers that did not fall
neatly within the framework established
by Congress to divide regulatory
authority between state regulators and
the Commission.44 The proposed
amendments would adapt the rule to the
broader evolution in technology and the
marketplace, and would better align
current practices in the investment
adviser industry with the narrow
exemption that was intended to reflect
the allocation of responsibility for
regulating investment advisers set forth
by Congress under NSMIA and the
Dodd-Frank Act. In addition, the
proposed amendments would enhance
investor protection through more
efficient use of the Commission’s
limited oversight and examination
resources by more appropriately
allocating Commission resources to
advisers with national presence and
allowing smaller advisers with
sufficient local presence to be regulated
by the states.
1. Operational Interactive Website
The current Internet Adviser
Exemption requires, among other things,
that an internet investment adviser
provide investment advice to all of its
clients exclusively through an
interactive website, except that the
investment adviser may provide
investment advice to fewer than 15
clients through other means during the
preceding 12 months.45 The rule defines
‘‘interactive website’’ to mean a website
in which computer software-based
models or applications provide
investment advice to clients based on
personal information each client
supplies through the website. We are
proposing the following targeted
amendments:
• First, we are proposing to amend
the ‘‘interactive website’’ defined term
to ‘‘operational interactive website.’’
• Second, we are proposing to define
an ‘‘operational interactive website’’ to
mean a website or mobile application
through which the investment adviser
provides digital investment advisory
services on an ongoing basis to more
than one client (except during
temporary technological outages of a de
minimis duration).
• Third, we are proposing to define
‘‘digital investment advisory service’’ as
investment advice to clients that is
generated by the operational interactive
website’s software-based models,
algorithms, or applications based on
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45 See
supra note 24.
rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
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personal information each client
supplies through the operational
interactive website.
• Finally, we are proposing to require
that an internet investment adviser
provide advice through an operational
interactive website at all times during
which the internet investment adviser
relies on the Internet Adviser
Exemption.
The amendments are designed to
modernize the definitions and to adapt
the rule more broadly to the evolution
of the asset management industry.
The proposed amendments specify
that an internet investment adviser must
provide digital investment advisory
services through its website on an
ongoing basis to more than one client.
We understand that unforeseen
technological issues outside of the
control of an adviser occur at times. We
also understand that websites may be
temporarily inoperable due to periodic
maintenance to ensure that the website
performs optimally. Accordingly, we
have incorporated into the definition of
‘‘operational interactive website’’ a
hardship clause that allows an internet
investment adviser to satisfy the rule
despite temporary technological outages
of the operational interactive website of
a de minimis duration. The proposed
amendments also specify that the
requirement to provide an operational
interactive website would apply at all
times during which the adviser relies on
the Internet Adviser Exemption (i.e., at
the time of the adviser’s registration and
at all times an adviser is registered in
reliance on the amended Internet
Adviser Exemption).46 Currently, the
Internet Adviser Exemption does not
specify that an interactive website be
‘‘operational,’’ whether at the time of
registration or otherwise. Further, in the
2002 Adopting Release, the Commission
did not specify the timing of when the
interactive website must be operational,
though no grace period exists under the
current rule.47 With advances in
46 In the case of an existing registered investment
adviser seeking to change its registration to rely on
the Internet Adviser Exemption, the adviser would
be required to have an operational interactive
website at the time in which it begins relying on
the rule.
47 See Ajenifuja, supra note 26 (finding that rule
203A–2(e) does not contain a grace period). The
Commission stated in the 2002 Adopting Release:
‘‘Nor is it likely Internet Investment Advisers could
rely on rule 203A–2(d) [redesignated as rule 203A–
2(c), see 2011 Redesignation, supra note 14 to carry
them through an initial period of operation without
state registration in anticipation of eligibility under
the multi-state exemption. If an adviser relying on
[redesignated] rule [203A–2(c)] has not become
eligible for SEC registration within 120 days, it
must withdraw its registration.’’ 2002 Adopting
Release, supra note 13, at section IV.A. Given
advances in technology, we preliminarily believe
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technology since the adoption of the
rule more than twenty years ago,48 we
believe that advisers seeking to rely on
the Internet Adviser Exemption can use
the 120-day rule to develop, test, and
launch an operational interactive
website and obtain initial clients by the
time the 120-day temporary registration
expires.49 Moreover, the requirement
that an internet investment adviser must
provide digital investment advisory
services through its website on an
ongoing basis to more than one client is
intended to reflect that advisers with
zero or one client are more akin to local
businesses that can be effectively
regulated by a state, consistent with
Congress’ intent in NSMIA’s
amendments to the Advisers Act.
The proposed definition of
‘‘operational interactive website’’ is also
designed to specify the rule’s
application to advisers’ use of
technology, including their use of
mobile applications, in connection with
their eligibility to rely on the rule.50
Thus, the proposed changes would
expressly permit an internet investment
adviser to use mobile applications to
provide investment advice to clients.51
It is appropriate to allow internet
investment advisers using mobile
applications to interact with advisory
clients to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption because clients increasingly
access services, including investment
advisory services, through mobile
that internet investment advisers should be able to
develop, test, and deploy an operational interactive
website and begin serving clients within 120 days.
48 See generally, Max Roser, Hannah Ritchie and
Edouard Mathieu, Technological Change (Mar.
2022), https://ourworldindata.org/technologicalchange (compiling statistics of technological
growth); Martin Armstrong, How Many Websites
Are There? (Aug. 6, 2021), https://
www.statista.com/chart/19058/number-of-websitesonline/ (showing growth from inception of the
internet to approximately 1.88 billion websites in
2021); Total Number of Websites (accessed July. 11,
2023), https://www.internetlivestats.com/totalnumber-of-websites/ (identifying, among others,
38,760,373 websites in 2002 and 1,106,671,903
websites in 2023).
49 If the adviser is initially relying on rule 203A–
2(c) as a basis for registration (‘‘120-day rule’’), the
interactive website would need to be operational
within 120 days of the adviser’s registration. For
example, an adviser could register with the
Commission in anticipation of reliance on the
Internet Adviser Exemption by using the 120-day
rule, have 0 clients with no website, and within 120
days create an operational interactive website and
obtain more than one client, then file an
amendment to its Form ADV indicating that it has
become eligible for the Internet Adviser Exemption.
50 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(2).
51 The term ‘‘mobile application’’ generally, refers
to a software application developed primarily for
use on wireless computing devices, such as
smartphones and tablets. See, e.g., techopedia,
Mobile Application (Mobile App) (Aug. 7, 2020),
https://www.techopedia.com/definition/2953/
mobile-application-mobile-app (‘‘techopedia’’).
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applications,52 and mobile applications
can provide interactive functionality
similar to the functionality of
websites.53 By including mobile
applications in the definition of
‘‘operational interactive website,’’
internet investment advisers will have
broad flexibility to design the
interactive website in a manner that best
suits their needs and their clients’
needs. We understand that mobile
applications use various methods of
communication, including, for example,
push notifications, in-app messages, and
similar forms of electronic
communication. The amended rule
would permit any form of mobile
application technology through which
the investment adviser provides digital
investment advisory services.
We also are proposing to define
‘‘digital investment advisory services’’
as ‘‘investment advice to clients that is
generated by the operational interactive
website’s software-based models,
algorithms, or applications based on
personal information each client
supplies through the operational
interactive website.’’ 54 The proposed
definition is designed to address that,
like the current rule, an adviser must
52 See Sarah Perez, Majority of Digital Media
Consumption Now Takes Place in Mobile Apps,
TechCrunch (Aug. 21, 2014) (‘‘[M]obile apps [. . .]
eat up more of our time than desktop usage or
mobile web surfing, accounting for 52% of the time
spent using digital media. Combined with mobile
web, mobile usage as a whole accounts for 60% of
time spent, while desktop-based digital media
consumption makes up the remaining 40%.’’); see
generally, Hannah Glover, ‘Healthy Paranoia’ Drives
Innovation at Vanguard (June 17, 2016), https://
www.ignites.com/c/1385943/158263?
referrer_module=searchSubFromFF&highlight=
%22mobile%20applications%22 (‘‘Next on the
horizon is mobile applications. When you travel
[outside of the U.S.], you see how PC-centric
technology does not exist anywhere else[.] In the
future, [. . . [i]t’s going to be all about the phone.
Companies without easy-to-use, yet powerful, apps
will be left behind [. . . .]’’) (internal quotations
omitted).
53 See, e.g., techopedia, supra note 51 (‘‘Mobile
applications frequently serve to provide users with
similar services to those accessed on PCs.’’); see,
e.g., Fundfire, What Are Major IT Trends in Wealth
Mgmt? (Oct. 15, 2012), https://www.fundfire.com/c/
422571/47531?referrer_module=searchSubFromF
F&highlight=%22mobile%20applications%22
(‘‘Dedicated mobile applications for smartphones
and tablets can enable unified digital
communication between advisors and their
clients—a combination of email, chat, voice and
video.’’).
54 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(2). Personal
information provided by the internet client
generally should consist of information relevant to
the client’s financial situation, level of financial
sophistication, investment experience, and
financial goals and objectives. See also Commission
Interpretation Regarding Standard of Conduct for
Investment Advisers, Investment Advisers Act
Release No. 5248 (June 5, 2019), at 12–14
(discussing an adviser’s duty of care, which
includes a duty to provide advice that is in the best
interest of the client).
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provide investment advice exclusively
through an interactive website.
However, the proposed definition
would specify that the generation of
such advice could include advice that is
generated by software-based algorithms
in addition to software-based models or
applications, in each case, based on
personal information each client
supplies through the interactive
website. We understand that advisers
are increasingly using algorithms to
generate investment advice in order to
provide clients with cost-effective and
tailored advice and the definition
encompasses this use.55 The proposed
amendments would specify that the
investment advice to clients must be
‘‘generated by’’ the website’s softwarebased models, algorithms, or
applications.56 Like the current rule,57
this new definition is designed to reflect
that an adviser’s personnel are not
permitted to generate, modify, or
otherwise provide client-specific
investment advice through the
55 See, e.g., Investment Adviser Association, 2020
Evolution Revolution (2020), at 8, https://
higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws.com/
INVESTMENTADVISER/aa03843e-7981-46b2-aa49c572f2ddb7e8/UploadedImages/resources/
Evolution_Revolution_2020_v8.pdf (noting that by
2020, ‘‘two of the top five advisers as measured by
number of non-high net worth individual clients
served [were] digital advice platforms, representing
7.5 million clients, an increase of 2.7 million clients
from [the prior year].’’); Robo-Advisers, IM
Guidance Update No. 2017–02 (Feb. 2017), https://
www.sec.gov/investment/im-guidance-2017-02.pdf
(‘‘Robo-Advisers Guidance’’); Akin Ajayi, The Rise
of the Robo-Advisers (July 16, 2015), https://
www.credit-suisse.com/about-us-news/en/articles/
news-and-expertise/the-rise-of-the-robo-advisers201507.html (‘‘Robo-advisers—to use the suitably
futuristic moniker adopted as a description for
these services—are investment services driven by
automated customer service and an investment
strategy governed by computer algorithms. A clutch
of start-ups, largely located in the United States but
spreading to Europe and Asia, have emerged over
the last few years.’’).
56 As a fiduciary, investment advisers have a duty
to make full and fair disclosure of all material facts
to, and to employ reasonable care to avoid
misleading, clients. Given the unique aspects of an
internet investment advisers’ business models and
because client relationships may occur with
limited, if any, human interaction, internet
investment advisers generally should consider the
most effective way to communicate to their clients
the limitations, risks, and operational aspects of
their advisory services. For example, internet
investment advisers generally should effectively
disclose to clients, among other matters, that an
algorithm is used to manage individual client
accounts with a description of the particular risks
inherent in the use of an algorithm to manage client
accounts.
57 See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section II.A.1 (‘‘[T]he exemption is for advisers that
provide investment advice to their Internet clients
‘exclusively’ through their interactive Web sites. An
adviser relying on the exemption may not use its
advisory personnel to elaborate or expand upon the
investment advice provided by its interactive Web
site, or otherwise provide investment advice to its
Internet clients, except as permitted by the de
minimis exception discussed below.’’).
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operational interactive website or
otherwise.58 Said differently, humandirected client-specific investment
advice, delivered through electronic
means, would not be eligible activity
under the Investment Adviser
Exemption. The use of the internet or
other electronic media to communicate
with clients is not, alone, a sufficient
basis for an adviser to rely on the
exemption.59
The proposed amendments would not
prohibit advisory personnel from all
interactions with advisory clients.
Advisory personnel could continue to
assist clients with technical issues in
connection with the use of the website
(e.g., accessing the website, etc.),
including by assisting clients with
explanations of how the algorithm
generating the investment advice was
developed or operates. Advisory
personnel generally should be able to
perform those services telephonically,
through email, live electronic chats, and
similar forms of electronic
communication. As discussed below,
the amended rule would not permit
advisory personnel to provide
investment advice of any kind to a
client.
We also are proposing that an adviser
relying on the rule as a basis for
registration must represent on Schedule
D of its Form ADV that, among other
things, it has an operational interactive
website.60 This representation is similar
to the representation that advisers
relying on the multi-state exemption
make on their Form ADV.61 This
representation would also assist
Commission staff in connection with its
review of existing registrations and
registration applications for compliance
with the rule and, as applicable, for
possible deregistration for an inability to
meet the conditions of the rule. This
58 This excludes human involvement and input
other than to the degree necessary for technological
oversight and management of a website’s softwarebased models, algorithms, or applications. But see
Comment Letter of Morningstar, Inc. (Oct. 1, 2021)
(recommending, in response to the 2021 RFC, that
the Commission should modify the Internet Adviser
Exemption to explicitly permit human interaction
for ‘‘certain types of information’’—for example,
costs, allocations, financial education—‘‘as long as
the actual asset allocation is conducted by the
algorithm.’’).
59 This treatment is unchanged from the current
rule. See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section II.A.1 (‘‘The rule is thus not available to
advisers that merely use Web sites as marketing
tools or that use Internet vehicles such as E-mail,
chat rooms, bulletin boards and webcasts or other
electronic media in communicating with clients
. . . expansion of the rule to include such activities
as suggested by some commenters could undermine
NSMIA’s allocation of regulatory responsibility over
smaller advisers to state securities authorities.’’).
60 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iv).
61 Rule 203A–2(d)(2)(i).
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amendment would require internet
investment advisers, as an initial matter
and periodically thereafter, to provide
an additional affirmative representation
on Form ADV that more clearly notes
the requirements of the exemption, thus
reinforcing the conditions of the
exemption for the internet investment
adviser.
We request comment on all aspects of
the proposed amendments relating to
the requirements for internet investment
advisers to have an operational
interactive website and related
amendments to Form ADV, including
the following:
1. Should we amend the interactive
website definition to ‘‘operational
interactive website,’’ as proposed? Do
commenters agree that the interactive
website should be operational at all
times an adviser is registered with the
Commission and relying on the Internet
Adviser Exemption?
2. Does the hardship clause in the
proposed definition of interactive
website reasonably account for
temporary outages? Should planned
periods of inoperability, such as
planned maintenance, be included, as
proposed? Are there other instances in
which an adviser intentionally takes an
interactive website offline that should
be explicitly discussed in the release?
The proposed hardship clause specifies
that the outages must be de minimis in
duration? Should the rule text specify a
particular time period instead, such as
less than 6 hours, 12 hours, or 24 hours?
3. Should the exemption specify what
it means to provide investment advice
‘‘exclusively’’ through the operational
interactive website? If so, how? Is it
sufficiently clear that the amended rule
is not designed to prevent advisory
personnel from assisting clients with
technical issues or from explaining how
the adviser’s algorithm works? Are there
any circumstances not accounted for in
the amended rule in which advisory
personnel interact with clients without
engaging in digital investment advisory
services?
4. Do commenters agree that advisers
seeking to rely on the proposed
exemption could develop, test, and
launch an operational interactive
website within 120 days? Are there
certain web-development issues that are
unique to the investment adviser
industry that would prevent the launch
of an operational interactive website
within 120 days?
5. Do commenters agree that advisers
seeking to rely on the proposed
exemption could develop a test
interactive website that is not accessible
to the public that subsequently could be
made accessible to the public, including
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advisory clients, and become an
operational interactive website at the
time of registration as an internet
investment adviser or within 120 days
of registration under the 120-day rule?
Generally, do commenters agree that
initial registration in reliance on the
120-day rule may not be challenging for
advisers in the way that it may have
been when the Commission adopted the
Internet Adviser Exemption?
6. Is the requirement that an internet
investment adviser must provide digital
investment advisory services through its
website on an ongoing basis to more
than one client appropriate? Should we
require that the internet investment
adviser provide digital investment
advisory services to ‘‘one or more
clients’’ instead? Alternatively, should
we require a de minimis number of
clients or some other exact number of
clients (e.g. ‘‘no fewer than 6 clients’’ to
align with section 222 of the Advisers
Act)?
7. Should we include mobile
applications in the definition of
interactive website, as proposed? Do
commenters agree that customers
increasingly access investment advisory
services through mobile applications?
Do commenters agree that mobile
applications can provide interactive
functionality similar to the functionality
of websites?
8. Are there other technologies similar
to websites and mobile applications that
commenters believe should be included
in the definition of operational
interactive website? For instance,
should the definition include computer
programs or software, which may not be
a website or a mobile application?
Alternatively, should the definition
include a broader reference to ‘‘digital
platform’’ or some other language
instead of ‘‘website or mobile
application’’?
9. Would requiring an affirmative
representation on Schedule D to Form
ADV that an adviser relying on the
Internet Adviser Exemption has an
operational interactive website, as
proposed, be useful for advisers by
reinforcing the conditions of the
proposed rule? Why or why not?
10. Generally, is there a need for the
Internet Adviser Exemption given the
changes in technology and wide use of
websites and/or mobile applications by
investment advisers to advertise and
provide investment advisory services?
2. Elimination of De Minimis NonInternet Client Exception
The current rule includes a de
minimis exception that permits an
internet investment adviser to provide
investment advice to fewer than 15 non-
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internet clients during the preceding 12
months.62 We are proposing to amend
the rule to remove this de minimis
exception, such that an internet
investment adviser must provide advice
to all of its clients exclusively through
an interactive website.63
The Commission included the noninternet client de minimis exception so
that internet investment advisers would
not lose their ability to rely on the
Internet Adviser Exemption as a result
of providing advice to a small number
of clients through means other than an
interactive website.64 In considering
whether to retain the de minimis
exception in this rule, we took into
account the basis of the narrow
exception, and the Commission’s
experience administering the rule. We
preliminarily believe, as discussed
below, that there is not the same need
for this exception now as at the time we
originally adopted it. Accordingly,
under these proposed amendments, if
an internet investment adviser is
advising non-internet clients, it would
not be exempted from the registration
rules that otherwise apply to all
investment advisers and should more
properly be regulated by a state (or
states) or the Commission (using a
different basis for registration), as
applicable.
In addition, certain internet
investment advisers may be able to
register with the Commission using
separate bases for registration. As such,
an internet investment adviser would be
less likely today to lose its ability to
remain registered with the Commission
as a result of taking on a client that
would disqualify the adviser from
relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption. As of December 31, 2022,
ten advisers are dually registered with
the Commission under both the Internet
Adviser Exemption and another basis
62 See
rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i). But see
Comment Letter of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich &
Rosati, P.C. (Oct. 4, 2021) (‘‘Wilson Sonsini
Comment Letter’’) (asserting, in response to the
2021 RFC, that the current rule is not permissive
enough with respect to the advising of non-internet
clients, further suggesting that the Internet Adviser
Exemption should be available to any investment
adviser that provides investment advice solely
through the internet to at least 51% of its
customers’’).
64 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section I. When the Commission initially adopted
the fewer than 15 client de minimis exception, the
Commission noted its similarity to the (thenexisting) ‘‘private adviser exemption’’ which,
subject to certain additional conditions, exempted
from the requirement to register with the
Commission any adviser that during the course of
the preceding 12 months, had fewer than 15 clients.
That exemption was repealed by Section 403 of
Dodd-Frank. See 2011 Redesignation, supra note
14, at n.4.
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63 See
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for registration.65 For example, contrary
to the practice of internet investment
advisers at the time the Commission
adopted the Internet Adviser
Exemption,66 our staff has observed that
the operations of certain investment
advisers that provide advice over the
internet have changed such that they
now manage assets of their internet
clients.67 Accordingly, depending on
assets under management, certain
internet investment advisers may be
eligible—or required—to register with
us.68 In addition, due in part to the
evolution of technology, investment
advisers can appropriately manage
advertisements, account openings, and
similar operations, and, as a
consequence, be able to better control in
which states they may be required to
register. Since the adoption of the rule
over 20 years ago, it has become more
common for internet businesses to
implement technology that targets and
tracks the locations in which they offer
services.69 Moreover, the Dodd-Frank
Act reduced the minimum number of
states in which an adviser would be
required to register before becoming
eligible for the multi-state exemption,
making it more likely that an adviser
would be eligible for the multi-state
exemption earlier and more easily than
at the time of adoption of the Internet
on analysis of Form ADV data.
2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
section IV.A. (stating that ‘‘Internet Investment
Advisers typically would not initially be eligible to
register with us, as they do not manage the assets
of their Internet clients.’’).
67 See, e.g., Robo-Advisers Guidance, supra note
55 (‘‘Robo-advisers, which are typically registered
investment advisers, use innovative technologies to
provide discretionary asset management services to
their clients through online algorithmic-based
programs.’’). Robo-advisers typically do not rely on
the Internet Adviser Exemption when they are
eligible for Commission registration based on
regulatory assets under management.
68 See, e.g., rule 203A–1.
69 See John T. Holden, Marc Edleman, A Short
Treatise on Sports Gambling and the Law: How
America Regulates its Most Lucrative Vice, 907
Wisconsin Law Review (2020), https://
wlr.law.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/1263/
2021/10/15-Holden-Edelman-To-Print.pdf
(illustrating this in the context of online gambling
platforms and stating that ‘‘any company that is
licensed to operate an online sportsbook must limit
access to individuals physically located within the
state where they have received their license. To
illustrate this point, if a company has a license to
operate an online sportsbook in New Jersey, that
company may accept bets from any individual of
legal age (other than self-excluded or prohibited
individuals) that is physically located in New Jersey
at the time of placing the bet. By contrast, even a
licensed New Jersey online sportsbook may not
accept bets from people, including New Jersey
residents, who are physically located outside of
New Jersey at the time of the attempted bet.
Therefore, it is critical that any licensed online
sportsbook implement proper geo-tracking
technology to ensure that all bettors are based in
permissible locations.’’).
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66 See
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50083
Adviser Exemption in 2002.70 Taken
together, these regulatory and
technological changes make the de
minimis exception in the Internet
Adviser Exemption less necessary than
at the time we originally adopted the
exemption.71
We request comment on the proposed
elimination of the de minimis exception
in the Internet Adviser Exemption:
11. Should the de minimis exception
for non-internet clients be eliminated, as
proposed? If so, should those internet
investment advisers registered in
reliance on the Internet Adviser
Exemption prior to the adoption of the
final rule continue to be able to rely on
the de minimis exception? Do
commenters agree that there is less of a
need for this exception today than there
was when it was originally adopted?
12. For internet investment advisers
that currently provide advice outside an
interactive website, to what types of
clients are you providing this advice,
and how does this advice differ from
advice provided through the interactive
website?
13. As an alternative to the proposal,
should the de minimis exception remain
at 15 as in the current rule? Should it
be higher or lower? If, unlike as
proposed, it should remain at 15 or
some alternative number, is it consistent
with the policy goals of the rule that an
adviser relying on the rule should be
permitted to advise a greater number of
non-internet clients than internet clients
during the specified timeframe? If,
unlike as proposed, it should remain at
15 or some alternative number, should
the rule require an equal or greater
number of minimum internet clients? If
the rule were to retain a de minimis
exception, rather than specifying the
exception as a numerical limit, should
we instead require that the de minimis
exception be a proportion of the number
of internet clients an internet
investment adviser has? For example,
should an internet investment adviser
be permitted to have a maximum of
51% of its clients as non-internet
clients, as suggested by one commenter,
or some greater or lesser percentage? 72
Would such an approach be consistent
with the policy goals of the rule of
balancing the burdens of multiple state
70 See Dodd-Frank Act, Section 410 (amending
section 203A of the Advisers Act to enable a midsized adviser to register with the Commission if it
would be required to register in 15 or more states).
71 See rule 203A–2(d). As noted above,
technological advances related to website
development would better allow advisers to
effectively utilize the 120-day rule in anticipation
of reliance on the multi-state exemption relative to
at the time we originally adopted the Internet
Adviser Exemption.
72 Wilson Sonsini Comment Letter.
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registration requirements and the
national presence for internet
investment advisers with the Advisers
Act’s allocation of responsibility for
regulating smaller advisers to state
securities authorities? Would there be
benefits to advisers from this approach
and would those benefits justify the
potential challenges in oversight?
Should the de minimis exception be
based on some other framework or
calculation?
14. If we were to retain a de minimis
exception, should we add a question to
Form ADV, asking how many noninternet clients the adviser had during
the last fiscal year? Would this reporting
requirement help internet investment
advisers in their compliance and/or
record keeping obligations with respect
to the conditions of the exemption as
currently constituted?
15. Are there changes to the
exemption that might help to
encompass those investment advisers
that provide advice through the internet
while ensuring that advisers that
otherwise are not eligible for registration
with the Commission and that use the
internet only as a marketing tool, for
example, remain subject to state
registration? Should the Commission
create a registration exemption that
reflects investment advisers’ current use
of technology in providing investment
advice in a better way than the Internet
Adviser Exemption?
16. Should we adopt changes to the
recordkeeping requirement? For
example, should the recordkeeping
requirement require advisers to record
the frequency of communication with
clients?
