97-2010. Definitions of ``Small Business'' or ``Small Organization'' Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the Securities Act of 1933  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 18 (Tuesday, January 28, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 4106-4114]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-2010]
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 18 / Tuesday, January 28, 1997 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 4106]]
    
    
    
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Parts 230, 240, 270, and 275
    
    [Release Nos. 33-7383, 34-38190, IC-22478, and IA-1609; File No. S7-4-
    97]
    RIN 3235-AG62; 3235-AH01
    
    
    Definitions of ``Small Business'' or ``Small Organization'' Under 
    the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Investment Advisers Act of 
    1940, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the Securities Act of 
    1933
    
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule amendments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is 
    publishing for comment proposed amendments to the definitions of 
    ``small business'' and ``small organization'' that are used in 
    connection with Commission rulemaking under the Investment Company Act 
    of 1940, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, the Securities Exchange 
    Act of 1934, and the Securities Act of 1933 regarding regulatory 
    requirements applicable to investment companies, investment advisers, 
    exchanges, securities information processors, transfer agents and 
    issuers, and broker-dealers. These definitions are used specifically 
    for purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, which requires the 
    Commission to consider the impact of its regulations on small entities. 
    The Commission is proposing amendments to these definitions to reflect 
    recent changes in the law as well as changes in the securities markets 
    over the past decade, including technological innovations and increased 
    business relationships among participants in the securities industry.
    
    DATES: Comments should be received on or before February 27, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted in triplicate to Jonathan G. 
    Katz, Secretary, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Mail Stop 6-
    9, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549. Comments also may be 
    submitted electronically at the following E-mail address: comments@sec.gov. All comment letters should refer to File Number S7-4-
    97. This file number should be included on the subject line if E-mail 
    is used. Comment letters will be available for inspection and copying 
    in the Public Reference Room, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 
    20549. Electronically submitted comment letters will be posted on the 
    Commission's Internet web site (http://www.sec.gov).
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    
        General: Penelope W. Saltzman, Special Counsel, at (202-942-0915), 
    or Anne H. Sullivan, Senior Counsel, at (202-942-0954), Office of the 
    General Counsel, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, 
    N.W., Mail Stop 6-6, Washington, D.C. 20549.
        Offices with Particular Responsibility: Thomas M.J. Kerwin, Senior 
    Counsel, Division of Investment Management, (definitions applicable to 
    investment companies and investment advisers) (202-942-0690).
        Glenn J. Jessee, Special Counsel, Office of the Chief Counsel, 
    Division of Market Regulation (definitions applicable to brokers, 
    dealers, exchanges, transfer agents and issuers, securities information 
    processors, and broker-dealers) (202-942-0073).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is requesting public comment 
    on proposed amendments to the definitions of ``small business'' and 
    ``small organization'' set forth in Rule 0-10 [17 CFR 270.0-10] under 
    the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a-1] (``Investment 
    Company Act''), Rule 0-7 [17 CFR 275.0-7] under the Investment Advisers 
    Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-1] (the ``Advisers Act''), Rule 0-10 [17 CFR 
    240.0-10] under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 [15 U.S.C. 78a] 
    (the ``Exchange Act''), and Rule 157 [17 CFR 230.157] under the 
    Securities Act of 1933 [15 U.S.C. 77a] (the ``Securities Act'') as 
    those terms are used for purposes of Chapter Six of the Administrative 
    Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 
    Pub. L. No. 96-354, 94 Stat. 1164 (1980), as amended, Pub. L. No. 104-
    121, Title II, Subtitle D, 110 Stat. 864 (1996) (``RFA'')). The RFA 
    requires the Commission to, among other things, consider the impact of 
    Commission rulemaking on entities that qualify as ``small'' under 
    applicable standards set forth in the RFA, the Small Business 
    Act,1 or regulations promulgated by the Small Business 
    Administration (``SBA'').2 In 1982, the Commission adopted 
    definitions that it considered appropriate for issuers and other 
    entities subject to its regulation, and the Commission is now, after 
    consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the SBA, proposing for 
    public comment amendments to those definitions applicable to investment 
    companies, investment advisers, exchanges, clearing agencies, transfer 
    agents and issuers,3 securities information processors, and 
    broker-dealers. The proposed amendments are discussed below.
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        \1\ 15 U.S.C. 631 et seq.
        \2\ The RFA provides that an agency, after consultation with the 
    Office of Advocacy of the SBA and an opportunity for public comment, 
    may establish one or more definitions of ``small entity'' that are 
    applicable to the activities of the agency. See 5 U.S.C. 601(3) and 
    601(4).
        \3\ The Commission is not proposing to change the definition of 
    small business issuer, but is proposing to delete the limitation of 
    the definition of small business, as it refers to ``issuer'' or 
    ``person'' under the Exchange Act rules, to Sections 12, 13, 14, 
    15(d), and 16 of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 
    78p]. See supra p. 26.
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    I. Background
    
