
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 93 (Friday, May 13, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27959-27967]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-11801]


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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

17 CFR Part 275

[Release No. IA-3198; File No. S7-17-11]
RIN 3235-AK71


Investment Adviser Performance Compensation

AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of intent to issue order.

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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'' or 
``SEC'') intends to issue an order that would adjust two dollar amount 
tests in the rule under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 that 
permits investment advisers to charge performance based compensation to 
``qualified clients.'' The adjustments would revise the dollar amount 
tests to account for the effects of inflation. The Commission is also 
proposing to amend the rule to: provide that the Commission will issue 
an order every five years adjusting for inflation the dollar amount 
tests; exclude the value of a person's primary residence from the test 
of whether a person has sufficient net worth to be considered a 
``qualified client;'' and add certain transition provisions to the 
rule.

DATES: Comments on the proposed rule should be received on or before 
July 11, 2011.

ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:

Electronic Comments

     Use the Commission's Internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml); or
     Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include 
File Number S7-17-11 on the subject line; or
     Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal (http://www.regulations.gov). Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

Paper Comments

     Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy, 
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., 
Washington, DC 20549-1090.

All submissions should refer to File Number S7-17-11. This file number 
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help us 
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one 
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's 
Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments 
are also available for Web site 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. All comments received will be posted without change; we do not 
edit personal identifying information from submissions. You should 
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly.
    Hearing Request: An order adjusting the dollar amount tests 
specified in the definition of ``qualified client'' will be issued 
unless the Commission orders a hearing. Interested persons may request 
a hearing by writing to the

[[Page 27960]]

Commission's Secretary. Hearing requests should be received by the SEC 
by 5:30 p.m. on June 20, 2011. Hearing requests should state the nature 
of the writer's interest, the reason for the request, and the issues 
contested.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Adam B. Glazer, Senior Counsel, or C. 
Hunter Jones, Assistant Director, at 202-551-6792, Office of Regulatory 
Policy, Division of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange 
Commission, 100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549-8549.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission intends to issue an order, 
and is proposing for public comment amendments to rule 205-3 [17 CFR 
275.205-3], under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Advisers Act'' 
or ``Act'').\1\
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    \1\ 15 U.S.C. 80b. Unless otherwise noted, all references to 
statutory sections are to the Investment Advisers Act, and all 
references to rules under the Investment Advisers Act, including 
rule 205-3, are to Title 17, Part 275 of the Code of Federal 
Regulations [17 CFR 275].
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Table of Contents

I. Background
II. Discussion
    A. Order Adjusting Dollar Amount Tests
    B. Proposed Amendments to Rule 205-3
    1. Inflation Adjustment of Dollar Amount Thresholds
    2. Exclusion of the Value of Primary Residence From Net Worth 
Determination
    3. Transition Rules
    C. Effective and Compliance Dates
III. Request for Comment
IV. Cost Benefit Analysis
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
VII. Statutory Authority
Text of Proposed Rules

I. Background

    Section 205(a)(1) of the Investment Advisers Act generally 
prohibits an investment adviser from entering into, extending, 
renewing, or performing any investment advisory contract that provides 
for compensation to the adviser based on a share of capital gains on, 
or capital appreciation of, the funds of a client.\2\ Congress 
prohibited these compensation arrangements (also known as performance 
compensation or performance fees) in 1940 to protect advisory clients 
from arrangements it believed might encourage advisers to take undue 
risks with client funds to increase advisory fees.\3\ In 1970, Congress 
provided an exception from the prohibition for advisory contracts 
relating to the investment of assets in excess of $1,000,000,\4\ if an 
appropriate ``fulcrum fee'' is used.\5\ Congress subsequently 
authorized the Commission to exempt any advisory contract from the 
performance fee prohibition if the contract is with persons that the 
Commission determines do not need the protections of that 
prohibition.\6\
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    \2\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-5(a)(1).
    \3\ H.R. Rep. No. 2639, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 29 (1940). 
Performance fees were characterized as ``heads I win, tails you 
lose'' arrangements in which the adviser had everything to gain if 
successful and little, if anything, to lose if not. S. Rep No. 1775, 
76th Cong., 3d Sess. 22 (1940).
    \4\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-5(b)(2). Trusts, governmental plans, 
collective trust funds, and separate accounts referred to in section 
3(c)(11) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a-
3(c)(11)] are not eligible for this exception from the performance 
fee prohibition under section 205(b)(2)(B) of the Advisers Act.
    \5\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-5(b). A fulcrum fee generally involves 
averaging the adviser's fee over a specified period and increasing 
or decreasing the fee proportionately with the investment 
performance of the company or fund in relation to the investment 
record of an appropriate index of securities prices. See rule 205-2 
under the Advisers Act; Definition of ``Specified Period'' Over 
Which Asset Value of Company or Fund Under Management is Averaged, 
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 347 (Nov. 10, 1972) [37 FR 24895 
(Nov. 23, 1972)]. In 1980, Congress added another exception to the 
prohibition against charging performance fees, for contracts 
involving business development companies under certain conditions. 
See section 205(b)(3) of the Advisers Act.
    \6\ Section 205(e) of the Advisers Act. In 1996, Congress 
included in the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 
(``1996 Act'') two additional statutory exceptions from the 
performance fee prohibition and new section 205(e) of the Advisers 
Act. The 1996 Act added exceptions for contracts with companies 
excepted from the definition of ``investment company'' in the 
Investment Company Act of 1940 (``Investment Company Act'') [15 
U.S.C. 80a] by section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act [15 
U.S.C. 80a-3(c)(7)] and contracts with persons who are not residents 
of the United States. See sections 205(b)(4) and (b)(5). Section 
205(e) of the Advisers Act authorizes the Commission to exempt 
conditionally or unconditionally from the performance fee 
prohibition advisory contracts with persons that the Commission 
determines do not need its protections. Section 205(e) provides that 
the Commission may determine that persons do not need the 
protections of section 205(a)(1) on the basis of such factors as 
``financial sophistication, net worth, knowledge of and experience 
in financial matters, amount of assets under management, 
relationship with a registered investment adviser, and such other 
factors as the Commission determines are consistent with [section 
205].''
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    The Commission adopted rule 205-3 in 1985 to exempt an investment 
adviser from the prohibition against charging a client performance fees 
in certain circumstances.\7\ The rule, when adopted, allowed an adviser 
to charge performance fees if the client had at least $500,000 under 
management with the adviser immediately after entering into the 
advisory contract (``assets-under-management test'') or if the adviser 
reasonably believed the client had a net worth of more than $1 million 
at the time the contract was entered into (``net worth test''). The 
Commission stated that these standards would limit the availability of 
the exemption to clients who are financially experienced and able to 
bear the risks of performance fee arrangements.\8\
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    \7\ Exemption To Allow Registered Investment Advisers to Charge 
Fees Based Upon a Share of Capital Gains Upon or Capital 
Appreciation of a Client's Account, Investment Advisers Act Release 
No. 996 (Nov. 14, 1985) [50 FR 48556 (Nov. 26, 1985)] (``1985 
Adopting Release''). The exemption applies to the entrance into, 
performance, renewal, and extension of advisory contracts. See rule 
205-3(a).
    \8\ See 1985 Adopting Release, supra note 7, at Sections I.C and 
II.B. The rule also imposed other conditions, including specific 
disclosure requirements and restrictions on calculation of 
performance fees. See id. at Sections II.C-E.
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    In 1998, the Commission amended rule 205-3 to, among other things, 
change the dollar amounts of the assets-under-management test and net 
worth test to adjust for the effects of inflation since 1985.\9\ The 
Commission revised the former from $500,000 to $750,000, and the latter 
from $1 million to $1.5 million.\10\
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    \9\ See Exemption To Allow Investment Advisers To Charge Fees 
Based Upon a Share of Capital Gains Upon or Capital Appreciation of 
a Client's Account, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1731 (July 
15, 1998) [63 FR 39022 (July 21, 1998)] (``1998 Adopting Release'').
    \10\ See id. at Section II.B.1.
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    On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed into law the Dodd-Frank 
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank 
Act'').\11\ The Dodd-Frank Act, among other things, amended section 
205(e) of the Advisers Act to state that, by July 21, 2011 and every 
five years thereafter, the Commission shall adjust for inflation the 
dollar amount tests included in rules issued under section 205(e).\12\ 
Separately, the Dodd-Frank Act also required that we adjust the net 
worth standard for an ``accredited investor'' in rules under the 
Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act'') \13\ to exclude the value 
of a person's primary residence.\14\
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    \11\ Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
    \12\ See section 418 of the Dodd-Frank Act (requiring the 
Commission to issue an order every five years revising dollar amount 
thresholds in a rule that exempts a person or transaction from 
section 205(a)(1) of the Advisers Act if the dollar amount threshold 
was a factor in the Commission's determination that the persons do 
not need the protections of that section).
    \13\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
    \14\ See section 413(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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II. Discussion