17. Should we retain the Internet
Adviser Exemption, or should we
remove it in its entirety? In light of the
other bases for registration that may be
available to internet investment
advisers, do commenters believe that
the rule is necessary? Could these
advisers simply rely on another
applicable exemption (e.g., the multistate exemption, mid-sized adviser,
related adviser)? Would eliminating the
Internet Adviser Exemption and instead
causing these advisers to rely on the
multi-state exemption to register with
the Commission better achieve our goals
of only allowing advisers with a larger
number of internet clients with a true
national presence to register with us? Do
commenters believe that certain
advisers relying on the rule could
instead register with the Commission
based on having sufficient assets under
management or an ability to rely on
another exemption for registration? Do
commenters believe that enough
advisers rely on the rule to warrant the
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relative cost of oversight required for
these advisers by our Staff?
18. Is there any particular topic or
issue that advisers encounter in
complying with the Internet Adviser
Exemption currently, or that they would
encounter in complying with the
proposed amendments to the
exemption, that should be addressed by
Commission guidance? Would the
proposed amendments create excessive
reliance on the Internet Advisers
Exemption? If so, how?
quantitative estimates, that range would
be so wide as to not be informative
about the magnitude of the benefits or
costs associated with the proposed
amendments. Many parts of the
discussion below are, therefore,
qualitative in nature. As described more
fully below, the Commission is
providing a qualitative assessment and,
where practicable, a quantified estimate
of the economic effects.
III. Economic Analysis
The amended rule would amend the
definitions used in the existing Internet
Adviser Exemption, which allows
internet investment advisers to register
with the Commission. The application
of this exemption, along with other
applicable rules, determines which
advisers the Commission regulates and
which advisers may fall under state
regulation. The entities potentially
affected by the proposed amendments
include all advisers that are currently
relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption, or are contemplating
becoming an internet investment
adviser under the current or proposed
definition; their clients and affiliated
parties; and users of Form ADV data.
A. Introduction
We are mindful of the costs imposed
by, and the benefits obtained from, our
rules. Section 202(c) of the Advisers Act
provides that when the Commission is
engaging in rulemaking under the Act
and is required to consider or determine
whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, the
Commission shall also consider whether
the action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation, in
addition to the protection of investors.73
The following analysis considers the
likely significant economic effects that
may result from the proposed
amendments to rules and forms,
including the benefits and costs to
clients and investors and other market
participants as well as the broader
implications of the proposed
amendments for efficiency, competition,
and capital formation.
Where possible, the Commission
quantifies the likely economic effects of
its proposed amendments. However, the
Commission is unable to quantify
certain economic effects because it lacks
the information necessary to provide
estimates or ranges of costs. For
instance, data that separately captures
the number of non-internet clients or
the types of internet clients an adviser
has is generally unavailable.74 Further,
in some cases, quantification would
require numerous assumptions to
forecast how investment advisers and
other affected parties would respond to
the proposed amendments, and how
those responses would in turn affect the
broader markets in which they operate.
In addition, many factors determining
the economic effects of the proposed
amendments would be investment
adviser-specific. Investment advisers
vary in size and sophistication, as well
as in the products and services they
offer. Even if it were possible to
calculate a range of potential
U.S.C. 80b–2(c).
on number of clients, such as that
described supra section I.B. is generally developed
during adviser examinations.
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74 Information
Frm 00018
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B. Baseline and Affected Parties
1. Regulatory Baseline
The NSMIA divided regulatory
responsibility for advisers between the
Commission and the states, where larger
advisers with national presence are
regulated by the Commission and
smaller advisers with sufficient local
presence are regulated by the states.75
Currently, subject to certain exceptions,
only advisers that advise a registered
investment company or have assets
under management above $100 million
are allowed to register with the
Commission. All other advisers may be
subject to state regulation and may be
required to register with one or multiple
states.76
However, section 222(d) of the
Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b–18a(d)]
provides that no law of any state ‘‘shall
require an investment adviser to register
with the securities commissioner of the
State’’ if the adviser ‘‘(1) does not have
a place of business located within the
State; and (2) during the preceding 12month period, has had fewer than 6
clients who are residents of that State.’’
State law varies, and states may exempt
from state regulation certain advisers
with a place of business in that state if
the adviser has a sufficiently low
75 See supra notes 2, 3, and the relevant
discussion in section 1.
76 See supra note 7; section 222 of the Advisers
Act.
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number of clients.77 Depending on the
location of the adviser and the number
and location of its clients, an adviser not
eligible for Commission registration
might need to register with no state, or
with up to 14 states.78 States may also
require advisers to file copies of their
Commission filings with the state
(notice filings) even if state registration
is not required.79
Certain exemptions allow advisers to
register with the Commission if state
registration becomes unfair, a burden on
interstate commerce, or otherwise
inconsistent with the purposes of
section 203A of the Act.80 The multistate exemption is one such exemption:
it allows advisers that would otherwise
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77 See e.g., N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 359–eee(a)(5)
(excluding from the definition of ‘‘investment
adviser’’ a person that has sold investment advisory
services to fewer than 6 persons in the state, in the
preceding 12 months); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 49:3–
56.9(g)(1) (exempting from registration as an
investment adviser a person that does not have
more than 5 clients in the state, in a 12-month
period); Ill. Admin. Code tit. 12 § 130.805b)
(exempting from registration as an investment
adviser any investment adviser that had no more
than 5 clients in the state, in the preceding 12
months); Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 590–4–4–.13(1)(b)
(exempting from registration an investment adviser
that had a fewer than 6 clients in the state, in the
preceding 12 months).
78 Advisers that would otherwise have to register
with 15 or more states may register with the
Commission using the multi-state exemption. See
supra note 13 and section 1 for the relevant
discussion. For information on the number of stateregistered investment advisers, see e.g., NASAA,
NASAA 2022 Investment Adviser Section Annual
Report (Apr. 2022), https://www.nasaa.org/wpcontent/uploads/2022/06/2022-IA-Section-ReportFINAL-updated-05192022.pdf.
79 15 U.S.C. 80b–3a note [Pub. L. 104–290, section
307, ‘‘Continued State Authority’’]. See, e.g., Neb.
Rev. St. sec. 8–1103(2)(b); N.H. Rev. State. sec. 421–
B;4–405; 7 TX Admin. Code § 116.1.(b)(2).
80 15 U.S.C. 80b–3a(c).
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have to register with 15 or more states
to register with the Commission
instead.81 The current Internet Adviser
Exemption similarly allows Commission
registration for advisers that conduct
their business predominantly over the
internet and by the nature of their
business have national presence. That
is, their clients may come from multiple
states, but they may not advise a
registered investment company or have
sufficient assets under management to
be able to register with the Commission.
To alleviate the burden of potentially
registering with numerous states for
business conducted over the internet,
the Commission created in 2002 the
exemption found in rule 203A–2(e).82
Under current rule 203A–2(e),
Commission registration is allowed for
an investment adviser that provides
advice to all of its clients exclusively
through an interactive website, except
that the investment adviser may provide
investment advice to fewer than 15
clients through other means during the
preceding 12 months. Rule 203A–2(e)
also requires the internet investment
adviser to maintain records
demonstrating that it meets the
conditions of rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).83
81 See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, and
section I, for the relevant discussion.
82 See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, and
the relevant discussion in section I.A. of this
release. The 2002 Adopting Release described the
exemption as ‘‘providing relief to certain
investment advisers who, unlike state-registered
advisers, have no local presence and whose
advisory activities are not limited to one or few
states.’’ At that time, the threshold for the miltistate exemption was registration in 30 states rather
than 15.
83 See rule 203A2(e)(1)(ii); relevant discussion in
supra section I.A.
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50085
2. Current Use of the Internet Adviser
Exemption
As of December 2022, there were
15,360 registered investment advisers
with $115,050 billion regulatory assets
under management. Of these, 256
(1.7%) with a combined total of $2.94
billion in regulatory assets under
management (0.003%) exclusively
relied on the Internet Adviser
Exemption, while 10 advisers were
dually registered with the Commission
under both the Internet Adviser
Exemption and another basis for
registration. The total number of
advisers claiming use of the Internet
Adviser Exemption was 266, 190 of
which were small entity registered
investment advisers.84
As of December 2022, registered
internet investment advisers had on
average 5,506 clients, with a minimum
of 0 clients, reported by 101 advisers,
and a maximum of 522,345 clients.85
The median number of clients for all
advisers using the exemption was 6,
indicating that the distribution is highly
skewed. As of December 2022, 101
advisers (38% of 266) reported advising
0 clients, 5 advisers (1.9% of 266)
reported advising 1 client, and 37% of
internet investment advisers (98 of 266)
advised 2 to 100 clients. Only 18
advisers (7% of 266) reported advising
more than 5,000 clients. Figure 1
demonstrates that 40% of internet
advisers have fewer than 2 clients.
84 The data comes from Form ADV filings
received by the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
Small entity investment advisers are advisers with
less than $25 million in regulatory assets under
management.
85 The data comes from Form ADV filings
received by the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
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TABLE 2—LARGEST CATEGORIES OF advisers using the internet Adviser
CLIENTS FOR INTERNET ADVISERS Exemption most likely do not have the
option of using the multi-state
WITH 100 OR FEWER CLIENTS
exemption instead. We invite public
comment on this topic.
Similarly, we cannot estimate how
Type of client
many
advisers currently using the
TABLE 1—LARGEST CATEGORIES OF
internet Adviser Exemption would
CLIENTS: DISTRIBUTION ACROSS ALL Non-high net worth individuals
6.3 potentially be subject to regulation by
Pension plans ...........................
0.1
INTERNET ADVISERS
multiple states if they did not elect to
High net worth individuals ........
0.7
use the exemption. State law varies, and
Mean
Data source: Form ADV filings received by regulation would depend on the
Type of client
clients per
the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
location of the adviser’s place of
adviser
business and the location of their
The data indicate that the majority of
clients.88 In light of the substantial
Non-high net worth individuals
5,085 clients using internet advisers are nonnumber of internet investment advisers
Pension plans ...........................
261 high net worth individuals.
with only a few clients, however, it is
High net worth individuals ........
2
We do not have information on the
likely that many of the advisers
states
in
which
these
clients
are
located.
Data source: Form ADV filings received by
currently relying on the exemption
Advisers
using
the
internet
Adviser
the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
Exemption might also be eligible for the would, if not registered using the
exemption, be subject to registration in
The low median, relative to the
multi-state exemption if they have
not more than one state.89 Additionally,
average, is an indication of skewed
clients in 15 or more states.87 But, we
distribution within the population of
would expect that relatively few
88 For example, the Uniform Securities Act
internet advisers. If the dataset is
advisers with the option to use either
would, if adopted by the relevant state, require an
reduced to only those 204 advisers with exemption would choose the internet
investment adviser to register with the state unless
Adviser Exemption instead of the multi- the adviser has no place of business in the state and
100 or fewer clients, the distribution of
state exemption, because the multi-state no more than 5 clients in the state other than
clients in these categories is as follows:
certain types of clients described in the Uniform
exemption is less restrictive: it does not Securities Act. UNIF. SEC. ACT OF 2002 (rev.
limit advice provided through non2005), sec. 403(b). As of July 2023, 21 states and
territories had adopted the 2002 version of the
internet means, as the internet Adviser
86 The instructions of Form ADV specify that the
Uniform Securities Act and 5 states had adopted an
Exemption does. This suggests that
earlier version. 2002 Securities Act Enactment
category ‘‘individuals’’ includes trusts, estates, and
401(k) plans and IRAs of individuals and their
family members but does not include businesses
organized as sole proprietorships. ‘‘High Net Worth
Individual’’ is defines as an individual who is a
qualified client or who is a ‘‘qualified purchaser’’
as defined in section 2(a)(51)(A) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940.
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Mean
clients per
adviser
multi-state exemption became more widely
available after the creation of the current Internet
Adviser Exemption, because of the change from a
minimum of 30 states to a minimum of 15. Thus,
the burden of registering in numerous states was
lessened, compared to what it had been when the
current exemption was developed.
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87 The
Frm 00020
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Sfmt 4702
History, UNIF. LAW COMM’N, https://
www.uniformlaws.org/committees/communityhome?CommunityKey=8c3c2581-0fea-4e91-8a5027eee58da1cf, last visited July 10, 2023.
89 The 2002 rule contemplated internet advisers
potentially having clients that ‘‘can come from any
state, at any time, without the adviser’s prior
knowledge’’ and thus potentially necessitating
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The largest categories of clients that
internet investment advisers currently
have are: non-high net worth
individuals, pension plans, and high net
worth individuals.86
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 1, 2023 / Proposed Rules
advisers now may be able to use
technology and targeting advertisement
in such a way as to limit the number of
clients from certain states thereby
reducing the state regulation burden.90
In the instances where state law does
not require the adviser to register with
a state, for example because the adviser
has fewer than the de minimis number
of clients in the state, registration with
the Commission represents an
additional compliance burden that some
internet investment advisers appear to
be voluntarily assuming. Moreover,
where state law would require a
Commission-registered adviser to make
notice filings with one or more states,
the combination of Commission
registration and state notice filings may
also represent an additional, voluntarily
assumed compliance burden as
compared to registering directly with
those states.91 Because some advisers
choose to register with the Commission
despite the potential additional
compliance burden, we assume that
some advisers perceive value in
Commission registration as compared to
state registration.
Based on observations of Commission
staff conducting examinations, we think
some investors may believe that
registration with the Commission
confers a reputational advantage or
appeals to potential clients. Other
possibilities include the intent to obtain
clients in multiple states in the future,
or avoidance of individual state
registration requirements such as bond
and invoicing requirements. We invite
public comment on the location of
internet investment advisers and their
clients, application of state law to
internet investment advisers, reasons to
seek the internet Adviser Exemption,
and other relevant topics.
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3. Increased Reliance on the Internet
Adviser Exemption
Use of the internet Adviser Exemption
has increased since its adoption,
especially in recent years.92 The number
registration in all states. 2002 Adopting Release,
supra note 13, at 77622. However, the significant
number of currently registered internet investment
advisers with one or fewer clients would not face
that risk. Additionally, as noted supra, note 69 and
surrounding text, today’s investment advisers are
better able to control in which states they may be
required to register.
90 See section II.A.2 for a relevant discussion.
91 The cost of notice filing is often the same as
the cost of registering with the state. See
INVESTMENT ADVISER REGISTRATION
DEPOSITORY, IA Firm State Registration/Notice
Filing Fee Schedule (Jan. 13, 2023), https://
www.iard.com, under the tab ‘‘Fees & Accounting.’’
We invite public comment on the cost of state
registration and notice filing fees.
92 See supra note 23 (number of advisers relying
exclusively on the exemption grew from 107 in
2015 to 256 in 2022).
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of investment advisers using the
exemption at the end of 2022 (that is,
266 advisers) was almost 18 times larger
than it was in December 2003, one year
after the exemption was put in place,
when there were 15 such advisers.93
The value of regulatory assets under
management for advisers exclusively
relying on the internet Adviser
Exemption at the end of 2022 was $2.94
billion,94 or 0.003% of total adviser
registered assets under management.
The average regulatory assets under
management per adviser for internet
investment advisers (about $64.11
million) was 165 times larger than it
was in December 2003 when advisers
using the exemption had on average
about $0.39 million of registered assets
under management per adviser. Further,
from 2003 to 2022, 440 unique
registered investment advisers that had
indicated in their prior ADV filing they
were utilizing the internet adviser
registration basis withdrew and filed a
total of 475 Forms ADV–W.95 Note that
the number of withdrawals has
increased, for example, there were 69
ADV–W filings by internet investment
advisers between 2003 and 2012 and
387 ADV–W filings between 2013 and
2022.96 This increase could suggest
erroneous registration, as discussed later
in this analysis.
Technology use in the advisory
industry has also changed. For example,
while the 2002 Adopting Release stated
that internet investment advisers might
not be fully operational within 120 days
of registration,97 today websites and
associated services are more common,
more website development services are
available on the market, and new
technologies, such as mobile
applications that can generate advice,
have emerged as well.98 Currently,
2002 Adopting Release used a figure of 20
eligible advisers in its analysis, acknowledging that
the number of eligible firms would likely grow.
2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at 77623.
94 Accounting for inflation using CPI calculator
(https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_
calculator.htm), this number is 1.83 billion in Dec.
2003 dollars.
95 The filing of 475 Forms ADV-W includes
singular investment advisers that utilized the
Internet Adviser Exemption on a non-continuous
basis (e.g., investment advisers that registered,
withdrew, registered again, and subsequently
withdrew).
96 Based on analysis of Form ADV data available
through Mar. 31, 2023.
97 Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers
Operating Through the Internet, Investment
Advisors Act Release No. 2091 [67 FR 77619 (Dec.
18, 2002)], at 77622.
98 See supra note 20 and surrounding text. See
also Alex Padalka, RIAs Depend on Tech for Client
Communications, Growth, FIN. ADVISOR IQ (Dec.
10, 2021), https://www.financialadvisoriq.com/c/
3402044/435734/rias_depend_tech_client_
communications_growth?preview=1.
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different options are available on the
market to develop a website, from using
website builder programs for an average
upfront cost of about $200 and
maintenance cost of about $50 per
month, to hiring a website designer for
an average upfront cost of about $6,000
and maintenance cost of about $1,000
per year.99
As discussed in section I.A, the
Commission adopted rule 203A–2(e) to
alleviate, for a narrow set of advisers
with national presence, the burden of
having to register in multiple states as
a result of providing internet advice.
The increase in its use, especially
among advisers that would not be
subject to registration in more than one
state, or that appear to have advised no
clients in several years, suggests the
exemption may currently be used in
ways that were not intended by the 2002
rule.
In addition, the Commission’s
examination program has identified
multiple instances of compliance issues
relating to advisers relying on the
exemption without an interactive
website, or providing advisory
personnel who could expand upon the
investment advice provided by the
adviser’s interactive website or
otherwise provide investment advice to
clients, such as financial planning.100
The frequency of registration
withdrawals has increased as well: as
discussed previously in the baseline, the
number of withdrawals by internet
investment advisers between 2013 and
2022 (387) was over five times larger
than the number of withdrawals
between 2003 and 2012 (69).101
C. Benefits and Costs and Effects on
Efficiency, Competition, and Capital
Formation
1. Benefits
The proposed amendments to the
internet Adviser Exemption are
designed to modernize the exemption
and address technological and other
industry developments that have
occurred since 2002, and to respond to
observations about the use of the
exemption that were not available when
the exemption was first put in place.102
Further, as discussed in more detail
below, the proposed changes to the
99 These estimates are available from Lucy
Carney, How Much Does a Website Cost in 2023?
(Full Breakdown), WEBSITEBUILDEREXPERT
(Apr. 26, 2023), https://www.websitebuilderexpert
.com/building-websites/how-much-should-awebsite-cost/.
100 See Risk Alert, supra note 25; see also supra
note 26 and surrounding text.
101 Based on the analysis of Form ADV data
available through Mar. 31, 2023.
102 See supra section I.B for a relevant discussion.
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definitions in the rule are designed to
better align regulatory authority
between the Commission and the states
and improve investor protection. The
proposed amendments would:
1. Specify that the exemption is
available to an investment adviser that
provides investment advice to all of its
clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website at all
times during which the investment
adviser relies on the exemption found in
section 275.203A–2(e).
2. Modernize the meaning of
‘‘interactive website’’ by:
• Adding the term ‘‘digital
investment advisory service,’’ defined to
mean investment advice to clients that
is generated by the website’s algorithms
as well as the software-based models
and applications covered by the existing
rule;
• Adding a reference to mobile
applications;
• Requiring more than one client to
which the adviser provides digital
investment advisory services on an
ongoing basis;
• Adding the word ‘‘operational,’’
thus changing the term to ‘‘operational
interactive website’’; and
• Adding an exception to the
operational interactive website
requirement for ‘‘temporary
technological outages of a de minimis
duration.’’
3. Eliminate the de minimis exception
allowing fewer than 15 non-internet
clients;
4. Require advisers to make a
representation of eligibility on Schedule
D of Form ADV (in addition to checking
the appropriate box in Item 2.A.(11) of
Form ADV).
These changes are intended to
modernize the Internet Adviser
Exemption, retain its intended narrow
scope, and minimize opportunities for
advisers to misuse the exemption to
register with the Commission without
meeting its conditions.
Augmenting the definition of
‘‘interactive website’’ to include the new
defined term ‘‘digital investment
advisory service’’ would capture the
increasing variety of technological
methods by which internet investment
advisers provide advice using the
internet. Additionally, the proposed
addition of the terms ‘‘mobile
application’’ and ‘‘algorithms’’ would
better align with technological advances
in the industry. Advisers increasingly
make use of various mobile applications
to interact with the clients, and use
algorithms to generate investment
advice.103 The improved definition thus
would allow internet investment
advisers that rely on mobile
applications to generate advice to use
the Internet Adviser Exemption,
potentially reducing their burdens
associated with multiple states’
registrations and regulations. Further,
internet investment adviser clients
would be able to benefit from being able
to rely on mobile applications and
algorithms, which offer a convenient
means of interaction between the
adviser and its clients. Additionally,
including an exception for temporary
technological outages of a de minimis
duration should help accommodate
occasional technological issues with the
website or mobile application so the
internet investment adviser is not
required to frequently withdraw and reregister due to minor or temporary
technical difficulties or planned
maintenance.
To the extent advisers may be
registering with the Commission in
order to market themselves to potential
clients, the proposed changes should
help avoid misleading clients. For
instance, advisers without an
‘‘operational’’ website would be
excluded from the pool of advisers
eligible for the Internet Adviser
Exemption. This would avoid clients
contracting with an adviser that is
relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for registration whose
website cannot be used to provide
investment advice. To the extent any
investors may be led to believe that an
adviser relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for registration has national
presence and conducts its business via
the internet, while this is not in fact the
case, the proposed amendments could
help avoid the possibility of investors
using a type of adviser they did not
intend to use.
The proposed amendments would
remove the de minimis exception for
non-internet clients, preventing advisers
with any non-internet clients from
relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption. Removing the exception
better services the narrow-intended
scope of t Internet heAdviser
Exemption.104 This amendment would
assist Commission staff in conducting
examinations of internet advisers,
because it can be difficult to identify the
instances of advice given and the exact
number of clients that received advice
through means other than an
operational interactive website.
Additionally, the proposed
amendments requiring advisers to
represent their Internet Adviser
Exemption eligibility on Schedule D of
103 See supra section II.A.1, specifically note 55
and surrounding text.
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Form ADV should reduce the number of
erroneous registrations and subsequent
withdrawals. Currently, prospective
advisers need only check a box on Form
ADV indicating they ‘‘are an internet
adviser relying on rule 203A–2e’’ but
the proposed change to Form ADV
would include a separate text
description of the actions the adviser
must have taken to become or remain
eligible for the Internet Adviser
Exemption.105 Listing the required
elements of eligibility for the Internet
Adviser Exemption should explicitly
state for the registrants the requirements
that they must meet in order to qualify,
and which they are certifying that they
have met when they file Form ADV.106
We also anticipate that by avoiding
erroneous registration, ineligible
registrants would avoid expending time
and effort on dealing with withdrawals,
and corresponding legal fees.
Currently, the Internet Adviser
Exemption does not require an adviser
to have a minimum number of clients.
Requiring that digital investment
advisory services be provided on an
ongoing basis to more than one client
would better align with the original goal
of the exemption, which was to provide
relief from multiple state registration
requirements for advisers with a
national presence via the internet.
Advisers with one or zero clients cannot
be considered entities with national
presence requiring relief from a state
registration burden. Further, advisers
with zero clients that effectively do not
conduct advisory business but are able
to register as internet investment
advisers may be misleading potential
future clients to believe they are
providing advisory business via the
internet.
2. Costs
The proposed amendments may
adversely affect some advisers. The
proposed amendments would
specifically require that the website be
‘‘operational,’’ and advisers may incur a
cost of developing a website or
withdrawing their Commission
registration if their website is not
operational. Advisers should already
have an interactive website and the
Commission does not currently
105 Schedule D of Part 1A of Form ADV currently
is submitted in a structured (i.e., machine-readable),
XML-based data language specific to that Form, so
the additional information that would be required
on Schedule D under the proposed rule
amendments would also be structured.
106 This amendment would also assist
Commission staff in connection with its review of
existing registrations and registration applications
for compliance with the rule and, as applicable, for
possible deregistration for inability to meet the
conditions of the rule.
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recognize a grace period to develop a
website, beyond the separate, rule
203A–2(c) exemption for an investment
adviser expecting to be eligible for
Commission registration within 120
days, so the proposed amendments
should not require new website
development costs.107
Advisers that choose to withdraw
their Commission registration must file
form ADV–W. The current burden
estimate to file form ADV–W is 0.75
hour per respondent,108 implying a cost
of withdrawal of $319 per adviser.109
The costs to file this form may vary
between advisers and may be larger than
this estimate for some. In addition,
depending on their location and the
scope and nature of their activities (if
any), advisers that withdraw from
Commission registration might need to
register with one or more states. Also, to
the extent some clients value
Commission registration and select
advisers based on their Commission
registration status, advisers could lose
clients as a result of withdrawal;
however, we do not have information
that would allow us to predict the size
or magnitude of this effect.110 We
request public comment on this topic.
Adding the term ‘‘mobile
applications’’ and the term ‘‘digital
investment advisory service’’ still may
not prevent some non-internet advisers
from relying on the exemption by
claiming to provide mobile application
or website-generated advice or ‘‘digital
investment advisory service’’ when in
fact the advice involves some human
input.111 Such advisers are likely to
incur costs of withdrawing their
Commission registration.
107 See
supra note 49.
e.g., Submission for OMB Review;
Comment request; Extension: Rule 203–2 and Form
ADV–W, 88 FR 37913 (Jun. 9, 2023) (describing the
burden associated with the previously approved
collection of information under OMB Control No.
3235–0313).