        The Commission has a longstanding commitment to understanding and 
    addressing the special concerns of small business. Nearly two decades 
    ago, in 1979, the Commission established the Office of Small Business 
    Policy in the Division of Corporation Finance, whose mission is to 
    direct the Commission's small business rulemaking initiatives, review 
    and comment on the impact of Commission rule proposals on small 
    issuers, and serve as liaison with Congressional committees, government 
    agencies, and other groups concerned with small business. Since then, 
    the Commission has conducted regular reviews of its rules, and their 
    impact on small business, in response to changing market conditions, 
    advances in technology, and innovations in financial products, as well 
    as to determine whether the rules continue to meet appropriate 
    regulatory objectives. These ongoing efforts have resulted in a number 
    of rule proposals or amendments and other initiatives specifically 
    intended to assist small businesses. They include:
         1992 Small Business Initiative. In 1992, the Commission 
    undertook a major initiative to make raising capital easier for small 
    businesses, which included the introduction of a new small business 
    integrated disclosure system, increased exemptions permitting 
    unregistered public and private sale of securities, and simplified 
    ongoing periodic reporting requirements of registered small 
    issuers.4
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        \4\ Securities Act Release No. 6949, 57 FR 36442 (Aug. 13, 1992) 
    (included adopting Regulation S-B, which provided integrated 
    disclosure requirements for small business issuers and simplified 
    the process for registering securities of small business issuers for 
    public sale, amending Regulation A to raise the ceiling for exempt 
    offerings from $1.5 million to $5 million, and adopting Regulation 
    D, which permitted nonpublic companies to raise up to $1 million in 
    12 months from any number or type of investor without federal 
    registration and disclosure obligations except anti-fraud 
    provisions).
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         Mutual Fund Investments. In 1992, the Commission also 
    published revisions to the Guidelines to Form N-1A relating to mutual 
    fund investments in illiquid securities, a change specifically intended 
    to provide small
    