    Pursuant to section 418 of the Dodd-Frank Act, today we are 
providing notice that the Commission intends to issue an order revising 
the dollar amount tests of rule 205-3 to account for the effects of 
inflation. We also are proposing for public comment amendments to rule 
205-3 to provide that the Commission will subsequently

[[Page 27961]]

issue orders making future inflation adjustments every five years.\15\ 
In addition, we are proposing to amend rule 205-3 to exclude the value 
of a person's primary residence from the determination of whether a 
person meets the net worth standard required to qualify as a 
``qualified client.'' Finally, we propose to modify the transition 
provisions of the rule to take into account performance fee 
arrangements that were permissible when they were entered into, so that 
new dollar amount thresholds do not require investment advisers to 
renegotiate the terms of arrangements that were permissible when the 
parties entered into them. These proposals are discussed in more detail 
below.
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    \15\ Rule 205-3 is the only exemptive rule issued under section 
205(e) of the Advisers Act that includes dollar amount tests, which 
are the assets-under-management and net worth tests.
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A. Order Adjusting Dollar Amount Tests

    We intend to issue an order revising the dollar amounts of the 
assets-under-management test and the net worth test in the definition 
of ``qualified client'' in rule 205-3. As discussed above, the 
Commission last revised these dollar amount tests in 1998 to take into 
account the effects of inflation. At that time, the Commission revised 
the assets-under-management test from $500,000 to $750,000 and revised 
the net worth test from $1 million to $1.5 million. Pursuant to section 
418 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which requires that we revise the dollar 
amount thresholds of the rule by order not later than July 21, 2011, 
and every five years thereafter, today we are providing notice \16\ 
that we intend to issue an order to revise the assets-under-management 
and net worth tests of rule 205-3 to $1 million \17\ and $2 million 
respectively.\18\
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    \16\ See section 211(c) of the Advisers Act (requiring the 
Commission to provide appropriate notice of and opportunity for 
hearing for orders issued under the Advisers Act).
    \17\ An investment adviser could include in determining the 
amount of assets under management the assets that a client is 
contractually obligated to invest in private funds managed by the 
adviser. Only bona fide contractual commitments may be included, 
i.e., those that the adviser has a reasonable belief that the 
investor will be able to meet.
    This approach to calculating assets under management conforms 
with the approach we took in our recent release proposing to 
implement certain exemptions from registration with the Commission 
under the Advisers Act. In that release, we proposed to include 
uncalled capital commitments in the calculation of assets under 
management used to determine whether an adviser qualifies for the 
private fund adviser exemption. See Exemptions for Advisers to 
Venture Capital Funds, Private Fund Advisers With Less Than $150 
Million in Assets Under Management, and Foreign Private Advisers, 
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 3111 (Nov. 19, 2010) [75 FR 
77190 (Dec. 10, 2010)] at nn.192-94 and accompanying text.
    \18\ As discussed further below, we also would revise the 
definition of ``qualified client'' in rule 205-3(d) to reflect the 
updated thresholds.
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    These revised dollar amounts would take into account the effects of 
inflation by reference to the historic and current levels of the 
Personal Consumption Expenditures Chain-Type Price Index (``PCE 
Index''),\19\ which is published by the Department of Commerce.\20\ The 
PCE Index is often used as an indicator of inflation in the personal 
sector of the U.S. economy.\21\ The Commission has used the PCE Index 
in other contexts, including the determination of whether a person 
meets a specific net worth minimum in Regulation R under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a) (``Exchange Act'').\22\
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    \19\ The revised dollar amounts in the tests would reflect 
inflation as of the end of 2010, and are rounded to the nearest 
$100,000 as required by section 418 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The 2010 
PCE Index is 111.123, and the 1997 PCE Index was 85.395. Assets-
under-management test calculation to adjust for the effects of 
inflation: 111.123/85.395 x $750,000 = $975,962; $975,962 rounded to 
the nearest multiple of $100,000 = $1 million. Net worth test 
calculation to adjust for the effects of inflation: 111.123/85.395 x 
$1.5 million = $1,951,923; $1,951,923 rounded to the nearest 
multiple of $100,000 = $2 million.
    \20\ The values of the PCE Index are available from the Bureau 
of Economic Analysis, a bureau of the Department of Commerce. See 
http://www.bea.gov. See also http://www.bea.gov/national/nipaweb/TableView.asp?SelectedTable=64&ViewSeries=NO&Java=no&Request3Place=N&3Place=N&FromView=YES&Freq=Year&FirstYear=1997&LastYear=2010&3Place=N&Update=Update&JavaBox=no#Mid.
    \21\ See Clinton P. McCully, Brian C. Moyer, and Kenneth J. 
Stewart, ``Comparing the Consumer Price Index and the Personal 
Consumption Expenditures Price Index,'' Survey of Current Business 
(Nov. 2007) at 26 n.1 (PCE Index measures changes in ``prices paid 
for goods and services by the personal sector in the U.S. national 
income and product accounts'' and is primarily used for 
macroeconomic analysis and forecasting). See also Federal Reserve 
Board, Monetary Policy Report to the Congress (Feb. 17, 2000) at n.1 
(available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/hh/2000/february/ReportSection1.htm#FN1) (noting the reasons for using the 
PCE Index rather than the consumer price index).
    \22\ See Definitions of Terms and Exemptions Relating to the 
``Broker'' Exceptions for Banks, Securities Exchange Act Release No. 
56501 (Sept. 24, 2007) [72 FR 56514 (Oct. 3, 2007)] (``Regulation R 
Release'') (adopting periodic inflation adjustments to the fixed-
dollar thresholds for both ``institutional customers'' and ``high 
net worth customers'' under Rule 701 of Regulation R). See also 
Amendments to Form ADV, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 3060 
(July 28, 2010) [75 FR 49234 (Aug. 12, 2010)] (increasing for 
inflation the threshold amount for prepayment of advisory fees that 
triggers an adviser's duty to provide clients with an audited 
balance sheet and the dollar threshold triggering the exception to 
the delivery of brochures to advisory clients receiving only 
impersonal advice). The Dodd-Frank Act also requires the use of the 
PCE Index to calculate inflation adjustments for the cash limit 
protection of each investor under the Securities Investor Protection 
Act of 1970. See section 929H(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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B. Proposed Amendments to Rule 205-3