109 0.75 hour * $425 = $319. The maximum total
cost of withdrawals assuming all 256 currently
registered internet investment advisers relying
exclusively on the Internet Investment Adviser
Exemption have to withdraw is 0.75 hour * $425
* 256 = $81,600. Assuming only 101 currently
registered internet investment advisers with zero
clients and 5 advisers with one client will have to
withdraw, the total estimated cost is 0.75 hour *
$425 *106 = $33,788. The $425 compensation rate
used is the rate for a Sr. Operations Manager in the
SIFMA Report on Management & Professional
Earnings in the Securities Industry—2013 (Oct. 7,
2013), adjusted for inflation using the Bureau of
Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index inflation
calculator, modified to account for a 1,800-hour
work-year, and multiplied by 5.35 to account for
bonuses, firm size, employee benefits and overhead.
110 See supra note 65 and surrounding text
(discussion of dual basis registration).
111 See, e.g., the findings in RetireHub, supra note
26.
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108 See,
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Internet investment advisers that rely
exclusively on the Internet Adviser
Exemption and have non-internet
clients, as is currently allowed, would
be affected by the proposed
amendments because they could no
longer rely on the exemption as a basis
for registering with the Commission.
Human-directed advice provided by
electronic means would not be eligible
for the exemption. These advisers may
be required to register with one or more
states if their total number of clients in
any given state exceeds five and the
state requires registration.112
Similarly, the proposed amendments
are designed to focus on advisers that
exclusively advise through the internet.
Advisers currently relying on the
Internet Adviser Exemption may need to
change the way they communicate with
or deliver services to their clients or rely
on a different basis for Commission
registration, if available. For example,
internet investment advisers that
provide advice via means other than an
interactive website or with some human
input might have to change their
communication with clients in order to
continue to rely on the exemption. In
some cases, such advisers may either
have to withdraw their registration or
lose some of their clients as well if the
clients require more than digital
investment advisory services in order to
remain with the specific adviser.
Further, the clients may have to switch
to a different adviser. As discussed in
section III.B, internet investment
advisers typically advise non-high net
worth individual clients. In addition to
the cost associated with finding a new
adviser, switching to a different adviser
may represent a cost increase for such
clients if the new adviser has higher
fees.
Finally, the proposed additional
representation of eligibility on Schedule
D of Form ADV may increase the time
and effort advisers expend when filing
Form ADV. However, as discussed in
the PRA, such costs are expected to be
minimal.113
Some of the costs associated with
advisers having to register with multiple
states are alleviated by the fact that the
state registration burdens assessed when
the exemption was originally
implemented have declined since 2002,
as now the advisers may be able to rely
on other available exemptions or more
easily meet registrations thresholds in
order to register with the Commission.
For example, as discussed in the
baseline, the multi-state exemption
threshold was decreased from 30 to 15,
making it easier for advisers to qualify
for this exemption. Further, as
discussed in the baseline, advisers
relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption now tend to have more
registered assets under management on
average per adviser and some may be
able to reach the minimum threshold on
the registered assets under management
sooner in order to qualify for the
Commission registration.114
The proposed change would render
ineligible for the exemption all the
currently registered internet investment
advisers with one or zero clients. This
would reduce the current population of
exemption-eligible advisers by
approximately 40%, unless those
advisers obtained additional clients.115
While reducing the number of advisers
relying on the exemption is not a goal
of the proposal, a reduction would
reflect the narrow scope of the
Commission’s exemptive rule.116
3. Effects on Efficiency, Competition,
and Capital Formation
We do not anticipate any significant
effects on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation, as the proposal
represents a minor change of the
exemption parameters and is not
intended to conceptually change the
exemption or the original intended
division of the regulatory authority over
investment advisers between the
Commission and the states. As
discussed in the baseline, the number of
advisers potentially affected by the
proposed change is small, and does not
represent a significant portion of the
population of investment advisers or
their clients.
The proposed amendments may have
a positive effect on competition and
capital formation as they are designed to
modernize the rule to recognize
advances in technology and digital
services employed by the investment
advisory industry. Specifying that
internet investment advisers may use
technology, such as mobile applications,
that can better fit their clients’ needs
114 See
also a related discussion in section II.A.2.
previous discussion in baseline on the
number of internet investment advisers with zero
(101) and one (5) client out of 266 total internet
investment advisers.
116 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
77621; 15 U.S.C. 80b–3a(c) (allowing exemptions
from the limits on Commission registration when
those limits ‘‘would be unfair, a burden on
interstate commerce, or otherwise inconsistent with
the purposes of this section’’).
115 See
112 See section 222(d) of the Advisers Act. We are
unable to quantify the costs of registering with the
States, beyond state registration fees, because the
registration requirements and forms, and the
corresponding time spent by firms, vary by each
state and there is no available data to make such
estimates. The average of state registration fees is
$224, see supra note 91.
113 See supra section IV.C.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 1, 2023 / Proposed Rules
should improve client-adviser
interactions, and the quality of the
services provided, and could encourage
client participation.
However, the positive effects
discussed above could be lessened by
the fact that certain proposed
amendments, such as the removal of the
current de minimis exception, could
adversely affect adviser-client
interactions by preventing internet
investment advisers from relying on the
Internet Adviser Exemption when
providing, to any client, advice beyond
digital investment advisory services. In
some cases, advisers may need to
choose between retaining their
Commission registration (if they rely
solely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption) or continuing to provide
human-directed advice as is allowed
under the current wording of the
exemption. This may lead to advisers
losing some clients who value both
Commission registration and humandirected advice and thus affect
competition in the investment adviser
market.
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D. Reasonable Alternatives
1. Allowing Fewer Non-Internet Clients
As an alternative to removing the de
minimis provision that allowed internet
investment advisers to have 15 or fewer
non-internet clients, the Commission
considered reducing that number, for
example, by setting a defined maximum
of non-internet clients, such as five.
Reducing the maximum to five could
strengthen the link between the Internet
Adviser Exemption and the Internet
advisory business, while retaining an
adviser’s flexibility to accommodate a
small number of customers who seek
advice beyond mere website output
allowed under the proposed amendment
to the exemption.
However, as discussed in section
II.A.2, if an internet investment adviser
is advising non-internet clients, it
should not be exempted from the
registration rules that otherwise apply to
all investment advisers and should more
properly be regulated by a state (or
states) or the Commission (using a
different basis for registration), as
applicable. This alternative may require
advisers to keep additional records
tracing instances in which clients
received advice beyond the model
generated output. Such cases may be
hard to identify because, as discussed
earlier in the Economic Analysis, it may
not always be clear when some human
input was involved and to what extent.
This alternative may thus result in a
greater number of erroneous
registrations and subsequent
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withdrawals as compared to the current
rule.
The Commission also considered
variations, such as defining a maximum
number of non-internet clients as a
percentage of the adviser’s total number
of clients. Under this variation,
however, the maximum number of noninternet clients could be quite large for
advisers with many clients, implying
sufficient local presence to register with
one or more states, while remaining
quite small for investors with few
clients and still limiting their
interactions with clients. This may not
be fair, efficient or reflect the originally
intended allocation of adviser regulation
responsibilities between the
Commission and the states: for example,
advisers with a large number of noninternet clients in a given state are more
likely to have a local presence in the
state as opposed to a national presence.
2. Alternative Definitions of ‘‘Interactive
Website’’
The Commission also considered
adding a different minimum number of
clients to the definition of ‘‘interactive
website.’’ A larger number of clients
would help limit Commission
registration to those advisers with a
national presence. Requiring a larger
minimum number of clients to qualify
for the exemption would exclude
advisers that are not otherwise eligible
for Commission regulation, but that
obtain one or a few clients with sole
purpose of relying on the exemption.
This would work against the originally
intended division of regulatory
authority between the Commission and
the states. A larger minimum number of
clients may, however, disadvantage
advisers with a small clientele or
advisers which are at the early stages of
starting their advisory business.
Further, the definition of ‘‘interactive
website’’ could use a term other than
‘‘operational,’’ such as ‘‘functioning’’ or
‘‘working,’’ to highlight the requirement
that the website can be used by the
clients or prospective clients to interact
with adviser or obtain advising services.
These alternative terms could simplify
the rule text. However, such terms may
be less technical and more prone to
potentially inconsistent interpretations
across advisers.
Further, the definition of ‘‘interactive
website’’ could use a definition of the
term ‘‘digital investment advisory
services,’’ other than ‘‘investment
advice to clients that is generated by the
operational interactive website’s
software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal
information each client supplies
through the operational interactive
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website.’’ For example, the definition of
the term could be less specific, such as
‘‘investment advice to clients that is
generated based on personal
information each client supplies
through an operational interactive
website.’’ This alternative does not
specify the type of technology used to
generate advice, which allows more
flexibility in technology use by internet
investment advisers. However, this may
result in non-internet advisers
attempting to rely on the Internet
Adviser Exemption by referencing a
technology that is not typically used to
provide investment advice via internet.
3. Eliminating the Internet Adviser
Exemption
As another alternative, the
Commission considered eliminating the
Internet Adviser Exemption. With the
proliferation of internet tools and their
frequent use by all types of advisers, the
distinction might no longer be valuable.
In addition, specifically defining the
bounds of the exemption may remain
difficult, as evolving industry practices
could quickly make rule definitions
stale. New innovations and new ways of
communication with the clients, which
are not accounted for by the current or
proposed exemption definitions, could
render the exemption unavailable to
some internet investment advisers who
adopt those new technologies. Further,
as discussed in the section on costs,
erroneous registrations associated with
the rule can create additional costs for
advisers due to registration
withdrawals. Eliminating the exemption
would eliminate these issues.
However, eliminating the exemption
would result in certain costs. Advisers
that currently rely on the exemption
would no longer be able to use it, and
therefore would not be eligible to
register with the Commission unless
they meet the criteria of another
exemption. Losing Commission
registration would impose costs: for
example, the adviser may lose some
clients or may need to comply with state
regulation requirements, as discussed in
the Costs section. Further, losing a basis
for Commission registration would
require the adviser to file form ADV–W.
We estimate the burden to file Form
ADV–W to withdraw from registration
as 0.75 hour per respondent.117
Assuming 256 currently registered
internet investment advisers relying
exclusively on the Internet Adviser
Exemption would have to withdraw
from registration, the total cost of filing
117 See
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Form ADV–W is estimated as
$81,600.118
This alternative may also result in
advisers losing some clients to the
extent clients value Commission
registration. Such clients would have to
seek a different adviser and may face
higher fees as well as switching costs as
discussed above.119 Further, losing
Commission registration may result in
advisers having to register in multiple
(up to 14) states and be subject to the
appropriate state regulations until they
become eligible under a different rule or
exemption, which would create a
burden, especially for new and small
advisers.120
Such costs, however, would likely be
small as the advisers exclusively using
the Internet Adviser Exemption
comprise a very small portion of the
relevant market (as discussed
previously, 1.7% of the total number of
advisers and 0.003% of the total assets
under management). Moreover, state
registration fees are typically the same
as state notice filing fees,121 so to the
extent the adviser is already paying
notice filing fees in the states where it
would need to register, the difference in
filing fees should be de minimis.
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Request for Comment
19. What additional qualitative or
quantitative information should be
considered as part of the baseline for the
economic analysis of the proposals?
20. Do commenters agree with our
characterization of the estimated
benefits, burden hours, and costs?
Please explain and supplement with
data or estimates if available.
21. Are the effects on competition,
efficiency, and capital formation arising
from the proposed amendments
accurately characterized? Please
explain, and provide data or estimates if
available.
22. Please provide data, if available,
on the number of currently registered
advisers that do not have an operational
interactive website.
23. Please provide data, if available,
on the cost of setting up and
118 $425 * 0.75 hour per respondent * 256
advisers. The $425 compensation rate is calculated
as described supra, note 109.
119 As discussed previously in the costs section,
we are unable to quantify these costs due to a lack
of data on such clients and the new advisers they
may have selected. We invite public comment on
this topic.
120 See relevant discussion in section III.C.2. As
stated previously in the Costs discussion, we are
unable to quantify the costs of registering with the
States, beyond state registration fees ($224 on
average across states), because the registration
requirements and forms, and the corresponding
time spent by firms, vary by each state and there
is no available data to make such estimates.
121 See supra note 91.
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maintaining an operational interactive
website.
24. Please provide data, if available,
on the number of non-internet clients of
registered internet investment advisers.
25. Please provide data, if available,
on the location of internet investment
advisers and their clients.
26. Please provide data, if available,
on the application of state law to
internet investment advisers.
27. For what reasons do investment
advisers seek to use the Internet Adviser
Exemption?
28. Please provide data, if available,
on the types of internet clients of
registered internet investment advisers.
What type of clients seek or prefer
internet advisers? Do clients prefer
internet advisers registered with the
Commission?
29. How would clients react if a
previously-registered adviser was no
longer registered with the Commission?
How would current clients react if an
internet adviser could no longer provide
advice by means other than a website?
30. Please provide data, if available,
on the number of clients that may have
to switch to a different adviser as a
result of the proposed amendments.
31. Please provide data, if available,
on the clients an adviser may lose as a
result of withdrawing from registration
with the Commission, as well as the
new advisers the clients may have
selected.
32. Are there known technological
advances in advisory business other
than ‘‘models,’’ ‘‘algorithms,’’ or
‘‘applications’’ generated advice that
should be included in ‘‘digital
investment advisory service’’ definition?
Please explain.
33. Is there a better term than
‘‘operational,’’ which can be used in the
definition of ‘‘interactive website’’? Are
there alternatives to the proposed items
in the definition of ‘‘interactive
website’’?
34. Please provide any available
estimates or data that can help estimate
the average costs of state registrations,
and of state notice filings.
35. Please provide any available data
regarding the advisers that currently
rely on the Internet Adviser Exemption
and will likely need to withdraw from
registration with the Commission. How
many of those advisers may face
multiple state registrations if the
exemption is eliminated?
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Introduction
Our proposal would result in new
‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
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Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).122 The proposed amendments
would have an impact on the current
collection of information burdens of
rule 203A–2(e) and Form ADV under
the Act. The existing collections of
information that we are proposing to
amend are: (i) ‘‘Exemption for Certain
Investment Advisers Operating Through
the Internet (Rule 203A–2(e))’’ (OMB
control number 3235–0559); and (iii)
‘‘Form ADV’’ (OMB control number
3235–0049). The Commission is
submitting these collections of
information to the OMB for review and
approval in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11. An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
We discuss below these proposed
amendments and new collection of
information burdens. Responses
provided to the Commission in the
context of its examination and oversight
program concerning the proposed
amendments to rule 203A–2(e) subject
to the provisions of applicable law.
Responses to the disclosure
requirements of the proposed
amendments to Forms ADV are not kept
confidential.
B. Rule 203A–2(e) Recordkeeping
Requirement
The amended rule would require an
internet investment adviser to provide
investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an operational
interactive website,123 and would
require advisers registering with the
Commission under the exemption to
maintain a record demonstrating that
the adviser’s advisory business has been
conducted through an operational
interactive website in accordance with
the rule.124 Although most advisers
registering under the rule usually
generate the necessary records in the
ordinary conduct of their Internet
advisory business, the recordkeeping
requirement of rule 203A–2(e)
nonetheless may impose a small
additional burden on these advisers. We
estimate this recordkeeping burden to
122 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
124 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(ii). Under the
proposed rule, as under the current rule, advisers
would need to maintain records of their compliance
with the rule. The proposed change to remove the
de minimis exception does not result in an increase
in the burden under the current rule but it has been
accounted for in our estimated burden for the
proposed rule.
123 See
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amount to an average of four (4) hours
annually per adviser.125
We estimate the number of
respondents to this information
collection to be 266 advisers.126
Accordingly, we estimate the total
recordkeeping burden hours for all rule
203A–2(e) advisers to be 1,064 hours.127
We estimate that the total monetized
cost to each internet adviser to comply
with the recordkeeping provision of rule
203A–2(e) would be approximately
$1,700,128 and that the total monetized
cost for the 266 advisers relying on this
exemption at this time would be
$452,200.129
C. Form ADV
We are proposing amendments to
Form ADV Part 1A, Schedule D,
requiring advisers to indicate on
Schedule D that, if applying for
registration with the Commission, the
adviser will provide—and if amending
its existing registration and is
continuing to rely on the internet
adviser exemption, that it has
provided—investment advice to all of
its clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website.130
These changes are designed to provide
information to the Commission in
connection with the registration and
annual amendments to Form ADV filed
by internet investment advisers and
would assist Commission staff in
connection with its review of existing
registrations and registration
applications for compliance with the
rule and, as applicable, for possible
deregistration for an inability to meet
the conditions of the rule. We do not
believe that these ministerial
amendments to Form ADV requiring a
very small number of advisers to check
a box make any substantive
modifications to any existing collection
of information requirements or impose
Number of
responses
Rule 203A–2(e) description of new requirements
any new substantive recordkeeping or
information collection requirements
within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (‘‘PRA’’).
Accordingly, we are not revising any
burden and cost estimates in connection
with these amendments.
D. Total Hour Burden Associated With
Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
We estimate investment advisers that
would be subject to the amended rule
would incur a total annual hour burden
resulting from the collections of
information discussed above of
approximately 1,064 hours, at a
monetized cost of $452,200.131 The total
external burden costs would be $0.
A chart summarizing the various
proposed components of the total
annual burden for investment advisers
with custody of client assets is below.
Internal burden hours
External
burden costs
Final Estimates for Internet Investment Advisers under Rule 203A–2(e)
Annual burden for making records sufficient to demonstrate
compliance with rule.
Annual burden for making representations on Form ADV,
Part 1A, Schedule D.
1,064 (4 hours per adviser) ....
0
De Minimis ..............................
De Minimis ..............................
0
We request comment on whether our
estimates for burden hours and any
external costs as described above are
reasonable. Pursuant to 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission solicits
comments in order to: (i) evaluate
whether the proposed collections of
information are necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(ii) evaluate the accuracy of the
Commission’s estimate of the burden of
the proposed collections of information;
(iii) determine whether there are ways
to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (iv) determine whether
there are ways to minimize the burden
of the collections of information on
those who are to respond, including
through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology.
In addition to these general requests
for comment, we also request comment
specifically on the following issues:
36. Our analysis relies upon certain
assumptions, such as that 266 advisers
will rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption and that it will take advisers
approximately 4 hours per year to
comply with the recordkeeping
requirements proposed. Do commenters
agree with these assumptions? If not,
why not, and what data would
commenters propose?
37. Our analysis relies upon the
assumption that internet investment
advisers will incur no meaningful
125 The adviser would need to demonstrate that
all of its clients obtain investment advice from the
firm exclusively through an operational interactive
website. Internet advisers that conduct their
business exclusively through interactive websites
and whose employees never directly communicate
with clients would likely need to spend very little
time documenting their compliance with the
condition. An adviser that has personnel that assist
clients directly (whether through email, chatbots,
telephonically, or otherwise) with administrative
functions like accessing the website may need to
spend more time.
126 This estimate is based on information reported
by advisers through the Investment Adviser
Registration Depository (‘‘IARD’’). Based on IARD
data as of Dec. 31, 2022, of the approximately
15,360 SEC-registered advisers, 266 checked Item
2.A(11) of Part 1A of Form ADV to indicate their
basis for SEC registration under the Internet Adviser
Exemption. This estimate may be overinclusive to
the extent that advisers currently registered in
reliance on the exemption, including, but not
limited to, those that currently have one or fewer
clients, are not able to satisfy the requirements of
the proposed amendments. The estimate may be
underinclusive to the extent that additional
advisers seek to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption, whether due to the industry’s increased
reliance on technology or otherwise.
127 Four (4) hours × 266 advisers = 1,064 hours.
128 We estimate the cost at a rate of $425 per hour.
The compensation rate for the current approved
information collection used is the rate for a Sr.
Operations Manager in the Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association’s Report on
Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2013 updated for 2023, and is
modified to account for an 1,800-hour work-year
and inflation and multiplied by 5.35 to account for
bonuses, firm size, employee benefits and overhead.
4 hours × $425 per hour = $1,700.
129 1,064 hours × $425 per hour = $452,200. We
do not expect advisers to incur any external cost
burden in connection with this information
collection because advisers registering under the
rule would generate the necessary records in the
ordinary course of their advisory businesses.
130 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iv).
131 This estimate is based upon the following
calculation: 1,064 hours × $425.
We estimate the total burden under
proposed 203A–2(e) to amount to an
average of four (4) hours annually per
adviser. This estimate is identical to the
estimate of the per-adviser burden
under current 203A–2(e). We believe
that the only differences in burden
hours and internal monetized costs
between current 203A–2(e) and
proposed 203A–2(e) will be determined
by the number of advisers subject to the
proposed rule.
E. Request for Comments
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burden to make the proposed
representations on Form ADV, Part 1A,
Schedule D. Do commenters agree with
this assumption? If not, why not, and
what burden hours and costs would
commenters propose?
The agency is submitting the
proposed collections of information to
OMB for approval. Persons wishing to
submit comments on the collection of
information requirements of the
proposed amendments should direct
them to the Office of Management and
Budget, Attention Desk Officer for the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, and
should send a copy to Vanessa A.
Countryman, Secretary, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090, with
reference to File No. S7–13–23. OMB is
required to make a decision concerning
the collections of information between
30 and 60 days after publication of this
release; therefore, a comment to OMB is
best assured of having its full effect if
OMB receives it within 30 days after
publication of this release. Requests for
materials submitted to OMB by the
Commission with regard to these
collections of information should be in
writing, refer to File No. S7–13–23, and
be submitted to the Securities and
Exchange Commission, Office of FOIA
Services, 100 F Street NE, Washington,
DC 20549–2736.
V. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
The Commission has prepared the
following Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (‘‘IRFA’’) in accordance with
section 3(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act 132 regarding our proposed rule.
A. Reason for and Objectives of the
Proposed Action
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1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
We are proposing amendments to the
internet Adviser Exemption, which we
adopted in 2002. The current internet
Adviser Exemption generally requires
an adviser to:
• Provide investment advice to all of
its clients exclusively through an
interactive website, except that the
investment adviser may provide
investment advice to fewer than 15
clients through other means during the
preceding twelve months; and
• Maintain records for a period of not
less than five years demonstrating
compliance with the conditions of the
rule.
132 5
U.S.C. 603(a).
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The proposed changes to the internet
Adviser Exemption are designed to
reflect the evolution in technology and
advisory industry since the adoption in
the rule. In addition, the proposed
changes are designed to better reflect the
allocation of authority between the
Federal government and States that
Congress intended under NSMIA and
the Dodd-Frank Act and enhance
investor protection through more
efficient use of the Commission’s
limited oversight and examination
resources by more appropriately
allocating Commission resources to
advisers with national presence and
allowing smaller advisers with
sufficient local presence to be regulated
by the states.
Specifically, the rule would require
an internet investment adviser to
provide investment advice to all of its
clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website at all
times during which the adviser relies on
the internet Adviser Exemption. The
rule’s definition of interactive website
would be amended to ‘‘operational
interactive website’’ and would be
expanded to include mobile
applications; the definition would also
be amended to define operational
interactive website as one through
which the investment adviser provides
digital investment advisory services on
an ongoing basis to more than one client
(except temporary technological outages
of a de minimis duration).133 The
amended rule would also remove the
current rule’s de minimis exception,134
which exception allows advisers relying
on the rule to provide advice to fewer
than 15 clients through means other
than an interactive website during the
preceding 12 months. As under the
current rule, the amended rule would
require advisers to comply with the
requirement to maintain certain records
in accordance with amended rule 203A–
2(e)(1)(ii). The reasons for, and
objectives of, the proposed amendments
are discussed in more detail in sections
I and II, above. The burdens of these
requirements on small advisers are
discussed below as well as above in
sections III and IV, which discuss the
burdens on all advisers. The
professional skills required to meet
133 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(2). For purposes
of the rule, ‘‘digital investment advisory service’’
would be defined as investment advice to clients
that is generated by the operational interactive
website’s software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information each
client supplies through the operational interactive
website. See id.
134 See rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i).
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these specific burdens are also
discussed in section IV.
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
The amended rule would also require
an adviser to make representations on
its Form ADV, Part 1A, Schedule D,
indicating that it satisfies the
requirements of the rule. This
representation is similar to the
representation that advisers relying on
the multi-state exemption make on their
Form ADV and would assist
Commission staff in connection with its
review of registration applications and
deregistrations of advisers that are not
in compliance with the rule. The
reasons for, and objectives of, the
proposed amendments are discussed in
more detail in sections I and II, above.
The burdens of these requirements on
small advisers are discussed below as
well as above in sections III and IV,
which discuss the burdens on all
advisers. The professional skills
required to meet these specific burdens
are also discussed in section IV.
B. Legal Basis
The Commission is proposing to
amend rule 203A–2(e) and amend Form
ADV under the authority set forth in
sections 203A(c) and 211(a) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15
U.S.C. 80b–3a(c) and 80b–11(a)].
C. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and
Rule Amendments
In developing these proposals, we
have considered their potential impact
on small entities that would be subject
to the proposed amendments. The
proposed amendments would affect a
relatively small number of investment
advisers registered with the
Commission, including some small
entities.
Under Commission rules, for the
purposes of the Advisers Act and the
RFA, an investment adviser generally is
a small entity if it: (1) has assets under
management having a total value of less
than $25 million; (2) did not have total
assets of $5 million or more on the last
day of the most recent fiscal year; and
(3) does not control, is not controlled
by, and is not under common control
with another investment adviser that
has assets under management of $25
million or more, or any person (other
than a natural person) that had total
assets of $5 million or more on the last
day of its most recent fiscal year. Our
proposed amendments would not affect
most investment advisers that are small
entities (‘‘small advisers’’) because they
are generally registered with one or
more state securities authorities and not
with the Commission. Under section
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203A of the Advisers Act, unless subject
to an exemption such as the internet
Adviser Exemption, most small advisers
are prohibited from registering with the
Commission and are regulated by state
regulators. Based on IARD data, we
estimate that as of December 31, 2022,
approximately 489 SEC-registered
advisers are small entities under the
RFA.