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    businesses better access to capital markets.5
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        \5\ Revisions of Guidelines to Form N-1A, Investment Company Act 
    Release No. 18612, 57 FR 9828 (Mar. 20, 1992) (permitting mutual 
    funds, other than money market funds, to increase from 10 percent to 
    15 percent the amount of illiquid assets they may hold).
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         New Registration Exemption. The Commission recently 
    adopted a new exemption from registration requirements for limited 
    offerings of up to $5 million that are exempt from qualification under 
    California law.6
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        \6\ Securities Act Release No. 7285, 61 FR 21356 (May 9, 1996).
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         Fewer Small Businesses Subject to Exchange Act 
    Registration. The Commission also recently doubled the asset threshold 
    that subjects companies to registration under the Exchange Act from $5 
    million to $10 million so that fewer small businesses are subject to 
    reporting requirements under the Exchange Act.7
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        \7\ Exchange Act Release No. 37157, 61 FR 21354 (May 9, 1996).
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         Pending Initiatives. The Commission's Task Force on 
    Capital Formation and Regulatory Processes has proposed a number of 
    initiatives to further increase small business access to capital 
    markets, including liberalizing and expanding the local offering 
    exemption and creating a new limited exemption for certain local 
    offerings that cross state lines, expanding the small offering 
    exemption by permitting small businesses to raise $5 million every six 
    months rather than once a year, and permitting companies engaged in 
    certain exempt offerings of $5 million or less to use uncertified 
    financial statements.8
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        \8\ See Report of the Task Force on Disclosure Simplification 
    (March 1996).
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        In keeping with its attention to small business issues, the 
    Commission acted quickly to implement the RFA after it was enacted in 
    1980. The Commission published its first semiannual agendas identifying 
    rulemaking proposals that could affect small entities on April 9, 1981 
    and has regularly published semiannual agenda since then.9 On June 
    29, 1981, the Commission published its ten-year plan to evaluate 
    existing rules for their impact on small entities and has since 
    completed all required rule reviews under the RFA.10 Indeed, the 
    Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA, in its first report regarding 
    the RFA, stated that the Commission's rule review ``epitomizes the 
    initiative that all agencies should be taking in the area.'' 11
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        \9\ 46 FR 23942 (Apr. 29, 1981). The Commission first published 
    the semiannual agenda independently. Beginning in October 1982 the 
    Commission included its semiannual agenda in the Unified Agenda of 
    Federal Regulations compiled by the Regulatory Service Information 
    Center. See 47 FR 48300, 48988 (Oct. 28, 1982).
        \10\ 46 FR 33287 (June 29, 1981). The requirements regarding 
    publication of a semiannual agenda and the ten-year rule review are 
    set forth in 5 U.S.C. 602 and 610, respectively.
        \11\ Oversight of Regulatory Flexibility Act: Hearings Before 
    the Subcomm. on Export Opportunities and Special Small Business 
    Problems of the House Comm. on Small Business, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 
    51 (1981) (statement of Frank Swain, Chief Counsel for Advocacy, 
    SBA).
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        As part of its RFA implementation efforts, in early 1982, the 
    Commission also became the first agency to adopt rules under which 
    entities it regulates would qualify as ``small'' for purposes of the 
    RFA.\12\ The RFA defines the term ``small entity'' as a ``small 
    business,'' ``small organization,'' or ``small governmental 
    jurisdiction.'' \13\ ``Small business'' under the RFA incorporates the 
    Small Business Size Regulations established by the SBA (``SBA size 
    standards'') \14\ under the Small Business Act.\15\ The RFA definitions 
    of ``small business'' and ``small organization'' also authorize 
    agencies to establish their own definitions of ``small business'' and 
    ``small organization'' if they determine that specialized definitions 
    are more appropriate to the activities of the agency.\16\ After 
    reviewing SBA size standards, the Commission chose to adopt its own 
    definitions of these terms for purposes of Commission rulemaking.\17\
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        \12\ Final Definitions of ``Small Business'' and ``Small 
    Organization'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 
    Securities Act Release No. 6380, Exchange Act Release No. 18452, 
    PUHCA Release No. 22371, Trust Indenture Act Release No. 693, 
    Investment Company Act Release No. 12194, Investment Advisers Act 
    Release No. 791, 47 FR 5215 (Feb. 4, 1982) (``1982 Adopting 
    Release''). Other agencies have adopted notices or policy statements 
    respecting their views regarding the definition of ``small 
    business.'' See, e.g., Definitions of Small Entity and Significant 
    Economic Impact for Making Determinations Required by the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act of 1980, 51 FR 45831 (Dec. 22, 1986) (Federal 
    Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation); Policy 
    Statement and Establishment of Definitions of ``Small Entities'' for 
    Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 
    1982) (Commodity Futures Trading Commission).
        \13\ 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
        \14\ 13 CFR Part 121.
        \15\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (defining ``small business'' to mean 
    ``small business concern'' under the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 
    632(a), which in turn allows the SBA to establish standards for 
    determining ``small business concern'').
        \16\ Id. Secs. 601(3), 601(4).
        \17\ The Commission determined that the industry size standards 
    adopted by the SBA were generally inappropriate in the context of 
    regulations affecting securities issuers and reporting companies. 
    See Proposed Definitions of ``Small Business'' and ``Small 
    Organization'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 
    Securities Act Release No. 6302, Exchange Act Release No. 17645, 
    PUHCA Release No. 21970, Trust Indenture Act Release No. 619, 
    Investment Company Act Release No. 11694, Investment Advisers Act 
    Release No. 754, 46 FR 19251 (Mar. 30, 1981) (``1981 Proposing 
    Release''); See also 1982 Adopting Release, 47 FR at 5216.
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        The regulations the Commission adopted in 1982 were, in many ways, 
    more expansive than the statutory definitions of ``small business'' and 
    ``small organization'' in the RFA. Under the RFA, a business is not 
    considered ``small'' if it is not ``independently owned and operated.'' 
    \18\ The Commission's definitions go beyond RFA requirements because, 
    for the most part, the Commission's definitions do not limit ``small 
    businesses'' to those that are independently owned and operated. The 
    Commission's existing definitions also are broader in certain respects 
    than the SBA size standards, which consider various limiting factors 
    when determining if an entity is ``small.'' \19\ For example, the SBA 
    size standards consider if entities are affiliated by such factors as 
    control, management, ownership, and contractual relationships in 
    determining whether an entity is ``independently owned and operated,'' 
    and thus, ``small.'' \20\ In addition, the SBA may treat multiple 
    entities that have identical or substantially identical business or 
    economic interests as a single entity.\21\ Although the Commission's 
    definitions in some cases address the concept of control,\22\ none of 
    these other affiliation concepts set forth in the SBA size standards is 
    considered in the Commission's definitions of ``small business.''
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        \18\ A ``small'' entity also cannot be dominant in its field of 
    operation. See 5 U.S.C. 601(4) (``small organization'' under RFA 
    means an entity that is ``independently owned and operated and is 
    not dominant in its field''); 15 U.S.C. 632(a)(1) (definition of 
    ``small business concern'' under the Small Business Act (as 
    incorporated in the RFA definition of ``small business,'' 5 U.S.C. 
    601(3)) means an entity that is ``independently owned and operated 
    and which is not dominant in its field'').
        \19\ See SBA size standards, 13 CFR 121.103 (size eligibility 
    provisions and standards).
        \20\ Id.  Sec. 121.103(a)(1) (describing control relationships 
    that constitute affiliation); id. Sec. 121.103(a)(2) (describing 
    factors such as ownership, management, previous relationships with 
    or ties to another concern, and contractual relationships that SBA 
    considers in determining whether affiliation exists).
        \21\ See id. Sec. 121.103(a)(3).
        \22\ In certain definitions of ``small business'' and ``small 
    organization'' under the Exchange Act (broker, dealer, clearing 
    agency, municipal securities dealer, securities information 
    processor, transfer agent), the Commission considers control 
    interests in determining whether the entity is ``small.'' Exchange 
    Act rule 0-10 [17 CFR 240.10]. The SBA regulations also address 
    factors of control. 13 CFR 121.103(a)(1).
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        Under the Commission's existing definitions, which were adopted in 
    1982, a majority of investment advisers and broker-dealers qualify as 
    small.23 Many of these ``small'' investment
    
