On November 14, 2018, the Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Division of Investment Management updated its frequently asked questions (FAQs) on its fund reporting rules relating to the investment company reporting modernization reforms adopted in October 2016. The Staff regularly updates the FAQs to address additional questions. The recently released questions and responses address issues within the four categories of Compliance Dates and General Filing Obligations, Form N-PORT, Regulation S-X and Form N-CEN.
Importantly, the FAQs clarified items in Form N-PORT by explaining (i) whether a fund may report monthly returns without deducting sales loads and redemption fees, (ii) whether a fund must continue to file reports if a registrant or series is terminated, and (iii) whether a fund with an effective registration statement without publicly offered shares must file Form N-PORT. The Staff also added information to address how funds should calculate the disclosures needed for a derivative on a non-public index or custom basket of investments to comply with Article 12 of Regulation S-X. Finally, the Staff released questions and answers regarding Form N-CEN related to (i) fund liquidity risk management programs, (ii) the use of a new SEC filing tool, and (iii) reporting on the termination of a registrant or series. These and other clarifications are discussed below.
Compliance Dates and General Filing Obligations
Issue | New SEC Guidance |
Form N-CEN (Items C.20 and E.5) |
The 2016 fund liquidity programs adopting release amended Form N-CEN to include disclosure Items C.20 (which requests information about a registrant’s lines of credit, The SEC clarified that a fund with a fiscal year-end that falls before December 1, 2018 should not include a response to these two items on Form N-CEN. Funds should only begin responding to these items when their fiscal year-ends fall on or after December 1, 2018. |
Form N-PORT, Regulation S-X and Form N-CEN
Form N-PORT
Issue | New SEC Guidance |
Monthly Total Returns Reports (Item B.5.a) |
Item B.5.a requires funds to report monthly total returns for each of the preceding three months. Calculation methodologies in Forms N-1A and N-3, both intended for annual reporting, require a deduction of sales loads and redemption fees charged to all shareholder accounts. No one methodology outlines how funds would pro-rate sales loads and redemption fees to reflect net monthly reporting, and funds could take a variety of approaches.
The Staff indicated that it would not object if funds reported returns without deducting sales loads and redemption fees charged to all accounts. In the answer, the SEC staff noted that deducting sales loads and redemption fees over an indefinite number of reports could provide investors with the impression that these are ongoing fees and overstate the effect on performance. If funds determine to report returns without deducting sales loads and redemption fees, this should be noted in Part E (explanatory notes). |
Issue | New SEC Guidance |
Filing Obligations for Terminated Registrants or Series |
A registrant or series that has liquidated, merged or otherwise been terminated and has no remaining investors or investments but has not yet deregistered is not required to file reports on Form N-PORT. The SEC determined filing a report in these circumstances would not provide relevant information to the necessary parties. |
Filing Obligations for a New Fund with an Effective Registration Statement | A fund with an effective registration statement whose shares have not yet been publicly offered is not required to file Form N-PORT. However, a new fund that publicly offers shares for the first time would be required to file its first Form N-PORT report no later than thirty days after the end of that month. |
Regulation S-X
Issue | New SEC Guidance |
Funds with Index or Basket of Investments as Underlying Asset (Article 12) |
Where the underlying asset is an index or basket of investments, the fund must assess whether the notional amount of a derivative contract exceeds one percent of the net asset value of the registrant as of the close of the period. If so, the fund must disclose the fifty largest components in the index or basket. The fund must also disclose any other components where the notional value for that component exceeds one percent of the “notional value of the index or custom basket.” To illustrate the performance of these calculations, the SEC provided a specific example in the updated FAQ. The “notional value of the index or custom basket” is the sum of the notional values of all the individual components of the index or custom basket. In the Staff’s example, the notional value of the custom basket was $101. Therefore, if the fund was required to disclose its fifty largest components, it would also need to disclose each additional component whose notional value exceeds $1.01. |
Derivatives with Index or Basket of Investments as Underlying Asset (Article 12) |
Article 12 of Regulation S-X requires disclosure for derivatives where the underlying asset is an index or custom basket of investments. In these circumstances, funds must disclose the percentage value of certain components as compared to the custom basket’s net assets. Generally, a fund does not calculate the net assets of a custom basket. As a result, the updated FAQ provides two methods for calculating the required percentage value information: (1) a fund could disclose the value of the component compared to the value of the derivative on the custom basket, or (2) a fund could disclose the value of the component relative to the fund’s net assets, provided the heading to the column clearly shows what this information represents. |
Form N-CEN
Issue | New SEC Guidance |
Form N-CEN Filing Tool |
To allow registrants to manually report data, the SEC will provide access to a web-based form available on EDGAR. To access this online form, select the “File N-CEN” link at https://www.edgarfiling.sec.gov and input the appropriate responses to each question. |
Filing Obligations for Terminated Registrants |
The Staff clarified that generally a registrant must still file reports on Form N-CEN when a registrant has filed or intends to file an application to deregister but is not yet deregistered. Conversely, registrants that do not yet have shareholders and management companies that have elected to be a business development company (BDC) are not required to file reports on Form N-CEN. |
Filing Obligations for Terminated Series of a Multi-Series Registrant (Items B.6.a.i, B.6.a.ii, C.2.a and C.2.c) |
The Staff clarified Form N-CEN filers’ requirements for a multi-series registrant where a series was liquidated, merged or otherwise terminated during the reporting period. These particular registrants do not need to report information requested by Part C of Form N-CEN as to those terminated series. Furthermore, instead of including terminated series in Item B.6.a.i (which requests the number of series of the registrant), these registrants would identify any terminated series during the relevant period in response to Item B.6.a.ii. In addition, information about the series name, Series ID and date of termination should be provided in Item B.6.a.ii, even where substantially all of the assets of the series have been transferred to another series of the same or different registrant. Registrants are also not required to include information about terminated classes in Item C.2.a (which requests the number of authorized classes of shares). Any terminated classes during the relevant period would be recorded in Item C.2.c. |
Practice Points and Tips
Service providers should consistently review their capabilities and evaluate changes needed to ensure compliance with the newly added information in the FAQ regarding Forms N-PORT and N-CEN, as well as the amendments to Regulation S-X. In addition, fund directors should be notified of regulatory updates and how they will influence funds and their reporting requirements. Both service providers and fund directors may utilize the FAQs to interpret these new forms and amendments.