1. Small Entities Subject to
Amendments to the Internet Adviser
Rule
As discussed above in section III (the
Economic Analysis), the Commission
estimates that based on IARD data as of
December 31, 2022, approximately 266
investment advisers would be subject to
the amended rule and the related
proposed amendments to Form ADV. Of
the approximately 489 SEC-registered
advisers that are small entities under the
RFA, 190 would be subject to the
proposed amendments to rule 203A–
2(e) and the corresponding amendments
to Form ADV.
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D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A–
2(e)
The proposed amendments to rule
203A–2(e) would impose certain
reporting and compliance requirements
on investment advisers relying on the
exemption for registration with the
Commission, including those that are
small entities. As under the current rule,
all internet investment advisers, which
we estimate to be 266 advisers,135
would be required to comply with the
proposed rule’s requirement to maintain
records in accordance with amended
rule 203A–2(e)(1)(ii).136 The proposed
requirements and rule amendments,
including compliance, reporting, and
recordkeeping requirements, are
summarized in this IRFA (section V.A.,
above). All of these proposed
requirements are also discussed in
detail, above, in sections I and II, and
these requirements and the burdens on
respondents, including those that are
small entities, are discussed above in
sections III and IV (the Economic
Analysis and Paperwork Reduction Act
Analysis, respectively) and below. The
professional skills required to meet
these specific burdens are also
discussed in section IV.
As discussed above, approximately
489 small advisers were registered with
135 Based
on IARD data as of Dec. 31, 2022.
203A–2(e)(1)(ii) is identical to
current 203A–2(e)(1)(ii) except for a conforming
change to reflect the proposed requirement that the
interactive website be ‘‘operational.’’
136 Proposed
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us as of December 31, 2022, and we
estimate that 190 of those small advisers
registered with us would be subject to
the proposed amendments (38.9% of all
registered small advisers). As discussed
above in our Paperwork Reduction Act
Analysis in section IV above, the
proposed amendments to rule 203A–
2(e) under the Advisers Act would
create an annual burden of
approximately 4 hours per adviser, or
760 hours in aggregate for small
advisers.137 We therefore expect the
annual monetized aggregate cost to
small advisers associated with our
proposed amendments to the Internet
Adviser Exemption would be
$323,000.138
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
Proposed amendments to Form ADV
would impose certain reporting and
compliance requirements on investment
advisers relying on the rule to register
and remain registered with the
Commission, including those that are
small entities. An adviser relying on the
rule as a basis for registration would be
required to represent on Schedule D of
its Form ADV that it provides
investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an operational
interactive website.139 An adviser
registered under the rule and continuing
to rely on the rule as a basis for its
registration would be required to make
a representation that it has provided
investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an operational
interactive website.140 The proposed
requirements and rule amendments,
including recordkeeping requirements,
are summarized above in this IRFA
(section V.A). All of these proposed
requirements are also discussed in
detail, above, in section II, and these
requirements and the burdens on
respondents, including those that are
small entities, are discussed above in
sections III and IV (the Economic
Analysis and Paperwork Reduction Act
Analysis) and below. The professional
skills required to meet these specific
burdens are also discussed in section IV.
Our Economic Analysis (section III
above) discusses these costs and
small advisers × 4 hours.
estimate the cost at a rate of $425 per hour.
The compensation rate for the current approved
information collection used is the rate for a Sr.
Operations Manager in the Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association’s Report on
Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2013 updated for 2023, and is
modified to account for an 1,800-hour work-year
and inflation and multiplied by 5.35 to account for
bonuses, firm size, employee benefits and overhead.
760 hours × $425 = $323,000.
139 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iv).
140 See id.
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138 We
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burdens for respondents, which include
small advisers. As discussed above in
our Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
in section IV above, the proposed
amendments to Form ADV would not
increase the annual burden for advisers
and would have no annual monetized
cost.
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or
Conflicting Federal Rules
The Commission believes that there
are no rules that duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with the proposed rule
amendments.
F. Significant Alternatives
The RFA directs the Commission to
consider significant alternatives that
would accomplish our stated objectives,
while minimizing any significant
adverse impact on small entities. We
considered the following alternatives for
small entities in relation to our
proposed amendments to rule 203A–
2(e) and the corresponding proposed
amendments to Form ADV: (i) differing
compliance or reporting requirements
that take into account the resources
available to small entities; (ii) the
clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the
amended rule for such small entities;
(iii) the use of performance rather than
design standards; and (iv) an exemption
from coverage of the proposals, or any
part thereof, for such small entities.
Regarding the first and fourth
alternatives, the Commission believes
that establishing different compliance or
reporting requirements for small
advisers, or exempting small advisers
from the proposed rule, or any part
thereof, would be inappropriate under
these circumstances. Because the
protections of the Advisers Act are
intended to apply equally to clients of
both large and small firms, it would be
inconsistent with the purposes of the
Advisers Act to specify differences for
small entities under the proposed
amendment to rule 203A–2(e) and Form
ADV. As discussed above, the proposed
amendments are intended to better
reflect the allocation of authority
between the Federal government and
States that Congress intended under
NSMIA and the Dodd-Frank Act and
would enhance investor protection
through more efficient use of the
Commission’s limited oversight and
examination resources by more
appropriately allocating Commission
resources to advisers with national
presence and allowing smaller advisers
with sufficient local presence to be
regulated by the states. We believe that
these benefits should apply to clients of
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smaller firms as well as larger firms. In
addition, as discussed above, our staff
would use the corresponding
information that advisers would report
on the proposed amended Form ADV to
help determine compliance with the
rule and to help prepare for
examinations of investment advisers.
Establishing different compliance or
reporting requirements for large and
small advisers relying on the Internet
Adviser Exemption would negate these
benefits and would be inconsistent with
our mandate to provide a system of
public disclosure of investment adviser
information. An internet investment
adviser that is a small entity, however,
by the nature of its business, would
likely spend fewer resources in
maintaining records and completing
Form ADV and amendments than a
larger adviser. Regarding the fourth
alternative, specifically, the
Commission has considered exempting
small advisers from the proposed rule.
Such an exemption would be
inconsistent with the intended purpose
of the proposal, which, in part, is to
provide regulatory relief from multiple
state regulatory requirements. Small
advisers are one of the primary
beneficiaries of this exemption.
Regarding the second alternative, we
believe the current proposal is clear and
that further clarification, consolidation,
or simplification of the compliance
requirements is not necessary. As
discussed above, the amended rule
would require an internet investment
adviser to (i) provide investment advice
to all of its clients exclusively through
an operational interactive website, (ii)
maintain records demonstrating that it
provides investment advice to its clients
exclusively through an operational
interactive website,141 and (iii)
represent on Schedule D of its Form
ADV that it provides investment advice
to all of its clients exclusively through
an operational interactive website.142
These provisions would better reflect
the allocation of authority between the
Federal government and States that
Congress intended under NSMIA and
the Dodd-Frank Act and would enhance
investor protection through more
efficient use of the Commission’s
limited oversight and examination
resources by more appropriately
141 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(i) and (ii). As
with the current rule, the proposed rule
amendments would provide that an internet
investment adviser does not control, is not
controlled by, and is not under common control
with, another investment adviser registered with
the Commission solely in reliance on an adviser
registered under the Internet Adviser Exemption.
See rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iii); proposed rule 203A–
2(e)(1)(iii).
142 See proposed rule 203A–2(e)(1)(iv).
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allocating Commission resources to
advisers with national presence and
allowing smaller advisers with
sufficient local presence to be regulated
by the states. Further, our proposal to
require the representation on Schedule
D of Form ADV would assist the
Commission’s examination and
enforcement capabilities, including
assessing compliance with rules, and
therefore, it would provide important
investor protections.
Regarding the third alternative, we
determined to use design standards
because we determined that removing
the de minimis exception and requiring
internet investment advisers to
exclusively advise internet clients to be
a design standard necessary to better
reflect Congress’s intent under NSMIA
and the Dodd-Frank Act.
G. Solicitation of Comments
We encourage written comments on
the matters discussed in this IRFA. We
solicit comment on the number of small
entities subject to proposed
amendments to rule 203A–2(e) and
related amendments to Form ADV, as
well as the potential impacts discussed
in this analysis; and whether the
proposal could have an effect on small
entities that has not been considered.
We request that commenters describe
the nature of any impact on small
entities and provide empirical data to
support the extent of such impact.
VI. Consideration of Impact on the
Economy
For purposes of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, or ‘‘SBREFA,’’ 143 we must advise
OMB whether a proposed regulation
constitutes a ‘‘major’’ rule. Under
SBREFA, a rule is considered ‘‘major’’
where, if adopted, it results in or is
likely to result in (1) an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more;
(2) a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers or individual industries; or
(3) significant adverse effects on
competition, investment or innovation.
We request comment on the potential
impact of the proposed rule
amendments on the economy on an
annual basis. Commenters are requested
to provide empirical data and other
factual support for their views to the
extent possible.
Statutory Authority
The Commission is proposing to
amend rule 203A–2(e) and amend Form
ADV under the authority set forth in
143 Public Law 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857
(1996) (codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C., 15
U.S.C., and as a note to 5 U.S.C. 601).
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
sections 203A(c) and 211(a) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15
U.S.C. 80b–3a(c) and 80b–11(a)].
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 275 and
279
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements; Securities.
Text of Proposed Rules and Rule and
Form Amendments
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, title 17, chapter II of the Code
of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 275—RULES AND
REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT
ADVISERS ACT OF 1940
1. The authority citation for part 275
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11)(G), 80b–
2(a)(11)(H), 80b–2(a)(17), 80b–3, 80b–4, 80b–
4a, 80b–6(4), 80b–6a, and 80b–11, unless
otherwise noted.
*
*
*
*
*
Section 275.203A–2 is also issued under 15
U.S.C. 80b–3a.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Amend § 275.203A–2 by revising
paragraph (e) to read as follows:
■
§ 275.203A–2 Exemptions from prohibition
on Commission registration.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Internet investment advisers. (1)
An investment adviser that:
(i) Provides investment advice to all
of its clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website at all
times during which the investment
adviser relies on this paragraph (e);
(ii) Maintains, in an easily accessible
place, for a period of not less than five
years from the filing of a Form ADV that
includes a representation that the
adviser is eligible to register with the
Commission under this paragraph (e), a
record demonstrating that it provides
investment advice to its clients
exclusively through an operational
interactive website in accordance with
the limits in paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this
section; and
(iii) Does not control, is not controlled
by, and is not under common control
with, another investment adviser that
registers with the Commission under
paragraph (b) of this section solely in
reliance on the adviser registered under
this paragraph (e) as its registered
adviser.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (e),
‘‘operational interactive website’’ means
a website or mobile application through
which the investment adviser provides
digital investment advisory services on
an ongoing basis to more than one client
E:\FR\FM\01AUP1.SGM
01AUP1
50096
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 1, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(except during temporary technological
outages of a de minimis duration). For
purposes of this rule, ‘‘digital
investment advisory service’’ is
investment advice to clients that is
generated by the operational interactive
website’s software-based models,
algorithms, or applications based on
personal information each client
supplies through the operational
interactive website.
(3) An investment adviser may rely on
the definition of client in
§ 275.202(a)(30)–1 in determining
whether it is eligible to rely on this
paragraph (e).
PART 279—FORMS PRESCRIBED
UNDER THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS
ACT OF 1940
3. The authority citation for part 279
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: The Investment Advisers Act of
1940, 15 U.S.C. 80b–1, et seq., Pub. L. 111–
203, 124 Stat. 1376.
4. Amend Form ADV (referenced in
§ 279.1) by:
■ a. In the instructions to the form,
Form ADV: Instructions for Part 1A, by
revising 2.i.;
■ b. In the Glossary of Terms by:
■ i. Redesignating paragraphs 14.
through 42. as paragraphs 15. through
43.; and paragraphs 43. through 65. as
paragraphs 45. through 67.; and
■ ii. Adding new paragraphs 13. and
44.;
■ c. In Part 1A, revising Item 2.A.(11);
and
■ d. In Part 1A, Schedule D, by adding
Section 2.A.(11).
■
Note: Form ADV is attached as Appendix
A to this document. Form ADV will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
By the Commission.
Dated: July 26, 2023.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
Note: The following appendix will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix A—Form ADV
FORM ADV (Paper Version)
*
*
*
*
*
Form ADV: Instructions for Part 1A
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
2. Item 2: SEC Registration and SEC Report
by Exempt Reporting Advisers
*
*
*
*
*
i. Item 2.A.(11): Internet Adviser. You may
check box 11 only if you are eligible for the
Internet Adviser Exemption from the
prohibition on SEC registration. See SEC rule
203A–2(e). If you check box 11, you must
complete Section 2.A.(11) of Schedule D.
You are eligible for this exemption if:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:05 Jul 31, 2023
Jkt 259001
• You provide investment advice to all of
your clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website at all times
during which you rely on rule 203A–2(e).
Other forms of online or internet investment
advice do not qualify for this exemption;
• You maintain a record demonstrating
that you provide investment advice to your
clients exclusively through an operational
interactive website in accordance with these
limits.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
13. Digital Investment Advisory Service:
Investment advice to clients that is generated
by the operational interactive website’s
software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information
each client supplies through the operational
interactive website.
*
*
*
*
*
44. Operational Interactive website: A
website or mobile application through which
the investment adviser provides digital
investment advisory services on an ongoing
basis to more than one client (except during
temporary technological outages of a de
minimis duration).
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1A
*
*
36 CFR Part 1195
[Docket No. ATBCB–2023–0001]
RIN 3014–AA45
Standards for Accessible Medical
Diagnostic Equipment
Architectural and
Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking;
extension of comment period.
AGENCY:
Glossary of Terms
*
ARCHITECTURAL AND
TRANSPORTATION BARRIERS
COMPLIANCE BOARD
The Architectural and
Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board (hereafter, ‘‘Access Board’’ or
‘‘Board’’), is extending the comment
period for the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on Standards for Accessible
Medical Diagnostic Equipment
published in the Federal Register on
May 23, 2023. In that document, the
Access Board requested comments by
July 24, 2023. The Access Board is
taking this action to allow interested
parties additional time to submit
comments.
SUMMARY:
(11) are an internet adviser relying on rule
203A–2(e);
If you check this box, complete Section
2.A.(11) of Schedule D.
The comment period for the
notice of proposed rulemaking
published on May 23, 2023, at 88 FR
33056, is extended. Comments should
be received on or before August 31,
2023.
*
ADDRESSES:
DATES:
Item 2. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Schedule D
*
*
Section 2.A.(11) Internet Adviser
If you are relying on rule 203A–2(e), the
Internet Adviser Exemption from the
prohibition on registration, you are required
to make a representation about your
eligibility for SEC registration. By checking
the appropriate box, you will be deemed to
have made the required representation.
If you are applying for registration as an
investment adviser with the SEC or changing
your existing Item 2 response regarding your
eligibility for SEC registration, you must
make this representation:
b I will provide investment advice to all
of my clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website.
If you are filing an annual updating
amendment to your existing registration and
are continuing to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for SEC registration, you must
make this representation:
b I have provided and will continue to
provide investment advice to all of my
clients exclusively through an operational
interactive website.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–16287 Filed 7–31–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
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You may submit comments
by any one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: docket@access-board.gov.
Include docket number ATBCB–2023–
0001 in the subject line of the message.
• Mail: Office of General Counsel,
U.S. Access Board, 1331 F Street NW,
Suite 1000, Washington, DC 20004–
1111.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the docket number (ATBCB–
2023–0001) for this regulatory action.
All comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov/docket/ATBCB2023-0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Accessibility Specialist Bobby Stinnette,
(202) 272–0021, stinnette@accessboard.gov; or Attorney Advisor Wendy
Marshall, (202) 272–0043, marshall@
access-board.gov.
E:\FR\FM\01AUP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 146 (Tuesday, August 1, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 50076-50096]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-16287]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 275 and 279
[Release No. IA-6354; File No. S7-13-23]
RIN 3235-AN31
Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers Operating Through the
Internet
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or
``Commission'') is proposing amendments to the rule under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 that exempts certain investment
advisers that provide advisory services through the internet
(``internet investment advisers'') from the prohibition on Commission
registration, as well as related amendments to Form ADV. The proposed
amendments are designed to modernize the rule's conditions to account
for the evolution in technology and the investment advisory industry
since the adoption of the rule.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before October 2, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number S7-13-23 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number S7-13-23. This file number
should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your comments more efficiently, please
use only one method of submission. The Commission will post all
comments on the Commission's Website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments are also available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. Operating conditions may limit access to the
Commission's Public Reference Room. Do not include personal
identifiable information in submissions; you should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. We may redact in
part or withhold entirely from publication submitted material that is
obscene or subject to copyright protection.
Studies, memoranda, or other substantive items may be added by the
Commission or staff to the comment file during this rulemaking. A
notification of the inclusion in the comment file of any such materials
will be made available on the Commission's website. To ensure direct
electronic receipt of such notifications, sign up through the ``Stay
Connected'' option at www.sec.gov to receive notifications by email.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Blair B. Burnett, Senior Counsel,
Investment Company Rulemaking Office; Michael Schrader, Senior Counsel,
Chief Counsel's Office; or Sirimal R. Mukerjee, Senior Special Counsel,
or Melissa Roverts Harke, Assistant Director, Investment Adviser
Rulemaking Office, Division of Investment Management, at (202) 551-6787
or [email protected], Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE, Washington, DC 20549-8549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is proposing for public
comment amendments to 17 CFR 275.203A-2(e) (``rule 203A-2(e)'') under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Advisers Act'' or ``Act'') [15
U.S.C. 80b-1 et seq.] and corresponding amendments to 17 CFR 279.1
(Form ADV) under the Advisers Act.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 80b. Unless otherwise noted, when we refer to the
Advisers Act, or any section of the Advisers Act, we are referring
to 15 U.S.C. 80b, at which the Advisers Act is codified, and when we
refer to rules under the Advisers Act, or any section 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Current Rule 203A-2(e)
B. Need for Reform and Overview of Rule Proposal
II. Discussion
A. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
1. Operational Interactive Website
2. Elimination of De Minimis Non-Internet Client Exception
III. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Baseline and Affected Parties
1. Regulatory Baseline
2. Current Use of the Internet Adviser Exemption
3. Increased Reliance on the Internet Adviser Exemption
[[Page 50077]]
C. Benefits and Costs and Effects on Efficiency, Competition,
and Capital Formation
1. Benefits
2. Costs
3. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
D. Reasonable Alternatives
1. Allowing Fewer Non-internet Clients
2. Alternative Definitions of ``Interactive website''
3. Eliminating the Internet Adviser Exemption
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Introduction
B. Rule 203A-2(e) Recordkeeping Requirement
C. Form ADV
D. Total Hour Burden Associated With Proposed Amendments to Rule
203A-2(e)
E. Request for Comments
V. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
A. Reason for and Objectives of the Proposed Action
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
B. Legal Basis
C. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and Rule Amendments
1. Small Entities Subject to Amendments to the Internet Adviser
Rule
D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance
Requirements
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules
F. Significant Alternatives
G. Solicitation of Comments
VI. Consideration of Impact on the Economy
Statutory Authority
I. Background
We are proposing amendments to rule 203A-2(e) (``Internet Adviser
Exemption'') under the Advisers Act. The Internet Adviser Exemption
provides an exemption from the prohibition on registration with the
Commission that may otherwise affect certain advisers seeking to
register with us. The proposed amendments are designed to modernize the
Internet Adviser Exemption's conditions to account for the evolution in
technology and the investment advisory industry since the adoption of
the rule over twenty years ago. The proposal would also amend Form ADV
to conform certain instructions and definitions to the amended rule and
would also require additional representations regarding an internet
investment adviser's reliance on the rule.
On January 1, 1997, the National Securities Markets Improvement Act
of 1996 (``NSMIA'') amended the Advisers Act to divide the
responsibility for regulating investment advisers between the
Commission and state securities authorities.\2\ Congress allocated to
state securities authorities the primary responsibility for regulating
smaller advisory firms and allocated to the Commission the primary
responsibility for regulating larger advisers.\3\ Section 303 of NSMIA
amended the Advisers Act to include section 203A \4\ to effect this
division of responsibility by generally prohibiting advisers from
registering with the Commission unless they either have assets under
management of not less than $25 million or advise a registered
investment company,\5\ and preempt state adviser statutes regarding
registration, licensing, or qualification as to advisers registered
with the Commission.\6\ Advisers prohibited from registering with the
Commission remain subject to the regulation of state securities
authorities.\7\ The ``$25 million assets under management'' test was
designed by Congress to distinguish investment advisers with a national
presence from those that are essentially local businesses.\8\ Congress
expressed that its goal in enacting the statute was to more efficiently
allocate the Commission's limited resources by allowing the Commission
to concentrate its regulatory responsibilities on larger advisers with
national businesses, and to reduce the burden to investment advisers of
the overlapping and duplicative regulation between Federal and State
regulators.\9\ Congress furthered this objective on July 21, 2010 with
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-
Frank Act''),\10\ which amended certain provisions of the Advisers Act,
including section 203A, to, among other things, reallocate primary
responsibility for oversight of investment advisers by delegating
generally to the states responsibility over certain mid-sized
advisers--i.e., subject to certain exceptions, those that have between
$25 million and $100 million of assets under management.\11\
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\2\ National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996, Public
Law 104-290, 110 Stat. 3416 (1996) (codified in various sections of
15 U.S.C.).
\3\ See S. Rep. No. 293, 104th Cong., 2d Sess. 3-4 (1996)
(``Senate Report''), at 4.
\4\ Public Law 104-290, Sec. 303; see also section 203A of the
Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-3a].
\5\ Section 203A(a)(1) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-
3a(a)(1)].
\6\ Section 203A(b) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-3a(b)].
\7\ Section 222 of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-18a]. The
prohibition in section 203A against registration with the Commission
applies to advisers whose principal office and place of business is
in a United States jurisdiction that has enacted an investment
adviser statute. See Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1633 (May
15, 1997) [62 FR 28112 (May 22, 1997)], at text accompanying n.83.
\8\ See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 4-5 (``The states should
play an important and logical role in regulating small investment
advisers whose activities are likely to be concentrated in their
home state.'').
\9\ See Senate Report, supra note 3, at 2-4 (stating
``[r]ecognizing the limited resources of both the Commission and the
states, the Committee believes that eliminating overlapping
regulatory responsibilities will allow the regulators to make the
best use of their scarce resources to protect clients of investment
advisers.'').
\10\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Public Law No. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
\11\ Unlike a small adviser, a mid-sized adviser is not
prohibited from registering with the Commission: (i) if the adviser
is not required to be registered as an investment adviser with the
securities commissioner (or any agency or office performing like
functions) of the state in which it maintains its principal office
and place of business; (ii) if registered, the adviser would not be
subject to examination as an investment adviser by that securities
commissioner; or (iii) if the adviser is required to register in 15
or more states. See section 410 of the Dodd-Frank Act; section 203A
of the Advisers Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress has recognized, however, that it would be more efficient
to regulate some advisers at the Federal level despite managing less
than the minimum thresholds in assets under management and gave the
Commission authority to enable advisers to register with us if the
prohibition would be ``unfair, a burden on interstate commerce, or
otherwise inconsistent with the purposes of [section 203A].'' \12\ In
exercising this authority, the Commission in 2002 adopted the Internet
Adviser Exemption, which relieves certain advisers that provide
advisory services primarily through the internet from the burdens of
multiple state regulation and allows them to register with the
Commission.\13\
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\12\ Section 203A(c) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-3a(c)].
See also Senate Report, supra note 3, at 5 and 15.
\13\ See Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers Operating
Through the Internet, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2028 (Dec.
12, 2002) [67 FR 19500 (Dec. 18, 2002)], at section I (``2002
Adopting Release''). The exercise of our exemptive authority enables
registration with the Commission and preempts most state law with
respect to the exempted advisers that register with us. See rule
203A-2.
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A. Current Rule 203A-2(e)
The Internet Adviser Exemption was designed to create a narrow
exemption from the prohibition on registration for certain advisers
(``internet investment advisers''), which typically do not manage the
assets of their clients or advise a registered investment company, and
thus do not meet the statutory thresholds for registration with the
Commission.\14\ These advisers,
[[Page 50078]]
therefore, ``do not fall neatly into the model assumed by Congress when
it added [s]ection 203A to the Act to divide regulatory authority over
advisers.'' \15\ The Commission concluded that, ``as applied to these
advisers, the application of the prohibition on Commission registration
would be ``unfair, a burden on interstate commerce, or otherwise
inconsistent with the purposes of [section 203A].'' \16\ Under the
current Internet Adviser Exemption, an adviser is exempt from the
prohibition on Commission registration if the adviser:
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\14\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13. The Commission
originally adopted the Internet Adviser Exemption as rule 203A-2(f)
and redesignated it as rule 203A-2(e) effective Sept. 19, 2011. See
Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment Advisers Act of
1940, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 3221 (June 22, 2011) [76
FR 42949 (July 19, 2011)] (``2011 Redesignation'').
\15\ 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section II (citing
Section 203A(c)).
\16\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Provides investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an interactive website, except it may provide
investment advice to fewer than 15 clients through other means during
the preceding 12 months;
Maintains a record demonstrating that it provides
investment advice to its clients exclusively through an interactive
website in accordance with the limits described in the bullet point
above; and
Does not control, is not controlled by, and is not under
common control with, another investment adviser registered with the
Commission solely in reliance on an adviser registered under the
Internet Adviser Exemption.
As the 2002 Adopting Release explained, absent the Internet Adviser
Exemption, Internet investment advisers would likely incur the burden
of temporarily registering in multiple states and later withdrawing.