1. Inflation Adjustment of Dollar Amount Thresholds
    We also are proposing to amend rule 205-3 under the Advisers Act. 
We would add a new paragraph (e) stating that the Commission will issue 
an order every five years adjusting for inflation the dollar amounts of 
the assets-under-management and net worth tests of the rule, as 
required by the Dodd-Frank Act.\23\ Our proposed amendment would 
specify that the PCE Index will be the inflation index used to 
calculate future inflation adjustments of the dollar amount tests in 
the rule.\24\ We believe the use of the PCE Index is appropriate 
because, as discussed above, it is an indicator of inflation in the 
personal sector of the U.S. economy and is used in other provisions of 
the Federal securities laws.\25\ We also intend to revise paragraph (d) 
of rule 205-3, which sets forth the assets-under-management and net 
worth tests, to reflect the revised thresholds that we establish by the 
order discussed

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above.\26\ Finally, we anticipate that, if we adopt these proposed 
amendments to rule 205-3, we would delegate to our staff the authority 
to issue inflation adjustment orders every five years in the 
future.\27\
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    \23\ Proposed rule 205-3(e) would provide that the Commission 
will issue an order effective on or about May 1, 2016 and 
approximately every five years thereafter adjusting the assets-
under-management and net worth tests for the effects of inflation.
    \24\ Proposed rule 205-3(e) would provide that the assets-under-
management and net worth tests will be adjusted for inflation by (i) 
dividing the year-end value of the PCE Index for the calendar year 
preceding the calendar year in which the order is being issued, by 
the year-end value of the PCE Index for the calendar year 1997, (ii) 
multiplying the threshold amounts adopted in 1998 ($750,000 and $1.5 
million) by that quotient, and (iii) rounding each product to the 
nearest multiple of $100,000. For example, for the order the 
Commission would issue in 2016, the Commission would (i) divide the 
2015 PCE Index by the 1997 PCE Index, (ii) multiply the quotient by 
$750,000 and $1.5 million, and (iii) round each of the two products 
to the nearest $100,000.
    \25\ See supra notes 21-22 and accompanying text.
    \26\ As discussed above, we would revise the assets-under-
management test to $1 million and the net worth test to $2 million.
    \27\ To delegate this authority to the staff, we would amend our 
rules of organization and program management to delegate to the 
Director of the Division of Investment Management the authority to 
issue notices and orders revising the dollar amount thresholds in 
rule 205-3(d)(1)(i) (assets-under-management) and 205-3(d)(1)(ii)(A) 
(net worth) for the effects of inflation pursuant to amended section 
205(e) of the Advisers Act every five years after 2011. See rule 30-
5 of the Commission's Rules of Organization and Program Management 
[17 CFR 200.30-5] (delegating authority to the Director of the 
Division of Investment Management). We also anticipate that future 
changes to the dollar amount tests that are issued by order, will be 
reflected in technical amendments to rule 205-3(d).
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    We request comment on the proposed amendments to rule 205-3 
concerning the adjustment of the dollar amount thresholds to account 
for inflation.
     Is the proposed use of the PCE Index as a measure of 
inflation appropriate? Is there another index or other measure that 
would be more appropriate?
     The rule would establish the dollar amount tests we 
adopted in 1998 as the baseline for all future adjustments, as a 
consistent denominator for all future calculations. Should we instead 
establish each future adjustment of the dollar amount tests as a new 
baseline for the next calculation of the dollar amount tests? If we 
were to adopt that approach, because the Dodd-Frank Act requires that 
revised thresholds be rounded to the nearest $100,000, could the 
establishment of new baselines at the rounded amounts, each time the 
thresholds are adjusted, result in the underestimation or 
overestimation of the effects of inflation in subsequent periods?
2. Exclusion of the Value of Primary Residence from Net Worth 
Determination
    We also are proposing to amend the net worth standard in rule 205-
3, in the definition of ``qualified client,'' to exclude the value of a 
natural person's primary residence and debt secured by the 
property.\28\ This change, although not required by the Dodd-Frank Act, 
is similar to that Act's requirement that we exclude the value of a 
natural person's primary residence in the definition of ``accredited 
investor'' in rules under the Securities Act.\29\ The value of a 
person's residence may have little relevance to an individual's 
financial experience \30\ and ability to bear the risks of performance 
fee arrangements, and therefore little relevance to the individual's 
need for the Act's protections from performance fee arrangements.\31\ 
The Commission took a similar approach when it excluded the value of a 
person's primary residence and associated liabilities from the 
determination of whether a person is a ``high net worth customer'' in 
Regulation R under the Exchange Act \32\ and from the determination of 
whether a natural person has a sufficient level of investments to be 
considered a ``qualified purchaser'' under the Investment Company 
Act.\33\
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    \28\ Proposed rule 205-3(d)(1)(ii)(A) (excluding from the 
assessment of net worth the value of a natural person's primary 
residence ``calculated by subtracting from the estimated fair market 