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    advisers handle as much as $50 million in client funds. In addition, 
    some ``small'' broker-dealers handle customer orders in excess of $200 
    million from which they earn more than $6 million per year in 
    revenue.24 These entities continue to be classified as ``small'' 
    under Commission rules even though they may be affiliated with larger 
    entities that are responsible for many of the smaller firms' securities 
    functions. For example, today most mutual funds are affiliated with 
    large mutual fund families, and many investment advisers are affiliated 
    with larger financial services firms. These relationships allow the 
    ``small'' affiliates to rely on a larger entity that centralizes 
    administrative and compliance systems for all affiliates, significantly 
    reducing regulatory burdens for each individual affiliate. A similar 
    relationship exists between introducing broker-dealers and the large 
    firms through which they clear securities trades. Although introducing 
    and clearing firms share responsibility for ensuring that a customer's 
    account is handled properly, introducing firms typically depend on 
    clearing firms to execute customer trades, to handle customer funds and 
    securities, and to handle many back-office functions, including issuing 
    the confirmation of the customer's trade. The increase in these 
    affiliations since 1982 occurred along with tremendous growth and 
    significant technological changes in the securities industry that 
    facilitate such arrangements.25 These changes in the securities 
    industry prompted the Commission to begin reviewing certain of its 
    ``small business'' definitions in 1995.26
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        \23\ Currently, approximately 75 percent of registered 
    investment advisers and 60 percent of registered broker-dealers 
    qualify as ``small.''
        \24\ The revenue amount is based on information provided by 
    broker-dealers in quarterly FOCUS reports. The amount of customer 
    order flow is derived using revenue data in the FOCUS reports.
        \25\ Between 1980 and 1995, the value of public offerings 
    (including debt and equity, but not investment company securities) 
    increased from $58 billion to $768 billion. Between 1990 and 1995, 
    the dollar volume of equity securities traded on U.S. securities 
    exchanges and National Association of Securities Dealers Automated 
    Quotation System (``Nasdaq'') grew 182 percent, with over $5.94 
    trillion traded in 1995. Assets under management by investment 
    advisers (excluding investment advisers to registered investment 
    companies) rose from $205 billion to $7.6 trillion (a 3,607 percent 
    increase) between 1980 and 1995. Over the same period, assets of 
    investment companies increased 1,203 percent from $235 billion to 
    $3.062 trillion. The number of securities firms and professionals 
    registered with the Commission or with self-regulating organizations 
    has also surged. Between 1980 and 1995, the number of registered 
    advisers increased from 3,500 to 22,000 (an increase of 529 
    percent). The number of broker-dealers grew, over the same period, 
    from around 5,200 to approximately 7,613 (a 46 percent increase). In 
    addition, technological progress has changed the securities 
    industry. For example, advances in information technology have 
    resulted in the proliferation of information vendors and electronic 
    trading systems not contemplated in 1982. Since 1982, the markets 
    have seen the development of fully automated electronic broker-
    dealers and exchanges, improved electronic order execution systems 
    at broker-dealers, exchanges, and national securities associations, 
    and improved electronic linkages among markets and between broker-
    dealers and their customers. These changes have created 
    substantially deeper and more liquid markets and have made trading 
    more immediate and less expensive for both institutional and retail 
    customers.
        \26\ See The Regulatory Plan and the Unified Agenda of Federal 
    Regulations, 60 FR 59503, 61073 ( Nov. 28, 1995) (Division of 
    Investment Management considering whether to recommend to the 
    Commission to propose amendment of definition of ``small entity'' in 
    Rule 0-10 [17 CFR 270.0-10] under the Investment Company Act).
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        In March 1996, Congress revisited small business concerns when it 
    enacted the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 
    (``SBREFA'').27 Among other things, SBREFA imposed new obligations 
    on the Commission and other agencies to assist small entities in 
    understanding and complying with regulatory requirements, including the 
    adoption of small business compliance guides and an informal guidance 
    program for small businesses.28 In addition, SBREFA amended the 
    RFA to allow small entities to seek judicial review of agency 
    compliance with the RFA.29 SBREFA also amended the Equal Access to 
    Justice Act (``EAJA'') 30 by expanding the class of litigants 
    eligible to receive EAJA awards to include small entities as defined 
    under the RFA.31
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        \27\ Pub. L. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996).
        \28\ Id. Secs. 212, 213(b), 110 Stat. 858, 859.
        \29\ Id. Sec. 242 110 Stat. 865.
        \30\ 5 U.S.C. 504; 28 U.S.C. 2412.
        \31\ Pub. L. 104-121, Sec. 232(b)(2), 110 Stat 863.
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        After SBREFA was enacted, the Commission began to develop 
    initiatives to meet its new obligations under the Act and to review 
    whether the Commission's definitions of ``small business'' and ``small 
    organization'' are still appropriate in view of (1) changes in the 
    securities industry and (2) the Commission's expanded obligations under 
    SBREFA. 32 As a result of its review, the Commission is proposing 
    amendments to the definitions of these terms as they apply to 
    investment companies, investment advisers, exchanges, securities 
    information processors, transfer agents and issuers, and broker-
    dealers. The Commission intends to maintain its definitions of ``small 
    business'' as they relate to small business issuers, and other 
    regulated entities. 33 The proposed amendments would take into 
    account more of the factors suggested by SBA size standards in 
    determining whether an entity qualifies as ``small.''
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        \32\ The Commission is concerned that as a result of the 
    Commission's existing broad definitions of ``small business,'' 
    certain of the amendments made by SBREFA could result in a 
    significant increase in the Commission's exposure to litigation 
    beyond that reasonably contemplated by the RFA. The Commission's 
    enforcement litigation and other litigation matters have increased 
    in recent years. In light of increased exposure to litigation under 
    SBREFA, which could further strain the Commission's limited budget, 
    the Commission believes it is appropriate to consider revising 
    certain definitions of small business to reflect the considerations 
    contained in the definition of the term under the RFA and the SBA 
    size standards.
        \33\ The Commission does not propose to revise the ``small 
    business'' definitions with respect to clearing agencies, bank 
    municipal securities dealers, or public utility holding company 
    systems. In a separate release, the Commission has, however, 
    proposed conforming changes to the definition of ``small business 
    issuer'' to allow registrants to include non-voting as well as 
    voting common equity, when computing the required $75 million 
    aggregate market value of common equity held by non-affiliates of 
    the registrant.
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        The Commission's proposal to amend certain ``small business'' 
    definitions should be considered in light of the Commission's ongoing 
    efforts to assist small business. On June 4, 1996, the Commission 
    appointed a special ombudsman to serve as the liaison and agency 
    spokesman for the concerns of small business. 34 The Commission 
    also recently held the first in a series of town meetings (to be held 
    nationwide) to educate small business issuers about the many 
    opportunities to raise capital in the securities markets. 35 More 
    generally, the Commission has established a World Wide Web site, which 
    provides, among other things, a special package of information for 
    small businesses, including Commission rulemaking and initiatives 
    affecting small business. 36 The Commission also has established 
    an electronic mailbox to receive comments on Commission rulemaking. 
    37 These communication efforts supplement the Commission's annual 
    government-business forum on small business capital formation. This 
    forum is held in a different place across the country each year to make 
    attendance by small businesses easier, and it is the only government-
    sponsored national gathering for small businesses that annually offers 
    small business the chance to tell government officials how the laws, 
    rules, and regulations impact their ability to raise capital. Through 
    these and other efforts, the Commission
    