State investment adviser registration statutes generally obligate
advisers to register in every state in which the adviser obtains more
than a de minimis number of clients. The 2002 Adopting Release reasoned
that because internet investment advisers provide investment advice to
their clients through an interactive website, they are likely to have
no physical local presence in a community or state, with little or no
in-person contact with advisory clients. Accordingly, the adviser's
clients can come from any state, at any time. As a result, an internet
investment adviser would have to, as a practical matter, register in
multiple states to ensure that its registration will be in place when
or if it obtains the requisite number of clients from any particular
state. Further, an internet investment adviser may subsequently become
eligible for an existing exemption under 17 CFR 275.203A-2(d) (``rule
203A-2(d)''), permitting Commission registration for advisers otherwise
obligated to register in at least 15 states, but typically not before
the adviser had already incurred the burden of registering, and
potentially deregistering, in multiple states.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ 17 CFR 275.203A-2(d). An investment adviser relying on the
multi-state exemption would not be eligible for that exemption until
the adviser had obtained the requisite number of clients in 15
states to trigger its registration obligations in those states.
Under the rule, an investment adviser relying on this exemption must
represent that it has reviewed its obligations under state and
Federal law and has concluded that it is required to register as an
investment adviser with the securities authorities of at least 15
states. At the time the Internet Adviser Exemption was adopted, the
``multi-state adviser exemption'' enabled an investment adviser who
was required to register as an investment adviser with 30 or more
states to register with the Commission. See 2002 Adopting Release,
supra note 13, at section II.A. Effective September 19, 2011, the
Commission amended the multi-state exemption to enable Commission
registration for advisers otherwise obligated to register in at
least 15 states, rather than 30 states, and renumbered the multi-
state exemption rule 203A-2(e) as rule 203A-2(d). See 2011
Redesignation, supra note 14, at section II.A.5.c and n.118.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
From the adoption of the Internet Adviser Exemption through
December 31, 2022, approximately 845 advisers have relied on the
exemption as a basis for registration with the Commission.\18\ Of these
advisers, 718 initially registered exclusively in reliance on the
Internet Adviser Exemption. As of December 31, 2022, approximately 256
advisers were relying exclusively on the Internet Adviser Exemption.
The exemption has been used with increasing frequency recently, with
149 of the 256 advisers relying exclusively on the exemption
registering after 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Need for Reform and Overview of Rule Proposal
The asset management industry has experienced substantial growth
and change since the rule was adopted over twenty years ago. Assets
under management have more than quadrupled since the adoption of the
rule.\19\ Similarly, since the adoption of the rule advisers are
increasingly using technology to interact with clients, including
through email, websites, mobile applications, investor portals, text
messages, chatbots and other similar means.\20\ The use of technology
is now central to how many investment advisers provide their products
and services to clients.\21\ For example, the growth of services
available on digital platforms, such as those offered by online
brokerage firms and robo-advisers, has multiplied the opportunities for
retail investors, in particular, to invest in and trade securities.
This increased accessibility has been one of the many factors
associated with the increase of retail investor participation in U.S.
securities markets in recent years.\22\ Concomitant with the growth in
assets under management and the broader evolution and adoption of
technology in the investment advisory industry, we have seen an uptick
in the number of advisers seeking to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption.\23\ We recognize that investment advisers are increasingly
utilizing a wide range of technologies in their businesses. The
Internet Adviser Exemption, however, was intended as a narrow exemption
for entities that are in the business of exclusively providing
[[Page 50079]]
investment advice through an interactive website.\24\
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\19\ There were approximately $23.6 trillion regulatory assets
under management among registered investment advisers as of Dec.
2003 and approximately $115 trillion assets under management as of
Dec. 2022. Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
\20\ See, e.g., Andrew Osterland, Technology is redefining that
client-financial advisor relationship (Oct. 14, 2019), https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/14/technology-is-redefining-that-client-financial-advisor-relationship.html (``Easy-to-use client portals
have become essential to provide investors with the ability to see
their accounts, exchange secure emails with their advisor and share
documents.'').
\21\ We note that the Commission is also proposing rules
requiring broker-dealers and investment advisers to eliminate or
neutralize certain conflicts of interest associated with their use
of technologies that optimize for, predict, guide, forecast, or
direct investment-related behaviors or outcomes, directly or
indirectly. These proposed rules derive, in part, from the
Commission's recognition that investment advisers in their
interactions with investors are increasingly using, among other
technologies, predictive data analytics, artificial intelligence,
including machine learning, deep learning, neural networks, natural
language processing, and large language models, as well as other
technologies that make use of historical or real-time data, lookup
tables, or correlation matrices. See Conflicts of Interest
Associated with the Use of Predicative Data Analytics by Broker-
Dealers and Investment Advisers, Investment Advisers Act Release No.
6353 (July 26, 2023).
\22\ See, e.g., Maggie Fitzgerald, Retail Investors Continue to
Jump Into the Stock Market After GameStop Mania, CNBC (Mar. 10,
2021), https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/10/retail-investor-ranks-in-the-stock-market-continue-to-surge.html (providing year-over-year app
download statistics for Robinhood, Webull, Sofi, Coinbase, TD
Ameritrade, Charles Schwab, E-Trade, and Fidelity from 2018-2020,
and monthly figures for Jan. and Feb. 2021); John Gittelsohn, Schwab
Boosts New Trading Accounts 31% After Fees Go to Zero, Bloomberg
(Nov. 14, 2019), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-11-14/schwab-boosts-brokerage-accounts-by-31-after-fees-cut-to-zero
(noting that Charles Schwab opened 142,000 new trading accounts in
Oct., a 31% jump over Sept.'s pace).
\23\ Based on Form ADV data, the number of advisers relying
exclusively on the exemption has grown from approximately 107
advisers as of Dec. 2015 to 256 advisers as of Dec. 2022.
\24\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section II.A.
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Our examination staff has observed numerous compliance deficiencies
by advisers relying on the rule.\25\ For example, in 2021 the staff
noted that, ``[n]early half of the [examined] advisers claiming
reliance on the Internet Adviser Exemption were ineligible to rely on
the exemption, and many were not otherwise eligible for SEC-
registration.'' \26\ As part of the examinations described in the Risk
Alert, the staff observed advisers relying on this exemption that did
not have an interactive website. In addition, the staff observed
advisers relying on this exemption that provided advisory personnel who
could expand upon the investment advice provided by the adviser's
interactive website or otherwise provide investment advice to clients,
such as financial planning, outside of the adviser's interactive
website.\27\ Advisers registered under rule 203A-2(e) providing advice
to 15 or more clients other than through the adviser's interactive
website during the preceding twelve months may not rely on this
exemption.\28\
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\25\ See Observations from Examinations of Advisers that Provide
Electronic Investment Advice (Nov. 9, 2021), https://www.sec.gov/files/exams-eia-risk-alert.pdf (``Risk Alert''). Staff documents
(including those cited herein) represent the views of Commission
staff and are not a rule, regulation, or statement of the
Commission. The Commission has neither approved nor disapproved the
content of these documents and, like all staff statements, they have
no legal force or effect, do not alter or amend applicable law, and
create no new or additional obligations for any person.
\26\ Id. at 8. The Risk Alert noted that this has been a common
finding for many years. Id. at n.28. The Commission has cancelled
the registration of advisers claiming reliance on the Internet
Adviser Exemption for not satisfying the requisite conditions and
also brought actions against them. See, e.g., Ajenifuja Investments,
LLC; Order Cancelling Registration Pursuant to Section 203(h) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Act Release No.
5110 (Feb. 12, 2019) (``Ajenifuja'') (finding that the adviser was
registered as an internet investment adviser for over three years
and in that time period did not have an interactive website and did
not demonstrate any other basis for registration eligibility);
Strategic Options, LLC; Order Denying a Request for Hearing and
Cancelling Registration Pursuant to Section 203(h) of the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 5689 (Feb.
24, 2021) (finding that since its registration in 2015, the
registrant has not had, and does not have, any clients for which it
provides investment advice through an interactive website). See also
In re. RetireHub, Inc., Investment Advisers Act Release No. 3337
(Dec. 15, 2011) (settled) (``RetireHub'') (alleging that the adviser
was never an internet investment adviser because, over the course of
its registration, it did not provide investment advice exclusively
through an interactive website, advised more clients than permitted
through personal contact, or both).
\27\ Risk Alert, supra note 25, at 8.
\28\ See rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
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Moreover, the Internet Adviser Exemption is unavailable to an
internet investment adviser if another adviser in a control
relationship with the internet investment adviser relies on the
Internet investment adviser's registration under the rule as the basis
for its own registration.\29\ The staff observed that some advisers'
affiliates were operating as unregistered investment advisers, because
the affiliates were operationally integrated with the registered
advisers, and the Internet Adviser Exemption prohibited those
affiliates from relying on the internet investment adviser's
registration as a basis for their own registration.\30\
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\29\ See rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iii); see also 2002 Adopting Release,
supra note 13 (discussing that this provision is meant to address
the concern that an internet investment adviser intent on evading
the restrictions on non-internet clients under the rule might
attempt to organize a subsidiary firm to serve its non-internet
clients, and assert rule 203A-2(b) as a basis to register the
subsidiary with the Commission, even though the subsidiary does not
manage the minimum amount of client assets required for registration
with the Commission).
\30\ See Risk Alert, supra note 25, at 8.
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As discussed above, the exemption has been used with increasing
frequency recently.\31\ At the same time, the frequency of registration
withdrawals and cancellations of internet investment advisers also has
increased since the rule's adoption, which has affected the cumulative
growth in the number of advisers relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption.\32\ For example, approximately 64 percent of the advisers
withdrawing their registration under the rule have done so since 2017,
while only approximately 36 percent of the withdrawing advisers did so
from the rule's adoption in 2002 through 2016.\33\
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\31\ See supra note 23.
\32\ As an example, the Commission has cancelled the
registration of internet investment advisers after finding the firms
are no longer in existence, not engaged in business as an investment
adviser, or prohibited from registering as an investment adviser
under section 203A of the Act (and related rules). See supra note
26. The Commission also has revoked the registration of an internet
investment adviser on the basis that it was ineligible to rely on
the exemption. See In re. Boveda Asset Management, Inc., Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 6016 (May 6, 2022) (referencing SEC v.
Boveda Asset Management, Inc. and George Kenneth Witherspoon, Jr.,
1:21-cv-05321-SCJ (N. D. GA) (Apr. 27, 2022) (``Boyeda'')).
\33\ Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
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Given that internet investment advisers may have characteristics
that distinguish them from other types of investment advisers
contemplated by Congress when it added section 203A to the Act, the
Commission established a ``narrow exemption,'' allowing certain
investment advisers to register with the Commission despite managing
less than the minimum threshold in assets under management.\34\ This
narrow exemption was intended to divide regulatory authority over
advisers that, unlike state-registered advisers, have no local presence
and whose advisory activities are not limited to one or a few
states.\35\ While some advisers have used the exemption as intended,
others have used this exemption by registering with the Commission
while failing to satisfy the conditions of the exemption. As discussed
above, some of these advisers have not provided investment advice to
any clients through an interactive website, in some cases for three or
four years.\36\ Advisers with very limited or zero clients are more
akin to local businesses that can be effectively regulated by one or a
few states, consistent with Congress's intent in NSMIA's amendments to
the Advisers Act.\37\ Moreover, some of the advisers relying on this
exemption provided advisory personnel who could expand upon the
investment advice provided by the adviser's interactive website or
otherwise provide investment advice to clients without consideration of
the 15 non-internet clients per 12-month period de minimis exception
within the Internet Adviser Exemption.\38\ Certain of these advisers
have failed to produce copies of books and records required for
advisers relying on the exemption, including books and records
necessary to demonstrate compliance with the exception for providing
non-interactive website-based advice to fewer than 15 clients in a 12-
month period.\39\ The number of registration applications and approvals
under this exemption have increased, while the number of cancellations,
withdrawals, and registration reliance changes resulting from an
inability to meet the conditions of the rule also increased.
Accordingly, in 2021 the Commission issued a request for information
and comments
[[Page 50080]]
on the Internet Adviser Exemption, among other areas.\40\
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\34\ See supra note 14 and accompanying text.
\35\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section II.
\36\ See supra note 26.
\37\ See also infra section III.B.2, stating that as of Dec.
2022, 266 advisers rely on the internet adviser exemption. Of those
advisers, 101 (38%), report zero clients. The median number of
reported clients is six. The data comes from Form ADV filings
received by the Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
\38\ See RetireHub, supra note 26 (finding that RetireHub
employed on-campus representatives at the university who were made
available to provide investment advice to university employees).
\39\ See Boyeda, supra note 32 (finding that the firm violated
section 204(a) of the Advisers Act by failing to furnish to the
Commission copies of books and records that the firm was required to
make, keep, and provide to representatives of the Commission
pursuant to an examination).
\40\ See Request for Information and Comments on Broker-Dealer
and Investment Adviser Digital Engagement Practices, Related Tools
and Methods, and Regulatory Considerations and Potential Approaches,
Exchange Act Release No. 92766 (Aug. 27, 2021) [86 FR 49067 (Sept.
1, 2021)] (``2021 RFC''). The Commission received numerous comments
in response to the 2021 RFC, which we considered in developing this
proposal. Comment letters received in response to the 2021 RFC are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-10-21/s71021.htm.
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We believe that the ``narrow exemption'' created over twenty years
ago should be amended to reflect its intended, narrow use in light of
technological advances and changes in the investment adviser
industry.\41\ In addition, this would further the investor protection
objectives that Congress expressed when designing section 203A of the
Advisers Act by better allocating the Commission's limited oversight
and examination resources to those advisers that should be subject to
national rules.\42\ In light of these observations and as discussed in
more detail below, we are proposing certain targeted amendments to rule
203A-2(e) with certain corresponding amendments to Form ADV.
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\41\ See supra note 21 and accompanying text.
\42\ See supra note 9.
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II. Discussion
A. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
Using the authority provided by section 203A(c) of the Act, we are
proposing amendments to the internet Adviser Exemption to reflect
developments since the adoption of the rule. The amendments we are
proposing to the internet Adviser Exemption would require internet
investment advisers relying on the internet Adviser Exemption to at all
times have an ``operational'' interactive website.\43\ We also are
proposing to eliminate the de minimis exception in the current rule
that permits internet investment advisers to have fewer than 15 non-
internet clients in any 12-month period. In light of the widespread use
of the internet, as well as the relative ease of building and
maintaining a website and applications, we propose requiring that
internet investment advisers have an operational interactive website at
all times during which the internet investment adviser relies on the
Internet Adviser Exemption. We also propose that this exemption should
only be available to those advisers that provide advice exclusively to
clients through an operational interactive website.
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\43\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
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The Commission intended the Internet Adviser Exemption to be a
narrow exemption for certain investment advisers that did not fall
neatly within the framework established by Congress to divide
regulatory authority between state regulators and the Commission.\44\
The proposed amendments would adapt the rule to the broader evolution
in technology and the marketplace, and would better align current
practices in the investment adviser industry with the narrow exemption
that was intended to reflect the allocation of responsibility for
regulating investment advisers set forth by Congress under NSMIA and
the Dodd-Frank Act. In addition, the proposed amendments would enhance
investor protection through more efficient use of the Commission's
limited oversight and examination resources by more appropriately
allocating Commission resources to advisers with national presence and
allowing smaller advisers with sufficient local presence to be
regulated by the states.
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\44\ See supra note 24.
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1. Operational Interactive Website
The current Internet Adviser Exemption requires, among other
things, that an internet investment adviser provide investment advice
to all of its clients exclusively through an interactive website,
except that the investment adviser may provide investment advice to
fewer than 15 clients through other means during the preceding 12
months.\45\ The rule defines ``interactive website'' to mean a website
in which computer software-based models or applications provide
investment advice to clients based on personal information each client
supplies through the website. We are proposing the following targeted
amendments:
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\45\ See rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
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First, we are proposing to amend the ``interactive
website'' defined term to ``operational interactive website.''
Second, we are proposing to define an ``operational
interactive website'' to mean a website or mobile application through
which the investment adviser provides digital investment advisory
services on an ongoing basis to more than one client (except during
temporary technological outages of a de minimis duration).
Third, we are proposing to define ``digital investment
advisory service'' as investment advice to clients that is generated by
the operational interactive website's software-based models,
algorithms, or applications based on personal information each client
supplies through the operational interactive website.
Finally, we are proposing to require that an internet
investment adviser provide advice through an operational interactive
website at all times during which the internet investment adviser
relies on the Internet Adviser Exemption.
The amendments are designed to modernize the definitions and to
adapt the rule more broadly to the evolution of the asset management
industry.
The proposed amendments specify that an internet investment adviser
must provide digital investment advisory services through its website
on an ongoing basis to more than one client. We understand that
unforeseen technological issues outside of the control of an adviser
occur at times. We also understand that websites may be temporarily
inoperable due to periodic maintenance to ensure that the website
performs optimally. Accordingly, we have incorporated into the
definition of ``operational interactive website'' a hardship clause
that allows an internet investment adviser to satisfy the rule despite
temporary technological outages of the operational interactive website
of a de minimis duration. The proposed amendments also specify that the
requirement to provide an operational interactive website would apply
at all times during which the adviser relies on the Internet Adviser
Exemption (i.e., at the time of the adviser's registration and at all
times an adviser is registered in reliance on the amended Internet
Adviser Exemption).\46\ Currently, the Internet Adviser Exemption does
not specify that an interactive website be ``operational,'' whether at
the time of registration or otherwise. Further, in the 2002 Adopting
Release, the Commission did not specify the timing of when the
interactive website must be operational, though no grace period exists
under the current rule.\47\ With advances in
[[Page 50081]]
technology since the adoption of the rule more than twenty years
ago,\48\ we believe that advisers seeking to rely on the Internet
Adviser Exemption can use the 120-day rule to develop, test, and launch
an operational interactive website and obtain initial clients by the
time the 120-day temporary registration expires.\49\ Moreover, the
requirement that an internet investment adviser must provide digital
investment advisory services through its website on an ongoing basis to
more than one client is intended to reflect that advisers with zero or
one client are more akin to local businesses that can be effectively
regulated by a state, consistent with Congress' intent in NSMIA's
amendments to the Advisers Act.
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\46\ In the case of an existing registered investment adviser
seeking to change its registration to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption, the adviser would be required to have an operational
interactive website at the time in which it begins relying on the
rule.
\47\ See Ajenifuja, supra note 26 (finding that rule 203A-2(e)
does not contain a grace period). The Commission stated in the 2002
Adopting Release: ``Nor is it likely Internet Investment Advisers
could rely on rule 203A-2(d) [redesignated as rule 203A-2(c), see
2011 Redesignation, supra note 14 to carry them through an initial
period of operation without state registration in anticipation of
eligibility under the multi-state exemption. If an adviser relying
on [redesignated] rule [203A-2(c)] has not become eligible for SEC
registration within 120 days, it must withdraw its registration.''
2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section IV.A. Given
advances in technology, we preliminarily believe that internet
investment advisers should be able to develop, test, and deploy an
operational interactive website and begin serving clients within 120
days.
\48\ See generally, Max Roser, Hannah Ritchie and Edouard
Mathieu, Technological Change (Mar. 2022), https://ourworldindata.org/technological-change (compiling statistics of
technological growth); Martin Armstrong, How Many Websites Are
There? (Aug. 6, 2021), https://www.statista.com/chart/19058/number-of-websites-online/ (showing growth from inception of the internet
to approximately 1.88 billion websites in 2021); Total Number of
Websites (accessed July. 11, 2023), https://www.internetlivestats.com/total-number-of-websites/ (identifying,
among others, 38,760,373 websites in 2002 and 1,106,671,903 websites
in 2023).
\49\ If the adviser is initially relying on rule 203A-2(c) as a
basis for registration (``120-day rule''), the interactive website
would need to be operational within 120 days of the adviser's
registration. For example, an adviser could register with the
Commission in anticipation of reliance on the Internet Adviser
Exemption by using the 120-day rule, have 0 clients with no website,
and within 120 days create an operational interactive website and
obtain more than one client, then file an amendment to its Form ADV
indicating that it has become eligible for the Internet Adviser
Exemption.
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The proposed definition of ``operational interactive website'' is
also designed to specify the rule's application to advisers' use of
technology, including their use of mobile applications, in connection
with their eligibility to rely on the rule.\50\ Thus, the proposed
changes would expressly permit an internet investment adviser to use
mobile applications to provide investment advice to clients.\51\ It is
appropriate to allow internet investment advisers using mobile
applications to interact with advisory clients to rely on the Internet
Adviser Exemption because clients increasingly access services,
including investment advisory services, through mobile
applications,\52\ and mobile applications can provide interactive
functionality similar to the functionality of websites.\53\ By
including mobile applications in the definition of ``operational
interactive website,'' internet investment advisers will have broad
flexibility to design the interactive website in a manner that best
suits their needs and their clients' needs. We understand that mobile
applications use various methods of communication, including, for
example, push notifications, in-app messages, and similar forms of
electronic communication. The amended rule would permit any form of
mobile application technology through which the investment adviser
provides digital investment advisory services.
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\50\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(2).
\51\ The term ``mobile application'' generally, refers to a
software application developed primarily for use on wireless
computing devices, such as smartphones and tablets. See, e.g.,
techopedia, Mobile Application (Mobile App) (Aug. 7, 2020), https://www.techopedia.com/definition/2953/mobile-application-mobile-app
(``techopedia'').
\52\ See Sarah Perez, Majority of Digital Media Consumption Now
Takes Place in Mobile Apps, TechCrunch (Aug. 21, 2014) (``[M]obile
apps [. . .] eat up more of our time than desktop usage or mobile
web surfing, accounting for 52% of the time spent using digital
media. Combined with mobile web, mobile usage as a whole accounts
for 60% of time spent, while desktop-based digital media consumption
makes up the remaining 40%.''); see generally, Hannah Glover,
`Healthy Paranoia' Drives Innovation at Vanguard (June 17, 2016),
https://www.ignites.com/c/1385943/158263?referrer_module=searchSubFromFF&highlight=%22mobile%20applications%22 (``Next on the horizon is mobile applications. When you
travel [outside of the U.S.], you see how PC-centric technology does
not exist anywhere else[.] In the future, [. . . [i]t's going to be
all about the phone. Companies without easy-to-use, yet powerful,
apps will be left behind [. . . .]'') (internal quotations omitted).
\53\ See, e.g., techopedia, supra note 51 (``Mobile applications
frequently serve to provide users with similar services to those
accessed on PCs.''); see, e.g., Fundfire, What Are Major IT Trends
in Wealth Mgmt? (Oct. 15, 2012), https://www.fundfire.com/c/422571/47531?referrer_module=searchSubFromFF&highlight=%22mobile%20applications%22 (``Dedicated mobile applications for smartphones and tablets
can enable unified digital communication between advisors and their
clients--a combination of email, chat, voice and video.'').
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We also are proposing to define ``digital investment advisory
services'' as ``investment advice to clients that is generated by the
operational interactive website's software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information each client supplies through
the operational interactive website.'' \54\ The proposed definition is
designed to address that, like the current rule, an adviser must
provide investment advice exclusively through an interactive website.
However, the proposed definition would specify that the generation of
such advice could include advice that is generated by software-based
algorithms in addition to software-based models or applications, in
each case, based on personal information each client supplies through
the interactive website. We understand that advisers are increasingly
using algorithms to generate investment advice in order to provide
clients with cost-effective and tailored advice and the definition
encompasses this use.\55\ The proposed amendments would specify that
the investment advice to clients must be ``generated by'' the website's
software-based models, algorithms, or applications.\56\ Like the
current rule,\57\ this new definition is designed to reflect that an
adviser's personnel are not permitted to generate, modify, or otherwise
provide client-specific investment advice through the
[[Page 50082]]
operational interactive website or otherwise.\58\ Said differently,
human-directed client-specific investment advice, delivered through
electronic means, would not be eligible activity under the Investment
Adviser Exemption. The use of the internet or other electronic media to
communicate with clients is not, alone, a sufficient basis for an
adviser to rely on the exemption.\59\
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\54\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(2). Personal information
provided by the internet client generally should consist of
information relevant to the client's financial situation, level of
financial sophistication, investment experience, and financial goals
and objectives. See also Commission Interpretation Regarding
Standard of Conduct for Investment Advisers, Investment Advisers Act
Release No. 5248 (June 5, 2019), at 12-14 (discussing an adviser's
duty of care, which includes a duty to provide advice that is in the
best interest of the client).
\55\ See, e.g., Investment Adviser Association, 2020 Evolution
Revolution (2020), at 8, https://higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws.com/INVESTMENTADVISER/aa03843e-7981-46b2-aa49-c572f2ddb7e8/UploadedImages/resources/Evolution_Revolution_2020_v8.pdf (noting that by 2020, ``two of the
top five advisers as measured by number of non-high net worth
individual clients served [were] digital advice platforms,
representing 7.5 million clients, an increase of 2.7 million clients
from [the prior year].''); Robo-Advisers, IM Guidance Update No.
2017-02 (Feb. 2017), https://www.sec.gov/investment/im-guidance-2017-02.pdf (``Robo-Advisers Guidance''); Akin Ajayi, The Rise of
the Robo-Advisers (July 16, 2015), https://www.credit-suisse.com/about-us-news/en/articles/news-and-expertise/the-rise-of-the-robo-advisers-201507.html (``Robo-advisers--to use the suitably
futuristic moniker adopted as a description for these services--are
investment services driven by automated customer service and an
investment strategy governed by computer algorithms. A clutch of
start-ups, largely located in the United States but spreading to
Europe and Asia, have emerged over the last few years.'').
\56\ As a fiduciary, investment advisers have a duty to make
full and fair disclosure of all material facts to, and to employ
reasonable care to avoid misleading, clients. Given the unique
aspects of an internet investment advisers' business models and
because client relationships may occur with limited, if any, human
interaction, internet investment advisers generally should consider
the most effective way to communicate to their clients the
limitations, risks, and operational aspects of their advisory
services. For example, internet investment advisers generally should
effectively disclose to clients, among other matters, that an
algorithm is used to manage individual client accounts with a
description of the particular risks inherent in the use of an
algorithm to manage client accounts.