value of the property the amount of debt secured by the property, up 
to the estimated fair market value of the property'').
    \29\ See section 413(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act (requiring the 
Commission to adjust any net worth standard for an ``accredited 
investor'' as set forth in Commission rules under the Securities Act 
of 1933 to exclude the value of a natural person's primary 
residence). The Dodd-Frank Act does not require that the net worth 
standard for an accredited investor be adjusted periodically for the 
effects of inflation, although it does require the Commission at 
least every four years to ``undertake a review of the definition, in 
its entirety, of the term `accredited investor' * * * [as defined in 
Commission rules] as such term applies to natural persons, to 
determine whether the requirements of the definition should be 
adjusted or modified for the protection of investors, in the public 
interest, and in light of the economy.'' See section 413(b)(2)(A) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act. In a separate release, we proposed rule 
amendments to adjust the net worth standards for accredited 
investors in our rules under the Securities Act. See Net Worth 
Standard for Accredited Investors, Securities Act Release No. 9177 
(Jan. 25, 2011) [76 FR 5307 (Jan. 31, 2011)] (``Accredited Investor 
Proposing Release'').
    \30\ We stated in 2006, when we proposed a minimum net worth 
threshold for establishing when an individual could invest in hedge 
funds pursuant to the safe harbor of Regulation D, that the value of 
an individual's personal residence may bear little or no 
relationship to that person's financial knowledge and 
sophistication. See Prohibition of Fraud by Advisers to Certain 
Pooled Investment Vehicles; Accredited Investors in Certain Private 
Investment Vehicles, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2576 (Dec. 
27, 2006) [72 FR 400 (Jan. 4, 2007)] at Section III.B.3.
    \31\ For example, an individual who meets the net worth test 
only by including the value of his primary residence in the 
calculation is unlikely to be as able to bear the risks of 
performance fee arrangements as an individual who meets the test 
without including the value of her primary residence.
    \32\ See, e.g., Regulation R Release, supra note 22, at Section 
II.C.1 (excluding primary residence and associated liabilities from 
the fixed-dollar threshold for ``high net worth customers'' under 
Rule 701 of Regulation R, which permits a bank to pay an employee 
certain fees for the referral of a high net worth customer or 
institutional customer to a broker-dealer without requiring 
registration of the bank as a broker-dealer).
    \33\ A qualified purchaser under section 2(a)(51) of the 
Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(51)] includes, among 
others, any natural person who owns not less than $5 million in 
investments, as defined by the Commission. Rule 2a51-1 under the 
Investment Company Act includes within the meaning of investments 
real estate held for investment purposes. 17 CFR 270.2a51-1(b)(2). A 
personal residence is not considered an investment under rule 2a51-
1, although residential property may be treated as an investment if 
it is not treated as a residence for tax purposes. See Privately 
Offered Investment Companies, Investment Company Act Release No. 
22597 (Apr. 3, 1997) [62 FR 17512 (Apr. 9, 1997)] at text 
accompanying and following n.48.
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    Our proposed amendment would exclude the value of a natural 
person's primary residence and the amount of debt secured by the 
property that is no greater than the property's current market 
value.\34\ Therefore a mortgage on the residence would not be included 
in the assessment of a natural person's net worth, unless the 
outstanding debt on the mortgage, at the time that net worth is 
calculated, exceeds the market value of the residence. If the 
outstanding debt exceeds the market value of the residence, the amount 
of the excess would be considered a liability in calculating net worth 
under the proposed amendments to rule 205-3.
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    \34\ Proposed rule 205-3(d)(1)(ii)(A).
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    We request comment on the proposed exclusion of the value of a 
person's primary residence from the calculation of a natural person's 
net worth under rule 205-3.
     Should we, as proposed, exclude the value of a natural 
person's primary residence from the calculation of net worth? Or should 
we include the value of a person's primary residence? Does such 
ownership evidence financial experience and the ability to bear risks 
associated with performance fee contracts? Should we, as proposed, also 
exclude from the net worth standard in rule 205-3 debt secured by a 
person's primary residence, up to the market value of the residence? 
Does such debt affect the ability to bear risks associated with 
performance fee contracts or investments that often are associated with 
such contracts?
     We note that although the Dodd-Frank Act requires the 
Commission to exclude a natural person's primary residence from the net 
worth standard for an ``accredited investor'' in rules under the 
Securities Act, the Dodd-Frank Act does not require the Commission to 
exclude a natural person's primary residence from the standards for a 
``qualified client'' in rules under section 205(e) of the Advisers Act. 
Instead, the Dodd-Frank Act requires that the dollar amount tests of 
``qualified client'' be adjusted for inflation every five years. Should 
our amendment of rule 205-3 accomplish only what the Dodd-Frank Act 
mandates (i.e., inflation-adjustment of the dollar amount tests) and 
not revise the net

[[Page 27963]]