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    will continue to involve small businesses in its rulemaking efforts, in 
    furtherance of the RFA and the Commission's policy of addressing small 
    business concerns.
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        \34\ The Ombudsman is available to receive information from 
    small businesses concerning the impact of any Commission proposal, 
    rule, or regulation and may be contacted at the Division of 
    Corporation Finance's Office of Small Business Policy at (202) 942-
    2950.
        \35\ See Remarks of Arthur Levitt, Chairman, U.S. Securities and 
    Exchange Commission, Los Angeles Venture Association Town Meeting 
    (Sept. 13, 1996).
        \36\ The Commission's Web site is located at http://www.sec.gov.
        \37\ The Commission's address for rulemaking comments is: comments@sec.gov.
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        Although the Commission has worked hard to meet the needs of small 
    businesses, the Commission believes that RFA and SBREFA requirements 
    must be viewed in the context of the requirements of the federal 
    securities laws, which mandate the maintenance of fair, honest, and 
    competitive securities markets and the protection of investors in those 
    markets. As a general matter, the Commission carefully weighs the 
    economic impact of its rules on all regulated entities, including small 
    business. However, the Commission's primary considerations as to each 
    rule it adopts must be the rule's effects on market integrity and 
    investor protection. Thus, uniform rules must be applied to firms that 
    are part of a larger national market system to ensure (1) fair and 
    efficient securities markets and (2) the same level of protection for 
    all investors regardless of the size of the firm to which they entrust 
    their funds. In those situations in which market integrity and investor 
    protection will not be compromised, however, the Commission carefully 
    tailors its regulations to the relevant characteristics of the 
    particular entities regulated.38 In this way, the Commission works 
    to meet its mandate under the federal securities laws while at the same 
    time reducing costs and regulatory burdens for small business. The 
    Commission intends to continue this careful, measured regulation that 
    addresses small business concerns within the protections of the federal 
    securities laws.
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        \38\ See supra note 7 and accompanying text (describing 
    exemptions from registration for small business issuers); Exchange 
    Act rule 15c3-1 [17 CFR 240.15c3-1] (varying capital requirements 
    for broker-dealers based on their activities).
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    Discussion of Proposed Amendments
    