\57\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section II.A.1
(``[T]he exemption is for advisers that provide investment advice to
their Internet clients `exclusively' through their interactive Web
sites. An adviser relying on the exemption may not use its advisory
personnel to elaborate or expand upon the investment advice provided
by its interactive Web site, or otherwise provide investment advice
to its Internet clients, except as permitted by the de minimis
exception discussed below.'').
\58\ This excludes human involvement and input other than to the
degree necessary for technological oversight and management of a
website's software-based models, algorithms, or applications. But
see Comment Letter of Morningstar, Inc. (Oct. 1, 2021)
(recommending, in response to the 2021 RFC, that the Commission
should modify the Internet Adviser Exemption to explicitly permit
human interaction for ``certain types of information''--for example,
costs, allocations, financial education--``as long as the actual
asset allocation is conducted by the algorithm.'').
\59\ This treatment is unchanged from the current rule. See 2002
Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section II.A.1 (``The rule is
thus not available to advisers that merely use Web sites as
marketing tools or that use Internet vehicles such as E-mail, chat
rooms, bulletin boards and webcasts or other electronic media in
communicating with clients . . . expansion of the rule to include
such activities as suggested by some commenters could undermine
NSMIA's allocation of regulatory responsibility over smaller
advisers to state securities authorities.'').
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The proposed amendments would not prohibit advisory personnel from
all interactions with advisory clients. Advisory personnel could
continue to assist clients with technical issues in connection with the
use of the website (e.g., accessing the website, etc.), including by
assisting clients with explanations of how the algorithm generating the
investment advice was developed or operates. Advisory personnel
generally should be able to perform those services telephonically,
through email, live electronic chats, and similar forms of electronic
communication. As discussed below, the amended rule would not permit
advisory personnel to provide investment advice of any kind to a
client.
We also are proposing that an adviser relying on the rule as a
basis for registration must represent on Schedule D of its Form ADV
that, among other things, it has an operational interactive
website.\60\ This representation is similar to the representation that
advisers relying on the multi-state exemption make on their Form
ADV.\61\ This representation would also assist Commission staff in
connection with its review of existing registrations and registration
applications for compliance with the rule and, as applicable, for
possible deregistration for an inability to meet the conditions of the
rule. This amendment would require internet investment advisers, as an
initial matter and periodically thereafter, to provide an additional
affirmative representation on Form ADV that more clearly notes the
requirements of the exemption, thus reinforcing the conditions of the
exemption for the internet investment adviser.
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\60\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iv).
\61\ Rule 203A-2(d)(2)(i).
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We request comment on all aspects of the proposed amendments
relating to the requirements for internet investment advisers to have
an operational interactive website and related amendments to Form ADV,
including the following:
1. Should we amend the interactive website definition to
``operational interactive website,'' as proposed? Do commenters agree
that the interactive website should be operational at all times an
adviser is registered with the Commission and relying on the Internet
Adviser Exemption?
2. Does the hardship clause in the proposed definition of
interactive website reasonably account for temporary outages? Should
planned periods of inoperability, such as planned maintenance, be
included, as proposed? Are there other instances in which an adviser
intentionally takes an interactive website offline that should be
explicitly discussed in the release? The proposed hardship clause
specifies that the outages must be de minimis in duration? Should the
rule text specify a particular time period instead, such as less than 6
hours, 12 hours, or 24 hours?
3. Should the exemption specify what it means to provide investment
advice ``exclusively'' through the operational interactive website? If
so, how? Is it sufficiently clear that the amended rule is not designed
to prevent advisory personnel from assisting clients with technical
issues or from explaining how the adviser's algorithm works? Are there
any circumstances not accounted for in the amended rule in which
advisory personnel interact with clients without engaging in digital
investment advisory services?
4. Do commenters agree that advisers seeking to rely on the
proposed exemption could develop, test, and launch an operational
interactive website within 120 days? Are there certain web-development
issues that are unique to the investment adviser industry that would
prevent the launch of an operational interactive website within 120
days?
5. Do commenters agree that advisers seeking to rely on the
proposed exemption could develop a test interactive website that is not
accessible to the public that subsequently could be made accessible to
the public, including advisory clients, and become an operational
interactive website at the time of registration as an internet
investment adviser or within 120 days of registration under the 120-day
rule? Generally, do commenters agree that initial registration in
reliance on the 120-day rule may not be challenging for advisers in the
way that it may have been when the Commission adopted the Internet
Adviser Exemption?
6. Is the requirement that an internet investment adviser must
provide digital investment advisory services through its website on an
ongoing basis to more than one client appropriate? Should we require
that the internet investment adviser provide digital investment
advisory services to ``one or more clients'' instead? Alternatively,
should we require a de minimis number of clients or some other exact
number of clients (e.g. ``no fewer than 6 clients'' to align with
section 222 of the Advisers Act)?
7. Should we include mobile applications in the definition of
interactive website, as proposed? Do commenters agree that customers
increasingly access investment advisory services through mobile
applications? Do commenters agree that mobile applications can provide
interactive functionality similar to the functionality of websites?
8. Are there other technologies similar to websites and mobile
applications that commenters believe should be included in the
definition of operational interactive website? For instance, should the
definition include computer programs or software, which may not be a
website or a mobile application? Alternatively, should the definition
include a broader reference to ``digital platform'' or some other
language instead of ``website or mobile application''?
9. Would requiring an affirmative representation on Schedule D to
Form ADV that an adviser relying on the Internet Adviser Exemption has
an operational interactive website, as proposed, be useful for advisers
by reinforcing the conditions of the proposed rule? Why or why not?
10. Generally, is there a need for the Internet Adviser Exemption
given the changes in technology and wide use of websites and/or mobile
applications by investment advisers to advertise and provide investment
advisory services?
2. Elimination of De Minimis Non-Internet Client Exception
The current rule includes a de minimis exception that permits an
internet investment adviser to provide investment advice to fewer than
15 non-
[[Page 50083]]
internet clients during the preceding 12 months.\62\ We are proposing
to amend the rule to remove this de minimis exception, such that an
internet investment adviser must provide advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an interactive website.\63\
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\62\ See rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
\63\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i). But see Comment Letter
of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C. (Oct. 4, 2021) (``Wilson
Sonsini Comment Letter'') (asserting, in response to the 2021 RFC,
that the current rule is not permissive enough with respect to the
advising of non-internet clients, further suggesting that the
Internet Adviser Exemption should be available to any investment
adviser that provides investment advice solely through the internet
to at least 51% of its customers'').
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The Commission included the non-internet client de minimis
exception so that internet investment advisers would not lose their
ability to rely on the Internet Adviser Exemption as a result of
providing advice to a small number of clients through means other than
an interactive website.\64\ In considering whether to retain the de
minimis exception in this rule, we took into account the basis of the
narrow exception, and the Commission's experience administering the
rule. We preliminarily believe, as discussed below, that there is not
the same need for this exception now as at the time we originally
adopted it. Accordingly, under these proposed amendments, if an
internet investment adviser is advising non-internet clients, it would
not be exempted from the registration rules that otherwise apply to all
investment advisers and should more properly be regulated by a state
(or states) or the Commission (using a different basis for
registration), as applicable.
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\64\ 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section I. When
the Commission initially adopted the fewer than 15 client de minimis
exception, the Commission noted its similarity to the (then-
existing) ``private adviser exemption'' which, subject to certain
additional conditions, exempted from the requirement to register
with the Commission any adviser that during the course of the
preceding 12 months, had fewer than 15 clients. That exemption was
repealed by Section 403 of Dodd-Frank. See 2011 Redesignation, supra
note 14, at n.4.
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In addition, certain internet investment advisers may be able to
register with the Commission using separate bases for registration. As
such, an internet investment adviser would be less likely today to lose
its ability to remain registered with the Commission as a result of
taking on a client that would disqualify the adviser from relying on
the Internet Adviser Exemption. As of December 31, 2022, ten advisers
are dually registered with the Commission under both the Internet
Adviser Exemption and another basis for registration.\65\ For example,
contrary to the practice of internet investment advisers at the time
the Commission adopted the Internet Adviser Exemption,\66\ our staff
has observed that the operations of certain investment advisers that
provide advice over the internet have changed such that they now manage
assets of their internet clients.\67\ Accordingly, depending on assets
under management, certain internet investment advisers may be
eligible--or required--to register with us.\68\ In addition, due in
part to the evolution of technology, investment advisers can
appropriately manage advertisements, account openings, and similar
operations, and, as a consequence, be able to better control in which
states they may be required to register. Since the adoption of the rule
over 20 years ago, it has become more common for internet businesses to
implement technology that targets and tracks the locations in which
they offer services.\69\ Moreover, the Dodd-Frank Act reduced the
minimum number of states in which an adviser would be required to
register before becoming eligible for the multi-state exemption, making
it more likely that an adviser would be eligible for the multi-state
exemption earlier and more easily than at the time of adoption of the
Internet Adviser Exemption in 2002.\70\ Taken together, these
regulatory and technological changes make the de minimis exception in
the Internet Adviser Exemption less necessary than at the time we
originally adopted the exemption.\71\
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\65\ Based on analysis of Form ADV data.
\66\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at section IV.A.
(stating that ``Internet Investment Advisers typically would not
initially be eligible to register with us, as they do not manage the
assets of their Internet clients.'').
\67\ See, e.g., Robo-Advisers Guidance, supra note 55 (``Robo-
advisers, which are typically registered investment advisers, use
innovative technologies to provide discretionary asset management
services to their clients through online algorithmic-based
programs.''). Robo-advisers typically do not rely on the Internet
Adviser Exemption when they are eligible for Commission registration
based on regulatory assets under management.
\68\ See, e.g., rule 203A-1.
\69\ See John T. Holden, Marc Edleman, A Short Treatise on
Sports Gambling and the Law: How America Regulates its Most
Lucrative Vice, 907 Wisconsin Law Review (2020), https://wlr.law.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/1263/2021/10/15-Holden-Edelman-To-Print.pdf (illustrating this in the context of online
gambling platforms and stating that ``any company that is licensed
to operate an online sportsbook must limit access to individuals
physically located within the state where they have received their
license. To illustrate this point, if a company has a license to
operate an online sportsbook in New Jersey, that company may accept
bets from any individual of legal age (other than self-excluded or
prohibited individuals) that is physically located in New Jersey at
the time of placing the bet. By contrast, even a licensed New Jersey
online sportsbook may not accept bets from people, including New
Jersey residents, who are physically located outside of New Jersey
at the time of the attempted bet. Therefore, it is critical that any
licensed online sportsbook implement proper geo-tracking technology
to ensure that all bettors are based in permissible locations.'').
\70\ See Dodd-Frank Act, Section 410 (amending section 203A of
the Advisers Act to enable a mid-sized adviser to register with the
Commission if it would be required to register in 15 or more
states).
\71\ See rule 203A-2(d). As noted above, technological advances
related to website development would better allow advisers to
effectively utilize the 120-day rule in anticipation of reliance on
the multi-state exemption relative to at the time we originally
adopted the Internet Adviser Exemption.
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We request comment on the proposed elimination of the de minimis
exception in the Internet Adviser Exemption:
11. Should the de minimis exception for non-internet clients be
eliminated, as proposed? If so, should those internet investment
advisers registered in reliance on the Internet Adviser Exemption prior
to the adoption of the final rule continue to be able to rely on the de
minimis exception? Do commenters agree that there is less of a need for
this exception today than there was when it was originally adopted?
12. For internet investment advisers that currently provide advice
outside an interactive website, to what types of clients are you
providing this advice, and how does this advice differ from advice
provided through the interactive website?
13. As an alternative to the proposal, should the de minimis
exception remain at 15 as in the current rule? Should it be higher or
lower? If, unlike as proposed, it should remain at 15 or some
alternative number, is it consistent with the policy goals of the rule
that an adviser relying on the rule should be permitted to advise a
greater number of non-internet clients than internet clients during the
specified timeframe? If, unlike as proposed, it should remain at 15 or
some alternative number, should the rule require an equal or greater
number of minimum internet clients? If the rule were to retain a de
minimis exception, rather than specifying the exception as a numerical
limit, should we instead require that the de minimis exception be a
proportion of the number of internet clients an internet investment
adviser has? For example, should an internet investment adviser be
permitted to have a maximum of 51% of its clients as non-internet
clients, as suggested by one commenter, or some greater or lesser
percentage? \72\ Would such an approach be consistent with the policy
goals of the rule of balancing the burdens of multiple state
[[Page 50084]]
registration requirements and the national presence for internet
investment advisers with the Advisers Act's allocation of
responsibility for regulating smaller advisers to state securities
authorities? Would there be benefits to advisers from this approach and
would those benefits justify the potential challenges in oversight?
Should the de minimis exception be based on some other framework or
calculation?
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\72\ Wilson Sonsini Comment Letter.
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14. If we were to retain a de minimis exception, should we add a
question to Form ADV, asking how many non-internet clients the adviser
had during the last fiscal year? Would this reporting requirement help
internet investment advisers in their compliance and/or record keeping
obligations with respect to the conditions of the exemption as
currently constituted?
15. Are there changes to the exemption that might help to encompass
those investment advisers that provide advice through the internet
while ensuring that advisers that otherwise are not eligible for
registration with the Commission and that use the internet only as a
marketing tool, for example, remain subject to state registration?
Should the Commission create a registration exemption that reflects
investment advisers' current use of technology in providing investment
advice in a better way than the Internet Adviser Exemption?
16. Should we adopt changes to the recordkeeping requirement? For
example, should the recordkeeping requirement require advisers to
record the frequency of communication with clients?
17. Should we retain the Internet Adviser Exemption, or should we
remove it in its entirety? In light of the other bases for registration
that may be available to internet investment advisers, do commenters
believe that the rule is necessary? Could these advisers simply rely on
another applicable exemption (e.g., the multi-state exemption, mid-
sized adviser, related adviser)? Would eliminating the Internet Adviser
Exemption and instead causing these advisers to rely on the multi-state
exemption to register with the Commission better achieve our goals of
only allowing advisers with a larger number of internet clients with a
true national presence to register with us? Do commenters believe that
certain advisers relying on the rule could instead register with the
Commission based on having sufficient assets under management or an
ability to rely on another exemption for registration? Do commenters
believe that enough advisers rely on the rule to warrant the relative
cost of oversight required for these advisers by our Staff?
18. Is there any particular topic or issue that advisers encounter
in complying with the Internet Adviser Exemption currently, or that
they would encounter in complying with the proposed amendments to the
exemption, that should be addressed by Commission guidance? Would the
proposed amendments create excessive reliance on the Internet Advisers
Exemption? If so, how?
III. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
We are mindful of the costs imposed by, and the benefits obtained
from, our rules. Section 202(c) of the Advisers Act provides that when
the Commission is engaging in rulemaking under the Act and is required
to consider or determine whether an action is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, the Commission shall also consider whether the
action will promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation, in
addition to the protection of investors.\73\ The following analysis
considers the likely significant economic effects that may result from
the proposed amendments to rules and forms, including the benefits and
costs to clients and investors and other market participants as well as
the broader implications of the proposed amendments for efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.
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\73\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-2(c).
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Where possible, the Commission quantifies the likely economic
effects of its proposed amendments. However, the Commission is unable
to quantify certain economic effects because it lacks the information
necessary to provide estimates or ranges of costs. For instance, data
that separately captures the number of non-internet clients or the
types of internet clients an adviser has is generally unavailable.\74\
Further, in some cases, quantification would require numerous
assumptions to forecast how investment advisers and other affected
parties would respond to the proposed amendments, and how those
responses would in turn affect the broader markets in which they
operate. In addition, many factors determining the economic effects of
the proposed amendments would be investment adviser-specific.
Investment advisers vary in size and sophistication, as well as in the
products and services they offer. Even if it were possible to calculate
a range of potential quantitative estimates, that range would be so
wide as to not be informative about the magnitude of the benefits or
costs associated with the proposed amendments. Many parts of the
discussion below are, therefore, qualitative in nature. As described
more fully below, the Commission is providing a qualitative assessment
and, where practicable, a quantified estimate of the economic effects.
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\74\ Information on number of clients, such as that described
supra section I.B. is generally developed during adviser
examinations.
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B. Baseline and Affected Parties
The amended rule would amend the definitions used in the existing
Internet Adviser Exemption, which allows internet investment advisers
to register with the Commission. The application of this exemption,
along with other applicable rules, determines which advisers the
Commission regulates and which advisers may fall under state
regulation. The entities potentially affected by the proposed
amendments include all advisers that are currently relying on the
Internet Adviser Exemption, or are contemplating becoming an internet
investment adviser under the current or proposed definition; their
clients and affiliated parties; and users of Form ADV data.
1. Regulatory Baseline
The NSMIA divided regulatory responsibility for advisers between
the Commission and the states, where larger advisers with national
presence are regulated by the Commission and smaller advisers with
sufficient local presence are regulated by the states.\75\ Currently,
subject to certain exceptions, only advisers that advise a registered
investment company or have assets under management above $100 million
are allowed to register with the Commission. All other advisers may be
subject to state regulation and may be required to register with one or
multiple states.\76\
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\75\ See supra notes 2, 3, and the relevant discussion in
section 1.
\76\ See supra note 7; section 222 of the Advisers Act.
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However, section 222(d) of the Advisers Act [15 U.S.C. 80b-18a(d)]
provides that no law of any state ``shall require an investment adviser
to register with the securities commissioner of the State'' if the
adviser ``(1) does not have a place of business located within the
State; and (2) during the preceding 12-month period, has had fewer than
6 clients who are residents of that State.'' State law varies, and
states may exempt from state regulation certain advisers with a place
of business in that state if the adviser has a sufficiently low
[[Page 50085]]
number of clients.\77\ Depending on the location of the adviser and the
number and location of its clients, an adviser not eligible for
Commission registration might need to register with no state, or with
up to 14 states.\78\ States may also require advisers to file copies of
their Commission filings with the state (notice filings) even if state
registration is not required.\79\
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\77\ See e.g., N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law Sec. 359-eee(a)(5) (excluding
from the definition of ``investment adviser'' a person that has sold
investment advisory services to fewer than 6 persons in the state,
in the preceding 12 months); N.J. Stat. Ann. Sec. 49:3-56.9(g)(1)
(exempting from registration as an investment adviser a person that
does not have more than 5 clients in the state, in a 12-month
period); Ill. Admin. Code tit. 12 Sec. 130.805b) (exempting from
registration as an investment adviser any investment adviser that
had no more than 5 clients in the state, in the preceding 12
months); Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 590-4-4-.13(1)(b) (exempting from
registration an investment adviser that had a fewer than 6 clients
in the state, in the preceding 12 months).
\78\ Advisers that would otherwise have to register with 15 or
more states may register with the Commission using the multi-state
exemption. See supra note 13 and section 1 for the relevant
discussion. For information on the number of state-registered
investment advisers, see e.g., NASAA, NASAA 2022 Investment Adviser
Section Annual Report (Apr. 2022), https://www.nasaa.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/2022-IA-Section-Report-FINAL-updated-05192022.pdf.
\79\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-3a note [Pub. L. 104-290, section 307,
``Continued State Authority'']. See, e.g., Neb. Rev. St. sec. 8-
1103(2)(b); N.H. Rev. State. sec. 421-B;4-405; 7 TX Admin. Code
Sec. 116.1.(b)(2).
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Certain exemptions allow advisers to register with the Commission
if state registration becomes unfair, a burden on interstate commerce,
or otherwise inconsistent with the purposes of section 203A of the
Act.\80\ The multi-state exemption is one such exemption: it allows
advisers that would otherwise have to register with 15 or more states
to register with the Commission instead.\81\ The current Internet
Adviser Exemption similarly allows Commission registration for advisers
that conduct their business predominantly over the internet and by the
nature of their business have national presence. That is, their clients
may come from multiple states, but they may not advise a registered
investment company or have sufficient assets under management to be
able to register with the Commission. To alleviate the burden of
potentially registering with numerous states for business conducted
over the internet, the Commission created in 2002 the exemption found
in rule 203A-2(e).\82\ Under current rule 203A-2(e), Commission
registration is allowed for an investment adviser that provides advice
to all of its clients exclusively through an interactive website,
except that the investment adviser may provide investment advice to
fewer than 15 clients through other means during the preceding 12
months. Rule 203A-2(e) also requires the internet investment adviser to
maintain records demonstrating that it meets the conditions of rule
203A-2(e)(1)(i).\83\
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\80\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-3a(c).
\81\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, and section I,
for the relevant discussion.
\82\ See 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, and the relevant
discussion in section I.A. of this release. The 2002 Adopting
Release described the exemption as ``providing relief to certain
investment advisers who, unlike state-registered advisers, have no
local presence and whose advisory activities are not limited to one
or few states.'' At that time, the threshold for the milti-state
exemption was registration in 30 states rather than 15.
\83\ See rule 203A2(e)(1)(ii); relevant discussion in supra
section I.A.
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2. Current Use of the Internet Adviser Exemption
As of December 2022, there were 15,360 registered investment
advisers with $115,050 billion regulatory assets under management. Of
these, 256 (1.7%) with a combined total of $2.94 billion in regulatory
assets under management (0.003%) exclusively relied on the Internet
Adviser Exemption, while 10 advisers were dually registered with the
Commission under both the Internet Adviser Exemption and another basis
for registration. The total number of advisers claiming use of the
Internet Adviser Exemption was 266, 190 of which were small entity
registered investment advisers.\84\
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\84\ The data comes from Form ADV filings received by the
Commission through Mar. 31, 2023. Small entity investment advisers
are advisers with less than $25 million in regulatory assets under
management.
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As of December 2022, registered internet investment advisers had on
average 5,506 clients, with a minimum of 0 clients, reported by 101
advisers, and a maximum of 522,345 clients.\85\ The median number of
clients for all advisers using the exemption was 6, indicating that the
distribution is highly skewed. As of December 2022, 101 advisers (38%
of 266) reported advising 0 clients, 5 advisers (1.9% of 266) reported
advising 1 client, and 37% of internet investment advisers (98 of 266)
advised 2 to 100 clients. Only 18 advisers (7% of 266) reported
advising more than 5,000 clients. Figure 1 demonstrates that 40% of
internet advisers have fewer than 2 clients.
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\85\ The data comes from Form ADV filings received by the
Commission through Mar. 31, 2023.
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[[Page 50086]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP01AU23.046
The largest categories of clients that internet investment advisers
currently have are: non-high net worth individuals, pension plans, and
high net worth individuals.\86\
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\86\ The instructions of Form ADV specify that the category
``individuals'' includes trusts, estates, and 401(k) plans and IRAs
of individuals and their family members but does not include
businesses organized as sole proprietorships. ``High Net Worth
Individual'' is defines as an individual who is a qualified client
or who is a ``qualified purchaser'' as defined in section
2(a)(51)(A) of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
Table 1--Largest Categories of Clients: Distribution Across All Internet
Advisers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mean
Type of client clients per
adviser
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-high net worth individuals............................. 5,085
Pension plans.............................................. 261
High net worth individuals................................. 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data source: Form ADV filings received by the Commission through Mar.
31, 2023.
The low median, relative to the average, is an indication of skewed
distribution within the population of internet advisers. If the dataset
is reduced to only those 204 advisers with 100 or fewer clients, the
distribution of clients in these categories is as follows:
Table 2--Largest Categories of Clients for Internet Advisers With 100 or
Fewer Clients
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mean
Type of client clients per
adviser
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-high net worth individuals............................. 6.3
Pension plans.............................................. 0.1
High net worth individuals................................. 0.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data source: Form ADV filings received by the Commission through Mar.
31, 2023.
The data indicate that the majority of clients using internet
advisers are non-high net worth individuals.
We do not have information on the states in which these clients are
located. Advisers using the internet Adviser Exemption might also be
eligible for the multi-state exemption if they have clients in 15 or
more states.\87\ But, we would expect that relatively few advisers with
the option to use either exemption would choose the internet Adviser
Exemption instead of the multi-state exemption, because the multi-state
exemption is less restrictive: it does not limit advice provided
through non-internet means, as the internet Adviser Exemption does.
This suggests that advisers using the internet Adviser Exemption most
likely do not have the option of using the multi-state exemption
instead. We invite public comment on this topic.
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\87\ The multi-state exemption became more widely available
after the creation of the current Internet Adviser Exemption,
because of the change from a minimum of 30 states to a minimum of
15. Thus, the burden of registering in numerous states was lessened,
compared to what it had been when the current exemption was
developed.
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Similarly, we cannot estimate how many advisers currently using the
internet Adviser Exemption would potentially be subject to regulation
by multiple states if they did not elect to use the exemption. State
law varies, and regulation would depend on the location of the
adviser's place of business and the location of their clients.\88\ In
light of the substantial number of internet investment advisers with
only a few clients, however, it is likely that many of the advisers
currently relying on the exemption would, if not registered using the
exemption, be subject to registration in not more than one state.\89\
Additionally,
[[Page 50087]]
advisers now may be able to use technology and targeting advertisement
in such a way as to limit the number of clients from certain states
thereby reducing the state regulation burden.\90\
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\88\ For example, the Uniform Securities Act would, if adopted
by the relevant state, require an investment adviser to register
with the state unless the adviser has no place of business in the
state and no more than 5 clients in the state other than certain
types of clients described in the Uniform Securities Act. UNIF. SEC.
ACT OF 2002 (rev. 2005), sec. 403(b). As of July 2023, 21 states and
territories had adopted the 2002 version of the Uniform Securities
Act and 5 states had adopted an earlier version. 2002 Securities Act
Enactment History, UNIF. LAW COMM'N, https://www.uniformlaws.org/committees/community-home?CommunityKey=8c3c2581-0fea-4e91-8a50-27eee58da1cf, last visited July 10, 2023.