worth test by excluding the value of a primary residence?
     Should the rule require, as proposed, that debt secured by 
the residence in excess of the market value of the residence at the 
time the advisory contract is entered into be included as a liability 
in the determination of the person's net worth? Should the rule instead 
require that all debt that is secured by the primary residence 
(regardless of whether it exceeds the fair market value of the 
residence) be excluded from the calculation of net worth under rule 
205-3? Alternatively, should the rule exclude the entire market value 
of the residence from net worth, but require treatment of any 
associated debt as a liability? Should the rule require inclusion of 
debt secured by a primary residence as a liability if proceeds of the 
debt are used to enter into an advisory contract that involves 
performance compensation paid to an investment adviser? If so, how 
would these proceeds of the debt be traced?
     Should the rule provide that the calculation of net worth 
must be made on a specified date prior to the day the advisory contract 
is entered into, for example 30, 60, or 90 days? If not, would 
investors be likely to inflate their net worth by borrowing against 
their homes to attain qualified client status? If we were to require 
that the net worth calculation be made a significant period of time in 
advance of entering into the advisory contract, would such a 
requirement make the calculation unduly complex?
     Is the language of the proposed rule amendment 
sufficiently precise? Should we substitute the word ``equity'' for the 
word ``value'' when referring to the primary residence excluded from 
the calculation of a natural person's net worth? Should we define the 
term ``primary residence'' for purposes of rule 205-3? If so, should we 
address the circumstances of a person who lives in multiple residences 
for roughly equal amounts of time during the year? \35\
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    \35\ As we stated in the Accredited Investor Proposing Release, 
supra note 29, at nn.35-36 and accompanying text, helpful guidance 
may be found in rules that apply in other contexts. For example, the 
IRS Publication 523, Selling Your Home 3-4 (Jan. 5, 2011) lists the 
following factors to be used, in addition to the amount of time a 
person lives in each of several homes, to determine a person's 
``principal residence'' under section 121 of the Internal Revenue 
Code, 26 U.S.C. 121: place of employment; location of family 
members' main home; mailing address for bills and correspondence; 
address listed on Federal and state tax returns, driver's license, 
car registration, and voter registration card; location of banks 
used and recreational clubs and religious organizations.
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     As noted above, the Commission proposed in a separate 
release to adjust the net worth standards for accredited investors in 
our rules under the Securities Act, to exclude the value of a natural 
person's primary residence from the assessment of a natural person's 
net worth.\36\ We request comment on whether the net worth standards 
that we consider in connection with rule 205-3 should differ from any 
standards we consider in connection with those proposed amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ See supra note 29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Transition Rules
    The proposed amendments would replace the current transition rules 
section of rule 205-3 with two new subsections to allow an investment 
adviser and its clients to maintain existing performance fee 
arrangements that were permissible when the advisory contract was 
entered into, even if performance fees would not be permissible under 
the contract if it were entered into at a later date. These transition 
provisions, proposed rules 205-3(c)(1) and (2), are both designed so 
that restrictions on the charging of performance fees apply to new 
contractual arrangements and do not apply retroactively to existing 
contractual arrangements, including investments in companies that are 
excluded from the definition of an ``investment company'' under the 
Investment Company Act by reason of section 3(c)(1) \37\ of that Act 
(``private investment companies'').\38\ This approach would minimize 
the disruption of existing contracts that meet applicable standards at 
the time the parties entered into the contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ See rule 205-3(d)(3) (defining ``private investment 
company'' for purposes of rule 205-3). Advisory contracts with 
companies excepted from the definition of an ``investment company'' 
by reason of section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act are not 
subject to the Advisers Act performance fee prohibition. See section 
205(b)(4) of the Advisers Act. Therefore these contractual 
arrangements do not need, and are not included within, the exemptive 
relief provided by rule 205-3.
    \38\ Under rule 205-3(b), the equity owner of a private 
investment company, or of a registered investment company or 
business development company, is considered a client of the adviser 
for purposes of rule 205-3(a). We adopted this provision in 1998, 
and the provision was not affected by our subsequent rule amendments 
and related litigation concerning the registration of investment 
advisers to private investment companies. See 1998 Adopting Release, 
supra note 9; Goldstein v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 451 
F.3d 873 (D.C. Cir. 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    First, proposed rule 205-3(c)(1) would provide that, if a 
registered investment adviser entered into a contract and satisfied the 
conditions of the rule that were in effect when the contract was 
entered into, the adviser will be considered to satisfy the conditions 
of the rule.\39\ If, however, a natural person or company that was not 
a party to the contract becomes a party, the conditions of the rule in 
effect at the time they become a party would apply to that person or 
company. This proposed subsection would mean, for example, that if an 
individual meets the $1.5 million net worth test and enters into an 
advisory contract with a registered investment adviser, the client 
could continue to maintain funds (and invest additional funds) with the 
adviser under that contract even if the net worth test were 
subsequently raised and he or she no longer met the new test. If, 
however, another person were to become a party to that contract, the 
current net worth threshold would apply to the new party when he or she 
becomes a party to the contract.\40\
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    \39\ Proposed rule 205-3(c)(1) would modify the existing 
transition rule in rule 205-3(c)(1), which permits advisers and 
their clients that entered into a contract before August 20, 1998, 
and satisfied the eligibility criteria in effect on the date the 
contract was entered into to maintain their existing performance fee 
arrangements.
    \40\ Proposed rule 205-3(c)(1). Similarly, a person who invests 
in a private investment company advised by a registered investment 
adviser must satisfy the rule's conditions when he or she becomes an 
investor in the company. See rule 205-3(b) (equity owner of a 
private investment company is considered a client of a registered 
investment adviser for purposes of rule 205-3(a)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We request comment on this proposed transition provision.
     Should the rule be amended as proposed, to allow advisers 
to continue to provide advisory services under performance fee 
arrangements that were permitted under the rule in effect at the time 
the contract was entered into, if the client does not meet the 
eligibility criteria after an adjustment to the dollar amount tests or 
for any other reason (e.g., a decrease in the client's net worth below 
the dollar amount test)? Should the rule in these circumstances permit 
the management of existing funds under previous contractual 
arrangements, but prohibit an adviser from charging performance fees 
with respect to funds committed after the effective date of the rule? 
If so, how should the rule treat dividends and realized capital gains 
reinvested by the adviser?
    Second, proposed rule 205-3(c)(2) would provide that, if an 
investment adviser was previously exempt pursuant to section 203 from 
registration with the Commission and subsequently registers with the 
Commission, section 205(a)(1) of the Act would not apply to the 
contractual arrangements into which the adviser entered when it was 
exempt from registration with the

[[Page 27964]]

Commission.\41\ This proposed subsection would mean, for example, that 
if an investment adviser to a private investment company with 50 
individual investors was exempt from registration with the Commission 
in 2009, but then subsequently registered with the Commission because 
it was no longer exempt from registration or because it chose 
voluntarily to register, section 205(a)(1) would not apply to the 
contractual arrangements the adviser entered into before it registered, 
including the accounts of the 50 individual investors with the private 
investment company and any additional investments they make in that 
company. If, however, any other individuals become new investors in the 
private investment company after the adviser registers with the 
Commission, section 205(a)(1) would apply to the adviser's relationship 
with them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ Section 205(a)(1) would apply, however, to contractual 
arrangements into which the adviser enters after it is no longer 
exempt from registration with the Commission. See proposed rule 205-
3(c)(2). The approach of the proposed subsection is similar to the 
transition subsections we adopted in 2004, in rules 205-3(c)(2)--
(3), when we adopted rules to require the registration of investment 
advisers to private funds. See Registration Under the Advisers Act 
of Certain Hedge Fund Advisers, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 
2333 (Dec. 2, 2004) [69 FR 72054 (Dec. 10, 2004)]. Those transition 
provisions were vacated by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 
District of Columbia Circuit when it vacated the Commission's 
rulemaking in its entirety. See Goldstein v. SEC, supra note 38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We request comment on this proposed transition provision.
     Should the rule be amended as proposed, to allow advisers 
to continue to be compensated under performance fee arrangements that 
were permitted when the adviser was exempt from registration with the 
Commission? Should the rule in these circumstances permit the 
management of existing funds under previous contractual arrangements, 
but prohibit a newly registered investment adviser from charging a 
performance fee with respect to any additional funds to be managed 
under previously existing contracts?
     Should the rule differentiate between the reasons why an 
adviser was exempt from registration (e.g., due to a particular 
subsection of the Advisers Act) but is no longer exempt? Should the 
rule include different transition provisions depending upon the reason 
why an adviser was exempt from registration but is no longer exempt?