    A. Investment Companies
    
        Rule 0-10 under the Investment Company Act currently defines 
    ``small business'' or ``small organization'' (together, ``small 
    entity'') to include each investment company (``fund'') that has $50 
    million or less in assets as of the end of its most recent fiscal 
    year.39 Thus, the definition focuses only on the fund's own 
    assets.
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        \39\ 17 CFR 270.0-10.
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        This approach no longer seems appropriate in the business 
    environment in which most funds now operate.40 Most funds are part 
    of a large ``family of funds'' sponsored by a highly sophisticated 
    third-party investment adviser or administrator that typically oversees 
    assets well in excess of $50 million.41 The adviser or 
    administrator generally uses the same administrative, management, and 
    compliance systems to oversee all of the funds in the complex. The fees 
    imposed on the fund by the adviser or administrator (and the fund's 
    resulting expense ratio) typically reflect economies of scale that the 
    adviser or administrator achieves from managing other funds. Treating a 
    new fund with less than $50 million of net assets as a small entity 
    seems anomalous if the fund's adviser or administrator oversees other 
    funds holding billions of dollars.42
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        \40\ It is appropriate to take into account the structure of 
    business concerns in the securities industry in determining size 
    standards. See 15 CFR 121.103(a)(3) (SBA rule providing for the 
    calculation of size standards on a consolidated basis for 
    individuals or firms with identical or substantially identical 
    business or economic interests or that are economically dependent); 
    id. Sec. 121.103(a)(4) (SBA rule providing for the aggregation of 
    receipts or employees of an entity and all its domestic or foreign 
    ``affiliates'' in calculating size standards). See also 1981 
    Proposing Release, 46 FR at 19257.
        \41\ Nearly half (47 percent) of all fund families manage assets 
    exceeding $1 billion per family.
        \42\ In the 1981 Proposing Release, the Commission noted its 
    belief that ``the Congress did not intend to confer the benefit of 
    any determination that an entity is small upon the affiliates of 
    large businesses, because only those businesses and organizations 
    that are `independently owned' may qualify as small entities 
    pursuant to the definitions contained in the RFA'' (citing 5 U.S.C. 
    601(4) and 15 U.S.C. 632). 46 FR at 19257. The Commission further 
    noted its belief that it is appropriate to preclude entities with 
    significant economic and financial resources from obtaining 
    potential regulatory benefits under the RFA. Id.
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        The Commission, therefore, is proposing to amend Rule 0-10 to treat 
    a fund as a small entity only if it and other funds in its related 
    group have net assets of $50 million or less in the aggregate.43 
    The proposed amendments would define a group of related investment 
    companies generally to include two or more management funds that hold 
    themselves out to investors as related companies for purposes of 
    investment and investor services, and share either a common investment 
    adviser (or affiliated advisers) or a common administrator.44 In 
    the case of unit investment trusts (``UITs''), a related group would 
    mean two or more trusts that have a common sponsor.45
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        \43\ Conforming amendments to Rules 157(b) [17 CFR 230.157(b)] 
    under the Securities Act and 0-10(b) [17 CFR 240.0-10(b)] under the 
    Exchange Act would take the same approach when those statutes 
    address investment companies. The Commission originally selected the 
    $50 million threshold because it believed that funds having assets 
    of $50 million or less had significantly higher expense ratios than 
    funds with more assets, and that funds with higher expense ratios 
    experienced greater impact from regulatory costs. 1982 Adopting 
    Release, 47 FR at 5220. Fifty million dollars appears to remain a 
    significant threshold for expense ratios for fund families as well 
    as stand-alone funds, which derive similar benefits from economies 
    of scale at lower ratios.
        \44\ Proposed rule 0-10(a)(1).
        \45\ Proposed rule 0-10(a)(2). A UIT holds a fixed portfolio of 
    securities generally deposited with the fund by its sponsor, and 
    does not have an investment adviser. See generally section 4(2) of 
    the Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-4(2)].
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        The proposed amendments would apply a special rule to insurance 
    company separate accounts.46 Because state law generally treats 
    separate account assets as the property of the sponsoring insurance 
    company, the rule would aggregate separate account assets with the 
    assets of their sponsors, including other sponsored accounts.47
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        \46\ Separate accounts contain assets used to fund certain 
    insurance and investment contracts between the sponsoring insurance 
    company and contract owners. Each account typically is organized as 
    a UIT, or in some cases as a management fund having a sponsor-
    affiliated investment adviser. See generally section 2(a)(37) of the 
    Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(37)].
        \47\ Proposed rule 0-10(b). This amendment would codify the 
    Commission's longstanding approach in addressing separate accounts' 
    status under rule 0-10. The proposed amendments would not provide a 
    special rule for another type of fund, face amount certificate 
    companies, which would continue to be subject to the $50 million 
    test on a company-by-company basis.
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        To standardize the determination of net assets, the proposed 
    amendments would provide that the Commission may base its count of the 
    net assets of any related group of funds on the net assets of each fund 
    in the group at the end of each fund's fiscal year, as generally 
    reported in Form N-SAR.48
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        \48\ Proposed rule 0-10(c); see 17 CFR 274.101; Form N-SAR, Item 
    74T.
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        The Commission estimates that as a result of the proposed 
    amendments, approximately 400 funds would no longer be treated as small 
    entities because they are affiliated with large fund families. 
    Commission data suggests that approximately 800 of an estimated 3700 
    total active registered investment companies may be considered small 
    entities under current Rule 0-10. Approximately 300 of these 800 funds 
    do not identify themselves as members of a fund family, and would 
    therefore continue to be deemed small entities. Of the remaining 500 
    funds, approximately 100 appear to be affiliated with fund families 
    that have $50 million or less in aggregate assets, and therefore would 
    continue to be deemed small entities under the proposed amendments.
        The Commission requests comment on the proposed amendments to Rule 
    0-10. Should the definition of a group of related funds consider 
    relationships other than a common investment adviser or administrator? 
    When funds (like those in a master/feeder
    
    [[Page 4110]]
    
    arrangement 49) share a common adviser or administrator, should 
    they be deemed a related group even though they may not hold themselves 
    out as related (so that a feeder fund, for example, would be deemed a 
    small entity only if the master fund is)? Alternatively, should related 
    group status depend only on whether funds hold themselves out as 
    related, so that funds might be in a related group even if they didn't 
    share a common adviser or administrator? Does the $50 million asset 
    threshold continue to be appropriate? Should the Commission consider 
    tests other than asset size for determining whether a fund or related 
    group is a small entity?
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        \49\ In such an arrangement, multiple ``feeder funds'' invest 
    all their assets in the shares of a single ``master fund'' managed 
    by one investment adviser, thereby reducing the costs of providing 
    investment advice to each feeder fund. The various feeder funds 
    typically sell their shares to different investors through different 
    distribution channels.
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    B. Investment Advisers
    