\89\ The 2002 rule contemplated internet advisers potentially
having clients that ``can come from any state, at any time, without
the adviser's prior knowledge'' and thus potentially necessitating
registration in all states. 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
77622. However, the significant number of currently registered
internet investment advisers with one or fewer clients would not
face that risk. Additionally, as noted supra, note 69 and
surrounding text, today's investment advisers are better able to
control in which states they may be required to register.
\90\ See section II.A.2 for a relevant discussion.
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In the instances where state law does not require the adviser to
register with a state, for example because the adviser has fewer than
the de minimis number of clients in the state, registration with the
Commission represents an additional compliance burden that some
internet investment advisers appear to be voluntarily assuming.
Moreover, where state law would require a Commission-registered adviser
to make notice filings with one or more states, the combination of
Commission registration and state notice filings may also represent an
additional, voluntarily assumed compliance burden as compared to
registering directly with those states.\91\ Because some advisers
choose to register with the Commission despite the potential additional
compliance burden, we assume that some advisers perceive value in
Commission registration as compared to state registration.
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\91\ The cost of notice filing is often the same as the cost of
registering with the state. See INVESTMENT ADVISER REGISTRATION
DEPOSITORY, IA Firm State Registration/Notice Filing Fee Schedule
(Jan. 13, 2023), https://www.iard.com, under the tab ``Fees &
Accounting.'' We invite public comment on the cost of state
registration and notice filing fees.
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Based on observations of Commission staff conducting examinations,
we think some investors may believe that registration with the
Commission confers a reputational advantage or appeals to potential
clients. Other possibilities include the intent to obtain clients in
multiple states in the future, or avoidance of individual state
registration requirements such as bond and invoicing requirements. We
invite public comment on the location of internet investment advisers
and their clients, application of state law to internet investment
advisers, reasons to seek the internet Adviser Exemption, and other
relevant topics.
3. Increased Reliance on the Internet Adviser Exemption
Use of the internet Adviser Exemption has increased since its
adoption, especially in recent years.\92\ The number of investment
advisers using the exemption at the end of 2022 (that is, 266 advisers)
was almost 18 times larger than it was in December 2003, one year after
the exemption was put in place, when there were 15 such advisers.\93\
The value of regulatory assets under management for advisers
exclusively relying on the internet Adviser Exemption at the end of
2022 was $2.94 billion,\94\ or 0.003% of total adviser registered
assets under management. The average regulatory assets under management
per adviser for internet investment advisers (about $64.11 million) was
165 times larger than it was in December 2003 when advisers using the
exemption had on average about $0.39 million of registered assets under
management per adviser. Further, from 2003 to 2022, 440 unique
registered investment advisers that had indicated in their prior ADV
filing they were utilizing the internet adviser registration basis
withdrew and filed a total of 475 Forms ADV-W.\95\ Note that the number
of withdrawals has increased, for example, there were 69 ADV-W filings
by internet investment advisers between 2003 and 2012 and 387 ADV-W
filings between 2013 and 2022.\96\ This increase could suggest
erroneous registration, as discussed later in this analysis.
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\92\ See supra note 23 (number of advisers relying exclusively
on the exemption grew from 107 in 2015 to 256 in 2022).
\93\ The 2002 Adopting Release used a figure of 20 eligible
advisers in its analysis, acknowledging that the number of eligible
firms would likely grow. 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at
77623.
\94\ Accounting for inflation using CPI calculator (https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm), this number is 1.83
billion in Dec. 2003 dollars.
\95\ The filing of 475 Forms ADV-W includes singular investment
advisers that utilized the Internet Adviser Exemption on a non-
continuous basis (e.g., investment advisers that registered,
withdrew, registered again, and subsequently withdrew).
\96\ Based on analysis of Form ADV data available through Mar.
31, 2023.
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Technology use in the advisory industry has also changed. For
example, while the 2002 Adopting Release stated that internet
investment advisers might not be fully operational within 120 days of
registration,\97\ today websites and associated services are more
common, more website development services are available on the market,
and new technologies, such as mobile applications that can generate
advice, have emerged as well.\98\ Currently, different options are
available on the market to develop a website, from using website
builder programs for an average upfront cost of about $200 and
maintenance cost of about $50 per month, to hiring a website designer
for an average upfront cost of about $6,000 and maintenance cost of
about $1,000 per year.\99\
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\97\ Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers Operating Through
the Internet, Investment Advisors Act Release No. 2091 [67 FR 77619
(Dec. 18, 2002)], at 77622.
\98\ See supra note 20 and surrounding text. See also Alex
Padalka, RIAs Depend on Tech for Client Communications, Growth, FIN.
ADVISOR IQ (Dec. 10, 2021), https://www.financialadvisoriq.com/c/3402044/435734/rias_depend_tech_client_communications_growth?preview=1.
\99\ These estimates are available from Lucy Carney, How Much
Does a Website Cost in 2023? (Full Breakdown), WEBSITEBUILDEREXPERT
(Apr. 26, 2023), https://www.websitebuilderexpert.com/building-websites/how-much-should-a-website-cost/.
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As discussed in section I.A, the Commission adopted rule 203A-2(e)
to alleviate, for a narrow set of advisers with national presence, the
burden of having to register in multiple states as a result of
providing internet advice. The increase in its use, especially among
advisers that would not be subject to registration in more than one
state, or that appear to have advised no clients in several years,
suggests the exemption may currently be used in ways that were not
intended by the 2002 rule.
In addition, the Commission's examination program has identified
multiple instances of compliance issues relating to advisers relying on
the exemption without an interactive website, or providing advisory
personnel who could expand upon the investment advice provided by the
adviser's interactive website or otherwise provide investment advice to
clients, such as financial planning.\100\ The frequency of registration
withdrawals has increased as well: as discussed previously in the
baseline, the number of withdrawals by internet investment advisers
between 2013 and 2022 (387) was over five times larger than the number
of withdrawals between 2003 and 2012 (69).\101\
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\100\ See Risk Alert, supra note 25; see also supra note 26 and
surrounding text.
\101\ Based on the analysis of Form ADV data available through
Mar. 31, 2023.
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C. Benefits and Costs and Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and
Capital Formation
1. Benefits
The proposed amendments to the internet Adviser Exemption are
designed to modernize the exemption and address technological and other
industry developments that have occurred since 2002, and to respond to
observations about the use of the exemption that were not available
when the exemption was first put in place.\102\ Further, as discussed
in more detail below, the proposed changes to the
[[Page 50088]]
definitions in the rule are designed to better align regulatory
authority between the Commission and the states and improve investor
protection. The proposed amendments would:
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\102\ See supra section I.B for a relevant discussion.
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1. Specify that the exemption is available to an investment adviser
that provides investment advice to all of its clients exclusively
through an operational interactive website at all times during which
the investment adviser relies on the exemption found in section
275.203A-2(e).
2. Modernize the meaning of ``interactive website'' by:
Adding the term ``digital investment advisory service,''
defined to mean investment advice to clients that is generated by the
website's algorithms as well as the software-based models and
applications covered by the existing rule;
Adding a reference to mobile applications;
Requiring more than one client to which the adviser
provides digital investment advisory services on an ongoing basis;
Adding the word ``operational,'' thus changing the term to
``operational interactive website''; and
Adding an exception to the operational interactive website
requirement for ``temporary technological outages of a de minimis
duration.''
3. Eliminate the de minimis exception allowing fewer than 15 non-
internet clients;
4. Require advisers to make a representation of eligibility on
Schedule D of Form ADV (in addition to checking the appropriate box in
Item 2.A.(11) of Form ADV).
These changes are intended to modernize the Internet Adviser
Exemption, retain its intended narrow scope, and minimize opportunities
for advisers to misuse the exemption to register with the Commission
without meeting its conditions.
Augmenting the definition of ``interactive website'' to include the
new defined term ``digital investment advisory service'' would capture
the increasing variety of technological methods by which internet
investment advisers provide advice using the internet. Additionally,
the proposed addition of the terms ``mobile application'' and
``algorithms'' would better align with technological advances in the
industry. Advisers increasingly make use of various mobile applications
to interact with the clients, and use algorithms to generate investment
advice.\103\ The improved definition thus would allow internet
investment advisers that rely on mobile applications to generate advice
to use the Internet Adviser Exemption, potentially reducing their
burdens associated with multiple states' registrations and regulations.
Further, internet investment adviser clients would be able to benefit
from being able to rely on mobile applications and algorithms, which
offer a convenient means of interaction between the adviser and its
clients. Additionally, including an exception for temporary
technological outages of a de minimis duration should help accommodate
occasional technological issues with the website or mobile application
so the internet investment adviser is not required to frequently
withdraw and re-register due to minor or temporary technical
difficulties or planned maintenance.
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\103\ See supra section II.A.1, specifically note 55 and
surrounding text.
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To the extent advisers may be registering with the Commission in
order to market themselves to potential clients, the proposed changes
should help avoid misleading clients. For instance, advisers without an
``operational'' website would be excluded from the pool of advisers
eligible for the Internet Adviser Exemption. This would avoid clients
contracting with an adviser that is relying on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for registration whose website cannot be used to provide
investment advice. To the extent any investors may be led to believe
that an adviser relying on the Internet Adviser Exemption for
registration has national presence and conducts its business via the
internet, while this is not in fact the case, the proposed amendments
could help avoid the possibility of investors using a type of adviser
they did not intend to use.
The proposed amendments would remove the de minimis exception for
non-internet clients, preventing advisers with any non-internet clients
from relying on the Internet Adviser Exemption. Removing the exception
better services the narrow-intended scope of t Internet heAdviser
Exemption.\104\ This amendment would assist Commission staff in
conducting examinations of internet advisers, because it can be
difficult to identify the instances of advice given and the exact
number of clients that received advice through means other than an
operational interactive website.
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\104\ See supra section II.A.2.
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Additionally, the proposed amendments requiring advisers to
represent their Internet Adviser Exemption eligibility on Schedule D of
Form ADV should reduce the number of erroneous registrations and
subsequent withdrawals. Currently, prospective advisers need only check
a box on Form ADV indicating they ``are an internet adviser relying on
rule 203A-2e'' but the proposed change to Form ADV would include a
separate text description of the actions the adviser must have taken to
become or remain eligible for the Internet Adviser Exemption.\105\
Listing the required elements of eligibility for the Internet Adviser
Exemption should explicitly state for the registrants the requirements
that they must meet in order to qualify, and which they are certifying
that they have met when they file Form ADV.\106\ We also anticipate
that by avoiding erroneous registration, ineligible registrants would
avoid expending time and effort on dealing with withdrawals, and
corresponding legal fees.
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\105\ Schedule D of Part 1A of Form ADV currently is submitted
in a structured (i.e., machine-readable), XML-based data language
specific to that Form, so the additional information that would be
required on Schedule D under the proposed rule amendments would also
be structured.
\106\ This amendment would also assist Commission staff in
connection with its review of existing registrations and
registration applications for compliance with the rule and, as
applicable, for possible deregistration for inability to meet the
conditions of the rule.
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Currently, the Internet Adviser Exemption does not require an
adviser to have a minimum number of clients. Requiring that digital
investment advisory services be provided on an ongoing basis to more
than one client would better align with the original goal of the
exemption, which was to provide relief from multiple state registration
requirements for advisers with a national presence via the internet.
Advisers with one or zero clients cannot be considered entities with
national presence requiring relief from a state registration burden.
Further, advisers with zero clients that effectively do not conduct
advisory business but are able to register as internet investment
advisers may be misleading potential future clients to believe they are
providing advisory business via the internet.
2. Costs
The proposed amendments may adversely affect some advisers. The
proposed amendments would specifically require that the website be
``operational,'' and advisers may incur a cost of developing a website
or withdrawing their Commission registration if their website is not
operational. Advisers should already have an interactive website and
the Commission does not currently
[[Page 50089]]
recognize a grace period to develop a website, beyond the separate,
rule 203A-2(c) exemption for an investment adviser expecting to be
eligible for Commission registration within 120 days, so the proposed
amendments should not require new website development costs.\107\
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\107\ See supra note 49.
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Advisers that choose to withdraw their Commission registration must
file form ADV-W. The current burden estimate to file form ADV-W is 0.75
hour per respondent,\108\ implying a cost of withdrawal of $319 per
adviser.\109\ The costs to file this form may vary between advisers and
may be larger than this estimate for some. In addition, depending on
their location and the scope and nature of their activities (if any),
advisers that withdraw from Commission registration might need to
register with one or more states. Also, to the extent some clients
value Commission registration and select advisers based on their
Commission registration status, advisers could lose clients as a result
of withdrawal; however, we do not have information that would allow us
to predict the size or magnitude of this effect.\110\ We request public
comment on this topic.
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\108\ See, e.g., Submission for OMB Review; Comment request;
Extension: Rule 203-2 and Form ADV-W, 88 FR 37913 (Jun. 9, 2023)
(describing the burden associated with the previously approved
collection of information under OMB Control No. 3235-0313).
\109\ 0.75 hour * $425 = $319. The maximum total cost of
withdrawals assuming all 256 currently registered internet
investment advisers relying exclusively on the Internet Investment
Adviser Exemption have to withdraw is 0.75 hour * $425 * 256 =
$81,600. Assuming only 101 currently registered internet investment
advisers with zero clients and 5 advisers with one client will have
to withdraw, the total estimated cost is 0.75 hour * $425 *106 =
$33,788. The $425 compensation rate used is the rate for a Sr.
Operations Manager in the SIFMA Report on Management & Professional
Earnings in the Securities Industry--2013 (Oct. 7, 2013), adjusted
for inflation using the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Consumer Price
Index inflation calculator, modified to account for a 1,800-hour
work-year, and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits and overhead.
\110\ See supra note 65 and surrounding text (discussion of dual
basis registration).
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Adding the term ``mobile applications'' and the term ``digital
investment advisory service'' still may not prevent some non-internet
advisers from relying on the exemption by claiming to provide mobile
application or website-generated advice or ``digital investment
advisory service'' when in fact the advice involves some human
input.\111\ Such advisers are likely to incur costs of withdrawing
their Commission registration.
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\111\ See, e.g., the findings in RetireHub, supra note 26.
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Internet investment advisers that rely exclusively on the Internet
Adviser Exemption and have non-internet clients, as is currently
allowed, would be affected by the proposed amendments because they
could no longer rely on the exemption as a basis for registering with
the Commission. Human-directed advice provided by electronic means
would not be eligible for the exemption. These advisers may be required
to register with one or more states if their total number of clients in
any given state exceeds five and the state requires registration.\112\
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\112\ See section 222(d) of the Advisers Act. We are unable to
quantify the costs of registering with the States, beyond state
registration fees, because the registration requirements and forms,
and the corresponding time spent by firms, vary by each state and
there is no available data to make such estimates. The average of
state registration fees is $224, see supra note 91.
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Similarly, the proposed amendments are designed to focus on
advisers that exclusively advise through the internet. Advisers
currently relying on the Internet Adviser Exemption may need to change
the way they communicate with or deliver services to their clients or
rely on a different basis for Commission registration, if available.
For example, internet investment advisers that provide advice via means
other than an interactive website or with some human input might have
to change their communication with clients in order to continue to rely
on the exemption. In some cases, such advisers may either have to
withdraw their registration or lose some of their clients as well if
the clients require more than digital investment advisory services in
order to remain with the specific adviser. Further, the clients may
have to switch to a different adviser. As discussed in section III.B,
internet investment advisers typically advise non-high net worth
individual clients. In addition to the cost associated with finding a
new adviser, switching to a different adviser may represent a cost
increase for such clients if the new adviser has higher fees.
Finally, the proposed additional representation of eligibility on
Schedule D of Form ADV may increase the time and effort advisers expend
when filing Form ADV. However, as discussed in the PRA, such costs are
expected to be minimal.\113\
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\113\ See supra section IV.C.
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Some of the costs associated with advisers having to register with
multiple states are alleviated by the fact that the state registration
burdens assessed when the exemption was originally implemented have
declined since 2002, as now the advisers may be able to rely on other
available exemptions or more easily meet registrations thresholds in
order to register with the Commission. For example, as discussed in the
baseline, the multi-state exemption threshold was decreased from 30 to
15, making it easier for advisers to qualify for this exemption.
Further, as discussed in the baseline, advisers relying on the Internet
Adviser Exemption now tend to have more registered assets under
management on average per adviser and some may be able to reach the
minimum threshold on the registered assets under management sooner in
order to qualify for the Commission registration.\114\
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\114\ See also a related discussion in section II.A.2.
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The proposed change would render ineligible for the exemption all
the currently registered internet investment advisers with one or zero
clients. This would reduce the current population of exemption-eligible
advisers by approximately 40%, unless those advisers obtained
additional clients.\115\ While reducing the number of advisers relying
on the exemption is not a goal of the proposal, a reduction would
reflect the narrow scope of the Commission's exemptive rule.\116\
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\115\ See previous discussion in baseline on the number of
internet investment advisers with zero (101) and one (5) client out
of 266 total internet investment advisers.
\116\ 2002 Adopting Release, supra note 13, at 77621; 15 U.S.C.
80b-3a(c) (allowing exemptions from the limits on Commission
registration when those limits ``would be unfair, a burden on
interstate commerce, or otherwise inconsistent with the purposes of
this section'').
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3. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
We do not anticipate any significant effects on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation, as the proposal represents a minor
change of the exemption parameters and is not intended to conceptually
change the exemption or the original intended division of the
regulatory authority over investment advisers between the Commission
and the states. As discussed in the baseline, the number of advisers
potentially affected by the proposed change is small, and does not
represent a significant portion of the population of investment
advisers or their clients.
The proposed amendments may have a positive effect on competition
and capital formation as they are designed to modernize the rule to
recognize advances in technology and digital services employed by the
investment advisory industry. Specifying that internet investment
advisers may use technology, such as mobile applications, that can
better fit their clients' needs
[[Page 50090]]
should improve client-adviser interactions, and the quality of the
services provided, and could encourage client participation.
However, the positive effects discussed above could be lessened by
the fact that certain proposed amendments, such as the removal of the
current de minimis exception, could adversely affect adviser-client
interactions by preventing internet investment advisers from relying on
the Internet Adviser Exemption when providing, to any client, advice
beyond digital investment advisory services. In some cases, advisers
may need to choose between retaining their Commission registration (if
they rely solely on the Internet Adviser Exemption) or continuing to
provide human-directed advice as is allowed under the current wording
of the exemption. This may lead to advisers losing some clients who
value both Commission registration and human-directed advice and thus
affect competition in the investment adviser market.
D. Reasonable Alternatives
1. Allowing Fewer Non-Internet Clients
As an alternative to removing the de minimis provision that allowed
internet investment advisers to have 15 or fewer non-internet clients,
the Commission considered reducing that number, for example, by setting
a defined maximum of non-internet clients, such as five. Reducing the
maximum to five could strengthen the link between the Internet Adviser
Exemption and the Internet advisory business, while retaining an
adviser's flexibility to accommodate a small number of customers who
seek advice beyond mere website output allowed under the proposed
amendment to the exemption.
However, as discussed in section II.A.2, if an internet investment
adviser is advising non-internet clients, it should not be exempted
from the registration rules that otherwise apply to all investment
advisers and should more properly be regulated by a state (or states)
or the Commission (using a different basis for registration), as
applicable. This alternative may require advisers to keep additional
records tracing instances in which clients received advice beyond the
model generated output. Such cases may be hard to identify because, as
discussed earlier in the Economic Analysis, it may not always be clear
when some human input was involved and to what extent. This alternative
may thus result in a greater number of erroneous registrations and
subsequent withdrawals as compared to the current rule.
The Commission also considered variations, such as defining a
maximum number of non-internet clients as a percentage of the adviser's
total number of clients. Under this variation, however, the maximum
number of non-internet clients could be quite large for advisers with
many clients, implying sufficient local presence to register with one
or more states, while remaining quite small for investors with few
clients and still limiting their interactions with clients. This may
not be fair, efficient or reflect the originally intended allocation of
adviser regulation responsibilities between the Commission and the
states: for example, advisers with a large number of non-internet
clients in a given state are more likely to have a local presence in
the state as opposed to a national presence.
2. Alternative Definitions of ``Interactive Website''
The Commission also considered adding a different minimum number of
clients to the definition of ``interactive website.'' A larger number
of clients would help limit Commission registration to those advisers
with a national presence. Requiring a larger minimum number of clients
to qualify for the exemption would exclude advisers that are not
otherwise eligible for Commission regulation, but that obtain one or a
few clients with sole purpose of relying on the exemption. This would
work against the originally intended division of regulatory authority
between the Commission and the states. A larger minimum number of
clients may, however, disadvantage advisers with a small clientele or
advisers which are at the early stages of starting their advisory
business.
Further, the definition of ``interactive website'' could use a term
other than ``operational,'' such as ``functioning'' or ``working,'' to
highlight the requirement that the website can be used by the clients
or prospective clients to interact with adviser or obtain advising
services. These alternative terms could simplify the rule text.
However, such terms may be less technical and more prone to potentially
inconsistent interpretations across advisers.
Further, the definition of ``interactive website'' could use a
definition of the term ``digital investment advisory services,'' other
than ``investment advice to clients that is generated by the
operational interactive website's software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information each client supplies through
the operational interactive website.'' For example, the definition of
the term could be less specific, such as ``investment advice to clients
that is generated based on personal information each client supplies
through an operational interactive website.'' This alternative does not
specify the type of technology used to generate advice, which allows
more flexibility in technology use by internet investment advisers.
However, this may result in non-internet advisers attempting to rely on
the Internet Adviser Exemption by referencing a technology that is not
typically used to provide investment advice via internet.
3. Eliminating the Internet Adviser Exemption
As another alternative, the Commission considered eliminating the
Internet Adviser Exemption. With the proliferation of internet tools
and their frequent use by all types of advisers, the distinction might
no longer be valuable. In addition, specifically defining the bounds of
the exemption may remain difficult, as evolving industry practices
could quickly make rule definitions stale. New innovations and new ways
of communication with the clients, which are not accounted for by the
current or proposed exemption definitions, could render the exemption
unavailable to some internet investment advisers who adopt those new
technologies. Further, as discussed in the section on costs, erroneous
registrations associated with the rule can create additional costs for
advisers due to registration withdrawals. Eliminating the exemption
would eliminate these issues.
However, eliminating the exemption would result in certain costs.
Advisers that currently rely on the exemption would no longer be able
to use it, and therefore would not be eligible to register with the
Commission unless they meet the criteria of another exemption. Losing
Commission registration would impose costs: for example, the adviser
may lose some clients or may need to comply with state regulation
requirements, as discussed in the Costs section. Further, losing a
basis for Commission registration would require the adviser to file
form ADV-W. We estimate the burden to file Form ADV-W to withdraw from
registration as 0.75 hour per respondent.\117\ Assuming 256 currently
registered internet investment advisers relying exclusively on the
Internet Adviser Exemption would have to withdraw from registration,
the total cost of filing
[[Page 50091]]
Form ADV-W is estimated as $81,600.\118\
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\117\ See supra note 108 and accompanying text.
\118\ $425 * 0.75 hour per respondent * 256 advisers. The $425
compensation rate is calculated as described supra, note 109.
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This alternative may also result in advisers losing some clients to
the extent clients value Commission registration. Such clients would
have to seek a different adviser and may face higher fees as well as
switching costs as discussed above.\119\ Further, losing Commission
registration may result in advisers having to register in multiple (up
to 14) states and be subject to the appropriate state regulations until
they become eligible under a different rule or exemption, which would
create a burden, especially for new and small advisers.\120\
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\119\ As discussed previously in the costs section, we are
unable to quantify these costs due to a lack of data on such clients
and the new advisers they may have selected. We invite public
comment on this topic.
\120\ See relevant discussion in section III.C.2. As stated
previously in the Costs discussion, we are unable to quantify the
costs of registering with the States, beyond state registration fees
($224 on average across states), because the registration
requirements and forms, and the corresponding time spent by firms,
vary by each state and there is no available data to make such
estimates.
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Such costs, however, would likely be small as the advisers
exclusively using the Internet Adviser Exemption comprise a very small
portion of the relevant market (as discussed previously, 1.7% of the
total number of advisers and 0.003% of the total assets under
management). Moreover, state registration fees are typically the same
as state notice filing fees,\121\ so to the extent the adviser is
already paying notice filing fees in the states where it would need to
register, the difference in filing fees should be de minimis.
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\121\ See supra note 91.
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Request for Comment
19. What additional qualitative or quantitative information should
be considered as part of the baseline for the economic analysis of the
proposals?
20. Do commenters agree with our characterization of the estimated
benefits, burden hours, and costs? Please explain and supplement with
data or estimates if available.
21. Are the effects on competition, efficiency, and capital
formation arising from the proposed amendments accurately
characterized? Please explain, and provide data or estimates if
available.
22. Please provide data, if available, on the number of currently
registered advisers that do not have an operational interactive
website.
23. Please provide data, if available, on the cost of setting up
and maintaining an operational interactive website.
24. Please provide data, if available, on the number of non-
internet clients of registered internet investment advisers.
25. Please provide data, if available, on the location of internet
investment advisers and their clients.
26. Please provide data, if available, on the application of state
law to internet investment advisers.
27. For what reasons do investment advisers seek to use the
Internet Adviser Exemption?
28. Please provide data, if available, on the types of internet
clients of registered internet investment advisers. What type of
clients seek or prefer internet advisers? Do clients prefer internet
advisers registered with the Commission?
29. How would clients react if a previously-registered adviser was
no longer registered with the Commission? How would current clients
react if an internet adviser could no longer provide advice by means
other than a website?
30. Please provide data, if available, on the number of clients
that may have to switch to a different adviser as a result of the
proposed amendments.
31. Please provide data, if available, on the clients an adviser
may lose as a result of withdrawing from registration with the
Commission, as well as the new advisers the clients may have selected.