C. Effective and Compliance Dates

    We anticipate that, if we issue the order described above and adopt 
the rule amendments we are proposing, we will allow an appropriate time 
period before requiring compliance with the new standards. For rule 
amendments, the Administrative Procedure Act generally requires at 
least 30 days prior to the effectiveness of new rules, absent special 
circumstances.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     We request comment on the transition period or delayed 
compliance date that would be appropriate for any revised thresholds 
that we issue by order, or for any rule amendments that we adopt. 
Should we allow more time than the 30 days required under the 
Administrative Procedure Act (e.g., 60 days, 90 days, 120 days)?

III. Request for Comment

    The Commission requests comment on the rule amendments we propose 
in this release. Commenters are requested to provide empirical data to 
support their views. The Commission also requests suggestions for 
additional changes to existing rules or forms, and comments on other 
matters that might have an effect on the proposals contained in this 
release.

IV. Cost Benefit Analysis

    The Commission is sensitive to the costs and benefits imposed by 
its rules. We have identified certain costs and benefits of the 
proposed amendments, and we request comment on all aspects of this cost 
benefit analysis, including identification and assessment of any costs 
and benefits not discussed in this analysis. We seek comment and data 
on the value of the benefits identified. We also welcome comments on 
the accuracy of the cost estimates in this analysis, and request that 
commenters provide data that may be relevant to these cost estimates. 
In addition, we seek estimates and views regarding these costs and 
benefits for particular investment advisers, including small advisers, 
as well as any other costs or benefits that may result from the 
adoption of these proposed amendments.
    In proposing to amend rule 205-3 to provide that the Commission 
will issue orders every five years adjusting for inflation the dollar 
amount tests of the rule, we are responding to the Dodd-Frank Act's 
amendment of section 205(e) of the Advisers Act requiring the 
Commission to issue these orders.\43\ The proposed amendments to rule 
205-3 also would exclude the value of a natural person's primary 
residence and debt secured by the property from the determination of 
whether a person has sufficient net worth to be considered a 
``qualified client,'' and would modify the transition provisions of the 
rule to take into account performance fee arrangements that were 
permissible when they were entered into.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ Section 418 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. Benefits

    We expect that adjusting the dollar amount thresholds in rule 205-3 
for the effects of inflation would benefit advisory clients. When the 
Commission adopted the dollar amount thresholds in the definition of 
``qualified client'' in rule 205-3 in 1985, it evaluated the most 
appropriate dollar amount for both the assets-under-management and net 
worth tests. The Commission stated that these standards would limit the 
availability of the exemption to clients who are financially 
experienced and able to bear the risks of performance fee 
arrangements.\44\ The adjustment of these dollar amount tests every 
five years would carry forward these protections at dollar levels that 
are based on the current price levels in the economy. We believe that 
adjusting these eligibility criteria to reflect real dollar equivalents 
would help to preserve these protections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ See supra note 8 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed exclusion of the value of an individual's primary 
residence also would benefit clients. As discussed above, the value of 
an individual's primary residence may bear little or no relationship to 
that person's financial experience or ability to bear the risks 
associated with performance fee arrangements. Therefore, a client who 
does not meet the net worth test of rule 205-3 without including the 
value of her primary residence would be protected by the performance 
fee restrictions in section 205 of the Advisers Act.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ As discussed above, the proposed amendments to rule 205-3 
also would exclude from the net worth test the amount of debt 
secured by the primary residence that is no greater than the 
property's current market value. The exclusion of the debt might 
limit these benefits in some circumstances. For example, if a client 
meets the net worth test as a result of the exclusion of debt 
secured by the primary residence and the market value of the primary 
residence were to decline to the extent that the debt could not be 
satisfied by the sale of the residence, the client might be less 
able to bear the risks related to the performance fee contract and 
the investments that the adviser might make on behalf of the client.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed amendments to the rule's transition provisions would 
benefit advisory clients and investment advisers. The proposed 
amendments would allow an investment adviser and its clients to 
maintain existing performance fee arrangements that were permissible 
when the advisory contract was entered into, even if performance fees 
would not be permissible under the contract if it were entered into at 
a later date. These transition provisions are

[[Page 27965]]

designed so that the restrictions on the charging of performance fees 
apply to new contractual arrangements and do not apply retroactively to 
existing contractual arrangements, including investments in private 
investment companies. Otherwise, advisory clients and investment 
advisers might have to terminate contractual arrangements into which 
they previously entered and enter into new arrangements, which could be 
costly to investors and advisers.
     We request comment on these anticipated benefits, and on 
whether the proposed rule amendments would result in additional 
benefits to advisory clients and investment advisers.