        Rule 0-7 under the Investment Advisers Act currently defines 
    ``small business'' or ``small organization'' for purposes of the RFA to 
    include each investment adviser (``adviser'') that either (i) manages 
    assets (``client assets'') with a total value of $50 million or less as 
    of the end of its most recent fiscal year, and performs no other 
    advisory services; or (ii) performs other advisory services, manages 
    client assets of $50 million or less if it manages client funds, and 
    has assets related to its advisory business (``business assets'') that 
    do not exceed $50,000.50
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        \50\ 17 CFR 275.0-7.
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        Rule 0-7 currently does not distinguish between an independent 
    adviser and an adviser that is controlled by, or under common control 
    with, a large firm.51 An adviser in a control relationship with a 
    large broker-dealer or other large financial services firm typically 
    benefits from the financial and technical resources of the large firm. 
    The large firm may handle much of the administrative and compliance 
    needs of its affiliated adviser using resources not reflected in the 
    adviser's client assets or business assets.
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        \51\ Such affiliations typically involve advisory firms that are 
    controlled by or under common control with the large firm (such as a 
    broker-dealer-owned subsidiary that advises institutional clients).
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        As noted above, the Commission believes that Congress did not 
    intend affiliates of large businesses to receive benefits under the 
    RFA.52 Rule 0-10 under the Exchange Act currently excludes 
    regulated persons from small entity status when they are affiliated 
    with a large firm through a control relationship.53 The Commission 
    is proposing to amend Rule 0-7 to apply a comparable provision to 
    investment advisers.54 Like the current definition under Exchange 
    Act Rule 0-10, the proposed amendments to Rule 0-7 would deem an 
    adviser ``affiliated'' with a large firm when the adviser controls, is 
    controlled by, or is under common control with the large firm.55 A 
    non-control affiliation with a large firm, or a control relationship 
    with a firm that is itself a small entity, would not trigger the 
    exclusion.56
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        \52\ See supra note 42.
        \53\ See 17 CFR 240.0-10(c), (d), (f), (g), and (h) (excluding 
    from ``small'' status a broker or dealer, clearing agency, bank 
    municipal securities dealer, securities information processor, or 
    transfer agent affiliated through a control relationship with any 
    person (other than a natural person) that is not a small business or 
    small organization).
        \54\ The Commission is also proposing to amend the definition of 
    ``small business'' under the Exchange Act to include consideration 
    of other factors in addition to control relationships in determining 
    affiliation. See discussion infra pp. 27-31. However, the Commission 
    does not propose to include those factors in the definition of 
    ``small business'' under the Investment Advisers Act at this time.
        \55\ Proposed rule 0-7(a)(2). Also in conformity with rule 0-10, 
    ``control'' would mean the right to vote 25 percent or more of the 
    voting securities of another person, to receive 25 percent or more 
    of the net profits of the other person, or otherwise to direct the 
    person's management or policies. Proposed rule 0-7(b). Many 
    individual advisers affiliated with large firms would continue to 
    meet the definition of ``small business'' notwithstanding the new 
    affiliation standard because the advisers' large firm affiliates do 
    not have the right to vote 25 percent or more of any stock issued by 
    the advisers, do not receive 25 percent or more of the advisers' net 
    profits, and do not direct the management of the individual 
    advisers' business.
        \56\ See proposed rule 0-7(a)(2) and (b).
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        The proposed amendments also would simplify Rule 0-7 by applying 
    the $50,000 business asset test to all advisers, rather than solely to 
    advisers that render services other than or in addition to managing 
    client assets.57 In addition to facilitating application of the 
    rule,58 this approach would eliminate the anomaly of treating as 
    ``small'' an adviser that manages $49 million in client assets and has 
    $5 million in business assets (because its only advisory service is 
    managing money for clients), while treating as ``large'' an adviser 
    that manages $20,000 in client assets and has $55,000 in business 
    assets (because it renders other advisory services).
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        \57\ Proposed rule 0-7(a)(1). The current rule's definition of 
    ``other advisory services'' would be eliminated because it would no 
    longer be necessary. The $50,000 threshold for the business asset 
    test appears to remain a meaningful divide between small advisers 
    and others. The Commission originally selected that figure because 
    it was approximately the median value of advisers' business assets. 
    1982 Adopting Release, 47 FR at 5221. The median may have changed in 
    recent years, but that figure remains significant inasmuch as more 
    than half of all advisers apparently do not have assets exceeding 
    it.
        \58\ See 1981 Proposing Release, 46 FR at 19257, 19263 (two 
    attributes desirable in size standards are capacity to differentiate 
    the small members of an industry from other members, and the use of 
    readily available information to derive standards).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The proposed amendments appear likely to have limited impact on the 
    total number of advisers deemed small entities. The Commission 
    estimates that up to 17,000 of approximately 22,500 total registered 
    investment advisers meet the current rule's definition of small entity 
    based on reported client assets or business assets.59 
    Approximately 10,000 of those ``small'' advisers report that they are 
    affiliated with broker-dealers (some of which are themselves 
    ``small'')--but not necessarily through a control affiliation. In many 
    cases, the affiliated broker-dealer does not own or otherwise control 
    the adviser's advisory business. Thus, many advisers that are broker-
    dealer affiliates (and most other ``small'' advisers affiliated with 
    non-brokers or having independent status) would remain small entities 
    under the proposed amendments.
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        \59\ Under the recently enacted National Securities Markets 
    Improvement Act of 1996, the Commission will soon lose 
    responsibility for regulating an estimated 16,000 of these 17,000 
    ``small'' advisers. See Pub. L. 104-290, sec. 303, 110 Stat. 3416 
    (1996) (transferring from the Commission to the states the primary 
    responsibility for regulating advisers managing less than $25 
    million in client assets).
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        Of the ``small'' advisers that for the first time would be subject 
    to the $50,000 business asset test (i.e., the limited group that does 
    not render advisory services other than managing client funds of $50 
    million or less), only a limited percentage would likely have business 
    assets exceeding $50,000. The number of such advisers no longer treated 
    as ``small'' probably would not exceed 2000 (or 11 percent of the total 
    number of ``small'' advisers under the current definition), because 
    most advisers that simply manage client funds require only modest 
    business assets.
        The Commission requests comment on the proposed amendments to Rule 
    0-7. Does the proposed treatment of advisers affiliated with large 
    firms properly focus only on control affiliations? Do the thresholds of 
    $50 million for client assets and $50,000 for business assets continue 
    to be appropriate? Recent federal legislation transfers to states 
    primary responsibility for regulating ``small'' advisers--those who 
    manage less than $25 million of client assets.60 In light of this
    