32. Are there known technological advances in advisory business
other than ``models,'' ``algorithms,'' or ``applications'' generated
advice that should be included in ``digital investment advisory
service'' definition? Please explain.
33. Is there a better term than ``operational,'' which can be used
in the definition of ``interactive website''? Are there alternatives to
the proposed items in the definition of ``interactive website''?
34. Please provide any available estimates or data that can help
estimate the average costs of state registrations, and of state notice
filings.
35. Please provide any available data regarding the advisers that
currently rely on the Internet Adviser Exemption and will likely need
to withdraw from registration with the Commission. How many of those
advisers may face multiple state registrations if the exemption is
eliminated?
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Introduction
Our proposal would result in new ``collection of information''
requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(``PRA'').\122\ The proposed amendments would have an impact on the
current collection of information burdens of rule 203A-2(e) and Form
ADV under the Act. The existing collections of information that we are
proposing to amend are: (i) ``Exemption for Certain Investment Advisers
Operating Through the Internet (Rule 203A-2(e))'' (OMB control number
3235-0559); and (iii) ``Form ADV'' (OMB control number 3235-0049). The
Commission is submitting these collections of information to the OMB
for review and approval in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR
1320.11. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
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\122\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
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We discuss below these proposed amendments and new collection of
information burdens. Responses provided to the Commission in the
context of its examination and oversight program concerning the
proposed amendments to rule 203A-2(e) subject to the provisions of
applicable law. Responses to the disclosure requirements of the
proposed amendments to Forms ADV are not kept confidential.
B. Rule 203A-2(e) Recordkeeping Requirement
The amended rule would require an internet investment adviser to
provide investment advice to all of its clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website,\123\ and would require advisers
registering with the Commission under the exemption to maintain a
record demonstrating that the adviser's advisory business has been
conducted through an operational interactive website in accordance with
the rule.\124\ Although most advisers registering under the rule
usually generate the necessary records in the ordinary conduct of their
Internet advisory business, the recordkeeping requirement of rule 203A-
2(e) nonetheless may impose a small additional burden on these
advisers. We estimate this recordkeeping burden to
[[Page 50092]]
amount to an average of four (4) hours annually per adviser.\125\
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\123\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
\124\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(ii). Under the proposed
rule, as under the current rule, advisers would need to maintain
records of their compliance with the rule. The proposed change to
remove the de minimis exception does not result in an increase in
the burden under the current rule but it has been accounted for in
our estimated burden for the proposed rule.
\125\ The adviser would need to demonstrate that all of its
clients obtain investment advice from the firm exclusively through
an operational interactive website. Internet advisers that conduct
their business exclusively through interactive websites and whose
employees never directly communicate with clients would likely need
to spend very little time documenting their compliance with the
condition. An adviser that has personnel that assist clients
directly (whether through email, chatbots, telephonically, or
otherwise) with administrative functions like accessing the website
may need to spend more time.
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We estimate the number of respondents to this information
collection to be 266 advisers.\126\ Accordingly, we estimate the total
recordkeeping burden hours for all rule 203A-2(e) advisers to be 1,064
hours.\127\ We estimate that the total monetized cost to each internet
adviser to comply with the recordkeeping provision of rule 203A-2(e)
would be approximately $1,700,\128\ and that the total monetized cost
for the 266 advisers relying on this exemption at this time would be
$452,200.\129\
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\126\ This estimate is based on information reported by advisers
through the Investment Adviser Registration Depository (``IARD'').
Based on IARD data as of Dec. 31, 2022, of the approximately 15,360
SEC-registered advisers, 266 checked Item 2.A(11) of Part 1A of Form
ADV to indicate their basis for SEC registration under the Internet
Adviser Exemption. This estimate may be overinclusive to the extent
that advisers currently registered in reliance on the exemption,
including, but not limited to, those that currently have one or
fewer clients, are not able to satisfy the requirements of the
proposed amendments. The estimate may be underinclusive to the
extent that additional advisers seek to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption, whether due to the industry's increased reliance on
technology or otherwise.
\127\ Four (4) hours x 266 advisers = 1,064 hours.
\128\ We estimate the cost at a rate of $425 per hour. The
compensation rate for the current approved information collection
used is the rate for a Sr. Operations Manager in the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association's Report on Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2013 updated for
2023, and is modified to account for an 1,800-hour work-year and
inflation and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits and overhead. 4 hours x $425 per hour = $1,700.
\129\ 1,064 hours x $425 per hour = $452,200. We do not expect
advisers to incur any external cost burden in connection with this
information collection because advisers registering under the rule
would generate the necessary records in the ordinary course of their
advisory businesses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Form ADV
We are proposing amendments to Form ADV Part 1A, Schedule D,
requiring advisers to indicate on Schedule D that, if applying for
registration with the Commission, the adviser will provide--and if
amending its existing registration and is continuing to rely on the
internet adviser exemption, that it has provided--investment advice to
all of its clients exclusively through an operational interactive
website.\130\ These changes are designed to provide information to the
Commission in connection with the registration and annual amendments to
Form ADV filed by internet investment advisers and would assist
Commission staff in connection with its review of existing
registrations and registration applications for compliance with the
rule and, as applicable, for possible deregistration for an inability
to meet the conditions of the rule. We do not believe that these
ministerial amendments to Form ADV requiring a very small number of
advisers to check a box make any substantive modifications to any
existing collection of information requirements or impose any new
substantive recordkeeping or information collection requirements within
the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA'').
Accordingly, we are not revising any burden and cost estimates in
connection with these amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Total Hour Burden Associated With Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-
2(e)
We estimate investment advisers that would be subject to the
amended rule would incur a total annual hour burden resulting from the
collections of information discussed above of approximately 1,064
hours, at a monetized cost of $452,200.\131\ The total external burden
costs would be $0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\131\ This estimate is based upon the following calculation:
1,064 hours x $425.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A chart summarizing the various proposed components of the total
annual burden for investment advisers with custody of client assets is
below.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 203A-2(e) description of new External
requirements Number of responses Internal burden hours burden costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final Estimates for Internet Investment Advisers under Rule 203A-2(e)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual burden for making records 266....................... 1,064 (4 hours per 0
sufficient to demonstrate compliance adviser).
with rule.
Annual burden for making representations De Minimis................ De Minimis................ 0
on Form ADV, Part 1A, Schedule D.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimate the total burden under proposed 203A-2(e) to amount to
an average of four (4) hours annually per adviser. This estimate is
identical to the estimate of the per-adviser burden under current 203A-
2(e). We believe that the only differences in burden hours and internal
monetized costs between current 203A-2(e) and proposed 203A-2(e) will
be determined by the number of advisers subject to the proposed rule.
E. Request for Comments
We request comment on whether our estimates for burden hours and
any external costs as described above are reasonable. Pursuant to 44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission solicits comments in order to: (i)
evaluate whether the proposed collections of information are necessary
for the proper performance of the functions of the Commission,
including whether the information will have practical utility; (ii)
evaluate the accuracy of the Commission's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collections of information; (iii) determine whether there are
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and (iv) determine whether there are ways to minimize the
burden of the collections of information on those who are to respond,
including through the use of automated collection techniques or other
forms of information technology.
In addition to these general requests for comment, we also request
comment specifically on the following issues:
36. Our analysis relies upon certain assumptions, such as that 266
advisers will rely on the Internet Adviser Exemption and that it will
take advisers approximately 4 hours per year to comply with the
recordkeeping requirements proposed. Do commenters agree with these
assumptions? If not, why not, and what data would commenters propose?
37. Our analysis relies upon the assumption that internet
investment advisers will incur no meaningful
[[Page 50093]]
burden to make the proposed representations on Form ADV, Part 1A,
Schedule D. Do commenters agree with this assumption? If not, why not,
and what burden hours and costs would commenters propose?
The agency is submitting the proposed collections of information to
OMB for approval. Persons wishing to submit comments on the collection
of information requirements of the proposed amendments should direct
them to the Office of Management and Budget, Attention Desk Officer for
the Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, and should send a copy to
Vanessa A. Countryman, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090, with reference to File No.
S7-13-23. OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collections
of information between 30 and 60 days after publication of this
release; therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days after publication of this
release. Requests for materials submitted to OMB by the Commission with
regard to these collections of information should be in writing, refer
to File No. S7-13-23, and be submitted to the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549-2736.
V. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Commission has prepared the following Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA'') in accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act \132\ regarding our proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Reason for and Objectives of the Proposed Action
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
We are proposing amendments to the internet Adviser Exemption,
which we adopted in 2002. The current internet Adviser Exemption
generally requires an adviser to:
Provide investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an interactive website, except that the investment
adviser may provide investment advice to fewer than 15 clients through
other means during the preceding twelve months; and
Maintain records for a period of not less than five years
demonstrating compliance with the conditions of the rule.
The proposed changes to the internet Adviser Exemption are designed
to reflect the evolution in technology and advisory industry since the
adoption in the rule. In addition, the proposed changes are designed to
better reflect the allocation of authority between the Federal
government and States that Congress intended under NSMIA and the Dodd-
Frank Act and enhance investor protection through more efficient use of
the Commission's limited oversight and examination resources by more
appropriately allocating Commission resources to advisers with national
presence and allowing smaller advisers with sufficient local presence
to be regulated by the states.
Specifically, the rule would require an internet investment adviser
to provide investment advice to all of its clients exclusively through
an operational interactive website at all times during which the
adviser relies on the internet Adviser Exemption. The rule's definition
of interactive website would be amended to ``operational interactive
website'' and would be expanded to include mobile applications; the
definition would also be amended to define operational interactive
website as one through which the investment adviser provides digital
investment advisory services on an ongoing basis to more than one
client (except temporary technological outages of a de minimis
duration).\133\ The amended rule would also remove the current rule's
de minimis exception,\134\ which exception allows advisers relying on
the rule to provide advice to fewer than 15 clients through means other
than an interactive website during the preceding 12 months. As under
the current rule, the amended rule would require advisers to comply
with the requirement to maintain certain records in accordance with
amended rule 203A-2(e)(1)(ii). The reasons for, and objectives of, the
proposed amendments are discussed in more detail in sections I and II,
above. The burdens of these requirements on small advisers are
discussed below as well as above in sections III and IV, which discuss
the burdens on all advisers. The professional skills required to meet
these specific burdens are also discussed in section IV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(2). For purposes of the rule,
``digital investment advisory service'' would be defined as
investment advice to clients that is generated by the operational
interactive website's software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information each client supplies
through the operational interactive website. See id.
\134\ See rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
The amended rule would also require an adviser to make
representations on its Form ADV, Part 1A, Schedule D, indicating that
it satisfies the requirements of the rule. This representation is
similar to the representation that advisers relying on the multi-state
exemption make on their Form ADV and would assist Commission staff in
connection with its review of registration applications and
deregistrations of advisers that are not in compliance with the rule.
The reasons for, and objectives of, the proposed amendments are
discussed in more detail in sections I and II, above. The burdens of
these requirements on small advisers are discussed below as well as
above in sections III and IV, which discuss the burdens on all
advisers. The professional skills required to meet these specific
burdens are also discussed in section IV.
B. Legal Basis
The Commission is proposing to amend rule 203A-2(e) and amend Form
ADV under the authority set forth in sections 203A(c) and 211(a) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-3a(c) and 80b-11(a)].
C. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and Rule Amendments
In developing these proposals, we have considered their potential
impact on small entities that would be subject to the proposed
amendments. The proposed amendments would affect a relatively small
number of investment advisers registered with the Commission, including
some small entities.
Under Commission rules, for the purposes of the Advisers Act and
the RFA, an investment adviser generally is a small entity if it: (1)
has assets under management having a total value of less than $25
million; (2) did not have total assets of $5 million or more on the
last day of the most recent fiscal year; and (3) does not control, is
not controlled by, and is not under common control with another
investment adviser that has assets under management of $25 million or
more, or any person (other than a natural person) that had total assets
of $5 million or more on the last day of its most recent fiscal year.
Our proposed amendments would not affect most investment advisers that
are small entities (``small advisers'') because they are generally
registered with one or more state securities authorities and not with
the Commission. Under section
[[Page 50094]]
203A of the Advisers Act, unless subject to an exemption such as the
internet Adviser Exemption, most small advisers are prohibited from
registering with the Commission and are regulated by state regulators.
Based on IARD data, we estimate that as of December 31, 2022,
approximately 489 SEC-registered advisers are small entities under the
RFA.
1. Small Entities Subject to Amendments to the Internet Adviser Rule
As discussed above in section III (the Economic Analysis), the
Commission estimates that based on IARD data as of December 31, 2022,
approximately 266 investment advisers would be subject to the amended
rule and the related proposed amendments to Form ADV. Of the
approximately 489 SEC-registered advisers that are small entities under
the RFA, 190 would be subject to the proposed amendments to rule 203A-
2(e) and the corresponding amendments to Form ADV.
D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements
1. Proposed Amendments to Rule 203A-2(e)
The proposed amendments to rule 203A-2(e) would impose certain
reporting and compliance requirements on investment advisers relying on
the exemption for registration with the Commission, including those
that are small entities. As under the current rule, all internet
investment advisers, which we estimate to be 266 advisers,\135\ would
be required to comply with the proposed rule's requirement to maintain
records in accordance with amended rule 203A-2(e)(1)(ii).\136\ The
proposed requirements and rule amendments, including compliance,
reporting, and recordkeeping requirements, are summarized in this IRFA
(section V.A., above). All of these proposed requirements are also
discussed in detail, above, in sections I and II, and these
requirements and the burdens on respondents, including those that are
small entities, are discussed above in sections III and IV (the
Economic Analysis and Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis, respectively)
and below. The professional skills required to meet these specific
burdens are also discussed in section IV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ Based on IARD data as of Dec. 31, 2022.
\136\ Proposed 203A-2(e)(1)(ii) is identical to current 203A-
2(e)(1)(ii) except for a conforming change to reflect the proposed
requirement that the interactive website be ``operational.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, approximately 489 small advisers were
registered with us as of December 31, 2022, and we estimate that 190 of
those small advisers registered with us would be subject to the
proposed amendments (38.9% of all registered small advisers). As
discussed above in our Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis in section IV
above, the proposed amendments to rule 203A-2(e) under the Advisers Act
would create an annual burden of approximately 4 hours per adviser, or
760 hours in aggregate for small advisers.\137\ We therefore expect the
annual monetized aggregate cost to small advisers associated with our
proposed amendments to the Internet Adviser Exemption would be
$323,000.\138\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ 190 small advisers x 4 hours.
\138\ We estimate the cost at a rate of $425 per hour. The
compensation rate for the current approved information collection
used is the rate for a Sr. Operations Manager in the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association's Report on Management &
Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2013 updated for
2023, and is modified to account for an 1,800-hour work-year and
inflation and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits and overhead. 760 hours x $425 = $323,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Proposed Amendments to Form ADV
Proposed amendments to Form ADV would impose certain reporting and
compliance requirements on investment advisers relying on the rule to
register and remain registered with the Commission, including those
that are small entities. An adviser relying on the rule as a basis for
registration would be required to represent on Schedule D of its Form
ADV that it provides investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an operational interactive website.\139\ An adviser
registered under the rule and continuing to rely on the rule as a basis
for its registration would be required to make a representation that it
has provided investment advice to all of its clients exclusively
through an operational interactive website.\140\ The proposed
requirements and rule amendments, including recordkeeping requirements,
are summarized above in this IRFA (section V.A). All of these proposed
requirements are also discussed in detail, above, in section II, and
these requirements and the burdens on respondents, including those that
are small entities, are discussed above in sections III and IV (the
Economic Analysis and Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis) and below. The
professional skills required to meet these specific burdens are also
discussed in section IV.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\139\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iv).
\140\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Economic Analysis (section III above) discusses these costs and
burdens for respondents, which include small advisers. As discussed
above in our Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis in section IV above, the
proposed amendments to Form ADV would not increase the annual burden
for advisers and would have no annual monetized cost.
E. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules
The Commission believes that there are no rules that duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with the proposed rule amendments.
F. Significant Alternatives
The RFA directs the Commission to consider significant alternatives
that would accomplish our stated objectives, while minimizing any
significant adverse impact on small entities. We considered the
following alternatives for small entities in relation to our proposed
amendments to rule 203A-2(e) and the corresponding proposed amendments
to Form ADV: (i) differing compliance or reporting requirements that
take into account the resources available to small entities; (ii) the
clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the amended rule for such small entities;
(iii) the use of performance rather than design standards; and (iv) an
exemption from coverage of the proposals, or any part thereof, for such
small entities.
Regarding the first and fourth alternatives, the Commission
believes that establishing different compliance or reporting
requirements for small advisers, or exempting small advisers from the
proposed rule, or any part thereof, would be inappropriate under these
circumstances. Because the protections of the Advisers Act are intended
to apply equally to clients of both large and small firms, it would be
inconsistent with the purposes of the Advisers Act to specify
differences for small entities under the proposed amendment to rule
203A-2(e) and Form ADV. As discussed above, the proposed amendments are
intended to better reflect the allocation of authority between the
Federal government and States that Congress intended under NSMIA and
the Dodd-Frank Act and would enhance investor protection through more
efficient use of the Commission's limited oversight and examination
resources by more appropriately allocating Commission resources to
advisers with national presence and allowing smaller advisers with
sufficient local presence to be regulated by the states. We believe
that these benefits should apply to clients of
[[Page 50095]]
smaller firms as well as larger firms. In addition, as discussed above,
our staff would use the corresponding information that advisers would
report on the proposed amended Form ADV to help determine compliance
with the rule and to help prepare for examinations of investment
advisers. Establishing different compliance or reporting requirements
for large and small advisers relying on the Internet Adviser Exemption
would negate these benefits and would be inconsistent with our mandate
to provide a system of public disclosure of investment adviser
information. An internet investment adviser that is a small entity,
however, by the nature of its business, would likely spend fewer
resources in maintaining records and completing Form ADV and amendments
than a larger adviser. Regarding the fourth alternative, specifically,
the Commission has considered exempting small advisers from the
proposed rule. Such an exemption would be inconsistent with the
intended purpose of the proposal, which, in part, is to provide
regulatory relief from multiple state regulatory requirements. Small
advisers are one of the primary beneficiaries of this exemption.
Regarding the second alternative, we believe the current proposal
is clear and that further clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of the compliance requirements is not necessary. As
discussed above, the amended rule would require an internet investment
adviser to (i) provide investment advice to all of its clients
exclusively through an operational interactive website, (ii) maintain
records demonstrating that it provides investment advice to its clients
exclusively through an operational interactive website,\141\ and (iii)
represent on Schedule D of its Form ADV that it provides investment
advice to all of its clients exclusively through an operational
interactive website.\142\ These provisions would better reflect the
allocation of authority between the Federal government and States that
Congress intended under NSMIA and the Dodd-Frank Act and would enhance
investor protection through more efficient use of the Commission's
limited oversight and examination resources by more appropriately
allocating Commission resources to advisers with national presence and
allowing smaller advisers with sufficient local presence to be
regulated by the states. Further, our proposal to require the
representation on Schedule D of Form ADV would assist the Commission's
examination and enforcement capabilities, including assessing
compliance with rules, and therefore, it would provide important
investor protections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(i) and (ii). As with the
current rule, the proposed rule amendments would provide that an
internet investment adviser does not control, is not controlled by,
and is not under common control with, another investment adviser
registered with the Commission solely in reliance on an adviser
registered under the Internet Adviser Exemption. See rule 203A-
2(e)(1)(iii); proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iii).
\142\ See proposed rule 203A-2(e)(1)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding the third alternative, we determined to use design
standards because we determined that removing the de minimis exception
and requiring internet investment advisers to exclusively advise
internet clients to be a design standard necessary to better reflect
Congress's intent under NSMIA and the Dodd-Frank Act.
G. Solicitation of Comments
We encourage written comments on the matters discussed in this
IRFA. We solicit comment on the number of small entities subject to
proposed amendments to rule 203A-2(e) and related amendments to Form
ADV, as well as the potential impacts discussed in this analysis; and
whether the proposal could have an effect on small entities that has
not been considered. We request that commenters describe the nature of
any impact on small entities and provide empirical data to support the
extent of such impact.
VI. Consideration of Impact on the Economy
For purposes of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996, or ``SBREFA,'' \143\ we must advise OMB whether a proposed
regulation constitutes a ``major'' rule. Under SBREFA, a rule is
considered ``major'' where, if adopted, it results in or is likely to
result in (1) an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more;
(2) a major increase in costs or prices for consumers or individual
industries; or (3) significant adverse effects on competition,
investment or innovation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ Public Law 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996)
(codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C., 15 U.S.C., and as a note
to 5 U.S.C. 601).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We request comment on the potential impact of the proposed rule
amendments on the economy on an annual basis. Commenters are requested
to provide empirical data and other factual support for their views to
the extent possible.
Statutory Authority
The Commission is proposing to amend rule 203A-2(e) and amend Form
ADV under the authority set forth in sections 203A(c) and 211(a) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-3a(c) and 80b-11(a)].
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 275 and 279
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements; Securities.
Text of Proposed Rules and Rule and Form Amendments
For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 17, chapter II of
the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 275--RULES AND REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF 1940
0
1. The authority citation for part 275 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11)(G), 80b-2(a)(11)(H), 80b-
2(a)(17), 80b-3, 80b-4, 80b-4a, 80b-6(4), 80b-6a, and 80b-11, unless
otherwise noted.
* * * * *
Section 275.203A-2 is also issued under 15 U.S.C. 80b-3a.
* * * * *
0
2. Amend Sec. 275.203A-2 by revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 275.203A-2 Exemptions from prohibition on Commission
registration.
* * * * *
(e) Internet investment advisers. (1) An investment adviser that:
(i) Provides investment advice to all of its clients exclusively
through an operational interactive website at all times during which
the investment adviser relies on this paragraph (e);
(ii) Maintains, in an easily accessible place, for a period of not
less than five years from the filing of a Form ADV that includes a
representation that the adviser is eligible to register with the
Commission under this paragraph (e), a record demonstrating that it
provides investment advice to its clients exclusively through an
operational interactive website in accordance with the limits in
paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section; and
(iii) Does not control, is not controlled by, and is not under
common control with, another investment adviser that registers with the
Commission under paragraph (b) of this section solely in reliance on
the adviser registered under this paragraph (e) as its registered
adviser.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (e), ``operational interactive
website'' means a website or mobile application through which the
investment adviser provides digital investment advisory services on an
ongoing basis to more than one client
[[Page 50096]]
(except during temporary technological outages of a de minimis
duration). For purposes of this rule, ``digital investment advisory
service'' is investment advice to clients that is generated by the
operational interactive website's software-based models, algorithms, or
applications based on personal information each client supplies through
the operational interactive website.
(3) An investment adviser may rely on the definition of client in
Sec. 275.202(a)(30)-1 in determining whether it is eligible to rely on
this paragraph (e).
PART 279--FORMS PRESCRIBED UNDER THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF
1940
0
3. The authority citation for part 279 continues to read as follows:
Authority: The Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. 80b-1,
et seq., Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376.
0
4. Amend Form ADV (referenced in Sec. 279.1) by:
0
a. In the instructions to the form, Form ADV: Instructions for Part 1A,
by revising 2.i.;
0
b. In the Glossary of Terms by:
0
i. Redesignating paragraphs 14. through 42. as paragraphs 15. through
43.; and paragraphs 43. through 65. as paragraphs 45. through 67.; and
0
ii. Adding new paragraphs 13. and 44.;
0
c. In Part 1A, revising Item 2.A.(11); and
0
d. In Part 1A, Schedule D, by adding Section 2.A.(11).
Note: Form ADV is attached as Appendix A to this document. Form
ADV will not appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
By the Commission.
Dated: July 26, 2023.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Appendix A--Form ADV
FORM ADV (Paper Version)
* * * * *
Form ADV: Instructions for Part 1A
* * * * *
2. Item 2: SEC Registration and SEC Report by Exempt Reporting
Advisers
* * * * *
i. Item 2.A.(11): Internet Adviser. You may check box 11 only if
you are eligible for the Internet Adviser Exemption from the
prohibition on SEC registration. See SEC rule 203A-2(e). If you
check box 11, you must complete Section 2.A.(11) of Schedule D. You
are eligible for this exemption if:
You provide investment advice to all of your clients
exclusively through an operational interactive website at all times
during which you rely on rule 203A-2(e). Other forms of online or
internet investment advice do not qualify for this exemption;
You maintain a record demonstrating that you provide
investment advice to your clients exclusively through an operational
interactive website in accordance with these limits.
* * * * *
Glossary of Terms
* * * * *
13. Digital Investment Advisory Service: Investment advice to
clients that is generated by the operational interactive website's
software-based models, algorithms, or applications based on personal
information each client supplies through the operational interactive
website.
* * * * *
44. Operational Interactive website: A website or mobile
application through which the investment adviser provides digital
investment advisory services on an ongoing basis to more than one
client (except during temporary technological outages of a de
minimis duration).
* * * * *
PART 1A
* * * * *
Item 2. * * *
* * * * *
(11) are an internet adviser relying on rule 203A-2(e);
If you check this box, complete Section 2.A.(11) of Schedule D.
* * * * *
Schedule D
* * * * *
Section 2.A.(11) Internet Adviser
If you are relying on rule 203A-2(e), the Internet Adviser
Exemption from the prohibition on registration, you are required to
make a representation about your eligibility for SEC registration.
By checking the appropriate box, you will be deemed to have made the
required representation.
If you are applying for registration as an investment adviser
with the SEC or changing your existing Item 2 response regarding
your eligibility for SEC registration, you must make this
representation:
[square] I will provide investment advice to all of my clients
exclusively through an operational interactive website.
If you are filing an annual updating amendment to your existing
registration and are continuing to rely on the Internet Adviser
Exemption for SEC registration, you must make this representation:
[square] I have provided and will continue to provide investment
advice to all of my clients exclusively through an operational
interactive website.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-16287 Filed 7-31-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P