B. Costs

    We do not expect that adjusting the dollar amount tests in rule 
205-3 would impose significant new costs on advisory clients or 
investment advisers. As discussed above, section 418 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act requires the Commission to periodically issue orders adjusting for 
inflation the assets-under-management and net worth tests in rule 205-
3. Raising these eligibility criteria could mean that certain persons 
who would have qualified under the current dollar amount thresholds 
would no longer qualify under the dollar amount thresholds as adjusted 
for the effects of inflation. As a result, an investment adviser could 
be prohibited from charging performance fees to new clients to whom it 
could have charged performance fees if the advisory contract had been 
entered into before the adjustment of the dollar amount thresholds. 
This effect may result in an investment adviser declining to provide 
services to potential clients.\46\ However, this cost is a consequence 
of the Dodd-Frank Act, and therefore we do not attribute this cost to 
this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ As discussed above, the proposed amendments would allow an 
investment adviser and its clients to maintain existing performance 
fee arrangements that were permissible when the advisory contract 
was entered into, even if performance fees would not be permissible 
under the contract if it were entered into at a later date. See 
supra Section II.B.3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 418 of the Dodd-Frank Act does not specify how the 
Commission should measure inflation. We have proposed to use the PCE 
Index because it is widely used as a broad indicator of inflation in 
the economy and because the Commission has used the PCE Index in other 
contexts. It is possible that the use of the PCE Index to measure 
inflation might result in a larger or smaller dollar amount for the two 
thresholds than the use of a different index, although the rounding 
required by the Dodd-Frank Act (to the nearest $100,000) would likely 
negate any difference between indexes.
    The proposed amendments to the rule's transition provisions are not 
likely to impose any new costs on advisory clients or investment 
advisers. As discussed above, the proposed amendments would allow an 
investment adviser and its clients to maintain existing performance fee 
arrangements that were permissible when the advisory contract was 
entered into, even if performance fees would not be permissible under 
the contract if it were entered into at a later date.
    The proposed amendments also would exclude the value of a person's 
primary residence and debt secured by the property (if no greater than 
the current market value of the residence) from the calculation of a 
person's net worth. Based on data from the Federal Reserve Board, 
approximately 5.5 million households have a net worth of more than $2 
million including the equity in the primary residence (i.e., value 
minus debt secured by the property), and approximately 4.2 million 
households have a net worth of more than $2 million excluding the 
equity in the primary residence.\47\ Therefore, approximately 1.3 
million households currently would not meet a $2 million net worth test 
under the proposed revised test, and would therefore not be considered 
``qualified clients,'' if the value of the primary residence is 
excluded from the test. Excluding the value of the primary residence 
(and debt secured by the property up to the current market value of the 
residence) would mean that 1.3 million households that would have met 
the net worth threshold if the value of the residence were included, as 
is currently permitted, would no longer be ``qualified clients'' under 
the proposed revised net worth test and therefore would be unable to 
enter into performance fee contracts unless they meet another test of 
rule 205-3.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ These figures are derived from the 2007 Federal Reserve 
Board Survey of Consumer Finances. These figures represent the net 
worth of households rather than individual persons who might be 
clients. More information regarding the survey may be obtained at 
http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/oss/oss2/scfindex.html.
    \48\ The net worth test includes assets that a natural person 
holds jointly with his or her spouse. See rule 205-3(d)(1)(ii)(A).
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    As noted above, the proposed amendments would allow an investment 
adviser and its clients to maintain existing performance fee 
arrangements that were permissible when the advisory contract was 
entered into. For purposes of this cost benefit analysis, Commission 
staff assumes that 25 percent of the 1.3 million households would have 
entered into new advisory contracts that contained performance fee 
arrangements after the compliance date of the amendments, and therefore 
approximately 325,000 clients would not meet the revised net worth 
test.\49\ Commission staff estimates that about 40 percent of those 
325,000 potential clients (i.e., 130,000) would separately meet the 
``qualified client'' definition under the assets-under-management test, 
and therefore could enter into performance fee arrangements.\50\ The 
remaining 60 percent (195,000 households) would have access only to 
those investment advisers (directly or through the private investment 
companies they manage) that charge advisory fees other than performance 
fees.\51\ Commission staff anticipates that the non-performance fee 
arrangements into which these clients would enter would contain 
management fees that yield advisers approximately the same amount of 
fees that clients would have paid under performance fee arrangements. 
Under these arrangements, if the adviser's performance does not reach 
the level at which it would have accrued performance fees, a client 
might end up paying higher overall fees than if he were paying 
performance fees. For purposes of this cost benefit analysis, 
Commission staff assumes that approximately 80 percent of the 195,000 
households (i.e. 156,000 households) would enter into these non-
performance fee arrangements, and that the other 20 percent would 
decide not to invest their assets with an adviser.\52\
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    \49\ The assumption that 25% of these investors would have 
entered into new performance fee arrangements is based on data 
compiled in a 2008 report sponsored by the Commission. See Angela A. 
Hung et al., Investor and Industry Perspectives on Investment 
Advisers and Broker-Dealers 130 (Table C.1) (2008) (available at 
http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-1_randiabdreport.pdf) 
(estimating that approximately 20% of investment advisers charge 
performance fees). Although that report indicated that 20% of 
investment advisers charge performance fees and an average of only 
37% of investors indicated they would seek investment advisory 
services in the next five years, id. at 105 (Table 6.13), we have 
used the 25% assumption in an effort to overestimate rather than 
underestimate the costs, especially given the inherent uncertainty 
surrounding hypothetical events. As noted above, the estimate 
concerning 1.3 million households is derived from the 2007 Federal 
Reserve Board Survey of Consumer Finances. See supra notes 47-48 and 
accompanying text.
    \50\ This estimate is based on data filed by registered 
investment advisers on Form ADV.
    \51\ Commission staff estimates that less than one percent of 
registered investment advisers are compensated solely by performance 
fees, based on data from filings by registered investment advisers 
on Form ADV.
    \52\ This assumption is based on the idea that a substantial 
majority of investment advisers that typically charge performance 
fees and that in the future would calculate a potential client's net 
worth and determine that it does not meet the $2 million threshold, 
would offer alternate compensation arrangements in order to offer 
their services. As noted above, Commission staff estimates that less 
than one percent of registered advisers charge performance fees 
exclusively. See supra note 51.

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[[Page 27966]]

    Commission staff estimates that the remaining 39,000 households 
that would have entered into advisory contracts, if the value of the 
client's primary residence were not excluded from the calculation of a 
person's net worth, will not enter into advisory contracts. Some of 
these households would likely seek other investment opportunities, for 
example, investing in mutual funds, closed-end funds, or exchange-
traded funds. Other households may forgo professional investment 
management altogether because of the higher value they place on the 
alignment of advisers' interests with their own interests associated 
with the use of performance fee arrangements.
    We recognize that the proposed amendments that would exclude the 
value of a person's primary residence from the calculation of a 
person's net worth also might result in a reduction in the total fees 
collected by investment advisers. Because advisers would no longer be 
able to charge some clients performance fees, it is possible that the 
overall fees collected by advisers might be reduced. As discussed 
above, advisers may adjust their fees in order to obtain the same 
revenue from clients who do not meet the definition of ``qualified 
clients.'' In addition, advisers may choose to market their services to 
a larger number of potential clients and thereby enter into advisory 
contracts with others to whom they could charge performance fees.\53\ 
As a result, Commission staff estimates that the proposed amendments 
are not likely to impose a significant net cost on advisers. Because of 
the ability of investment advisers to attract qualified clients who 
satisfy the proposed standards, and the ability of non-qualified 
clients to invest in other investment opportunities that do not entail 
performance fees, we expect that the proposed rule would not have a 
significant impact on capital formation.\54\
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    \53\ Commission staff notes that expanding marketing efforts 
could result in additional costs that offset some of the new sources 
of revenue. As noted above, Commission staff estimates that 39,000 
households that would have entered into advisory contracts would not 
enter into such contracts as a result of the proposed exclusion of a 
client's primary residence from a determination of a client's net 
worth. Based on ADV filings, Commission staff estimates that 3295 
registered advisers charge performance fees. Therefore, Commission 
staff estimates that on average each adviser would need to offset 
the loss of approximately 12 households (39,000/3295 = 11.8 
households) to avoid a reduction in total fees collected, either by 
charging those households comparable fees other than performance 
fees, or by attracting other clients that meet the net worth test.
    \54\ Clients who no longer meet the net worth test as a result 
of the exclusion of their primary residence likely would have 
invested a smaller amount of assets than other clients who continue 
to meet the test. Therefore, the revenue loss to investment advisers 
from the exclusion of these clients from the performance fee 
exemption may be mitigated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We request comment on the economic costs of excluding the value of 
the primary residence and debt secured by the property from the net 
worth test for determining whether individual clients are ``qualified 
clients.''
     Would most households that no longer meet the net worth 
standard due to the exclusion of the value of the primary residence, 
still receive advisory services? Would investment advisers decline to 
provide advisory services to potential clients who do not qualify as 
``qualified clients''? Would investment advisers be able to offset the 
potential lost performance fees? If not, what would be the amount of 
lost fees that advisers would incur?

C. Request for Comment

    The Commission requests comment on all aspects of the cost benefit 
analysis, including the accuracy of the potential benefits and costs 
identified and assessed in this release, as well as any other benefits 
or costs that may result from the proposals. We encourage commenters to 
identify, discuss, analyze, and supply relevant data regarding these or 
additional benefits and costs. For purposes of the Small Business 
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,\55\ the Commission also 
requests information regarding the potential annual effect of the 
proposals on the U.S. economy. Commenters are requested to provide 
empirical data to support their views.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ Pub. L. 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).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The proposed amendments to rule 205-3 under the Advisers Act do not 
contain a ``collection of information'' requirement within the meaning 
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA'').\56\ Accordingly, the 
PRA is not applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification

    Section 3(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 \57\ 
(``RFA'') requires the Commission to undertake an initial regulatory 
flexibility analysis (``IRFA'') of the proposed rule amendments on 
small entities unless the Commission certifies that the rule, if 
adopted, would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities.\58\ Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. section 605(b), the 
Commission hereby certifies that the proposed amendments to rule 205-3 
under the Advisers Act, would not, if adopted, have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Under 
Commission rules, for purposes of the Advisers Act and the RFA, an 
investment adviser generally is a small entity if it: (i) Has assets 
under management having a total value of less than $25 million; (ii) 
did not have total assets of $5 million or more on the last day of its 
most recent fiscal year; and (iii) 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.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
    \58\ 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
    \59\ Rule 0-7(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Based on information in filings submitted to the Commission, 617 of 
the approximately 11,888 investment advisers registered with the 
Commission are small entities. Only approximately 20 percent of the 617 
registered investment advisers that are small entities (about 122 
advisers) charge any of their clients performance fees. In addition, 24 
of the 122 advisers require an initial investment from their clients 
that would meet the current assets-under-management threshold 
($750,000), which advisory contracts would be grandfathered into the 
exemption provided by rule 205-3 under the proposed amendments. 
Therefore, if these advisers in the future raise those minimum 
investment levels to the revised level that we intend to issue by order 
($1 million), those advisers could charge their clients performance 
fees because the clients would meet the assets-under-management test, 
even if they would not meet the proposed net worth test that would 
exclude the value of the client's primary residence. For these reasons, 
the Commission believes that the proposed amendments to rule 205-3 
would not, if adopted, have a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities.
    The Commission requests written comments regarding this 
certification. The Commission solicits comments as

[[Page 27967]]

to whether the proposed amendments 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.

VII. Statutory Authority

    The Commission is proposing amendments to rule 205-3 pursuant to 
the authority set forth in section 205(e) of the Investment Advisers 
Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-5(e)].

List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 275

    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.

Text of Proposed Rules

    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 general authority citation for part 275 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority:  15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(17), 80b-3, 80b-4, 80b-6(4), 80b-
6a, 80b-11, unless otherwise noted.
* * * * *
    2. Section 275.205-3 is amended by:
    a. Revising paragraph (c);
    b. Revising paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii); and
    c. Adding paragraph (e).
    The revisions and addition read as follows.


Sec.  275.205-3  Exemption from the compensation prohibition of section 
205(a)(1) for investment advisers.

* * * * *
    (c) Transition rules. (1) Registered investment advisers. If a 
registered investment adviser entered into a contract and satisfied the 
conditions of this section that were in effect when the contract was 
entered into, the adviser will be considered to satisfy the conditions 
of this section; Provided, however, that if a natural person or company 
who was not a party to the contract becomes a party (including an 
equity owner of a private investment company advised by the adviser), 
the conditions of this section in effect at that time will apply with 
regard to that person or company.
    (2) Registered investment advisers that were previously exempt from 
registration. If an investment adviser was exempt from registration 
with the Commission pursuant to section 203 of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80b-
3), section 205(a)(1) of the Act will not apply to an advisory contract 
entered into when the adviser was exempt, or to an account of an equity 
owner of a private investment company advised by the adviser if the 
account was established when the adviser was exempt; Provided, however, 
that section 205(a)(1) of the Act will apply with regard to a natural 
person or company who was not a party to the contract and becomes a 
party (including an equity owner of a private investment company 
advised by the adviser) when the adviser is no longer exempt.
    (d) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) A natural person who, or a company that, immediately after 
entering into the contract has at least $1,000,000 under the management 
of the investment adviser;
    (ii) A natural person who, or a company that, the investment 
adviser entering into the contract (and any person acting on his 
behalf) reasonably believes, immediately prior to entering into the 
contract, either:
    (A) Has a net worth (together, in the case of a natural person, 
with assets held jointly with a spouse) of more than $2,000,000, 
excluding the value of the primary residence of such natural person, 
calculated by subtracting from the estimated fair market value of the 
property the amount of debt secured by the property, up to the 
estimated fair market value of the property; or
    (B) Is a qualified purchaser as defined in section 2(a)(51)(A) of 
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(51)(A)) at the 
time the contract is entered into; or
* * * * *
    (e) Inflation adjustments. Pursuant to section 205(e) of the Act, 
the dollar amounts specified in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(ii)(A) 
of this section shall be adjusted by order of the Commission, effective 
on or about May 1, 2016 and issued approximately every five years 
thereafter. The adjusted dollar amounts established in such orders 
shall be computed by:
    (1) Dividing the year-end value of the Personal Consumption 
Expenditures Chain-Type Price Index (or any successor index thereto), 
as published by the United States Department of Commerce, for the 
calendar year preceding the calendar year in which the order is being 
issued, by the year-end value of such index (or successor) for the 
calendar year 1997;
    (2) For the dollar amount in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, 
multiplying $750,000 times the quotient obtained in paragraph (e)(1) of 
this section and rounding the product to the nearest multiple of 
$100,000; and
    (3) For the dollar amount in paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(A) of this 
section, multiplying $1,500,000 times the quotient obtained in 
paragraph (e)(1) of this section and rounding the product to the 
nearest multiple of $100,000.

    By the Commission.

    Dated: May 10, 2011.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011-11801 Filed 5-12-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P