    [[Page 4111]]
    
    legislation, is a threshold of $25 million for client assets under 
    management more appropriate than the $50 million threshold?
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        \60\ See id.; See also Report on S. 1815, The Securities 
    Investment Promotion Act of 1996, S. Rep. No. 293, 104th Cong., 2d 
    Sess. at 3-4 (1996) (legislation would focus SEC supervision ``on 
    investment advisers most likely to be engaged in interstate 
    commerce'' and focus state supervision ``on advisers whose 
    activities are most likely to be centered in their home state''; 
    ``legislation allows states to assume the primary role with respect 
    to regulating advisers that are small, local businesses, managing 
    less than $25 million in client assets, while the Commission's role 
    is focused on larger advisers with $25 million or more in client 
    assets under management''). The Commission estimates that limiting 
    small advisers to those managing less than $25 million in client 
    assets would reduce the total number of small advisers by less than 
    500.
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    C. Definitions Under the Exchange Act
    
    1. Exchanges
        In the 1981 Proposing Release, the Commission expressed its doubt 
    that Congress intended for the RFA to apply to exchanges.61 
    Nevertheless, the Commission adopted a definition of ``small business'' 
    and ``small organization'' applicable to exchanges. The Commission's 
    proposed amendment to this definition would retain the existing 
    provisions of Rule 0-10 that define as ``small'' those exchanges that 
    are exempt from the requirements of Rule 11Aa3-1 regarding the 
    dissemination of transaction reports and last sale data with respect to 
    transactions in securities.62
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        \61\ The term ``exchange'' is defined in Section 3(a)(1) of the 
    Exchange Act. [15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(1).] Currently, none of the eight 
    registered exchanges is considered a ``small business'' or ``small 
    organization'' under Rule 0-10.
        \62\ 17 CFR 240.11Aa3-1. In the 1981 Proposing Release, the 
    Commission noted that those exchanges that are exempt from the 
    requirements of Rule 11Aa3-1 would appropriately be considered 
    small, mentioning in particular that the Spokane Stock Exchange and 
    the Intermountain Stock Exchange had been granted exemptions from 
    the rule, in part, because of their low trading volume. Since 1981, 
    both of these exchanges have withdrawn from registration. Currently, 
    no exchanges are fully exempted from the requirements of Rule 11Aa3-
    1.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission is proposing to add a requirement that the exchange 
    also must not be affiliated with any person (other than a natural 
    person) that is not a small business or small organization as defined 
    in Rule 0-10. The proposed amendment would deem an exchange 
    ``affiliated'' with another entity when the exchange controls, is 
    controlled by, or is under common control with the other entity. In 
    adopting Rule 0-10 in 1982, the Commission applied this standard to 
    broker-dealers, clearing agencies, bank municipal securities dealers, 
    securities information processors, and transfer agents. The 1981 
    Proposing Release noted that such entities were not small if they were 
    affiliated with another entity that did not qualify as small. The 
    Commission is proposing to conform the definition of small exchange to 
    that of other small entities by adding this affiliation 
    standard.63
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        \63\ The Commission believes that it is appropriate to consider 
    precluding entities with significant economic and financial 
    resources from obtaining potential regulatory benefits under the 
    RFA. See supra note 42. The definitions set forth in Rule 0-10 
    generally incorporate the concept of affiliation and provide that a 
    broker-dealer, clearing agency, bank municipal securities dealer, 
    securities information processor, or transfer agent is not a small 
    business or small organization if that entity is affiliated with any 
    person (other than a natural person) that is not a small business or 
    small organization as defined in Rule 0-10. Under paragraph (i) of 
    Rule 0-10, a person is affiliated with another if that person 
    controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with such 
    other person. Control within this context constitutes the right to 
    vote 25 percent or more of the voting securities of any entity, the 
    right to receive 25 percent or more of the net profits of such 
    entity, or the ability otherwise to direct or cause the direction of 
    the management or policies of such entity.
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    2. Securities Information Processors
        The Commission proposes to retain the existing criteria for 
    determining whether a securities information processor is a ``small 
    business'' or ``small organization'' in substantially the same form, 
    including the requirement that to be considered small, a securities 
    information processor service less than 100 interrogation devices or 
    moving tickets during the preceding fiscal year.64 As a result of 
    changes in technology since Rule 0-10 was adopted, however, the 
    Commission is proposing to modify the definition of ``interrogation 
    device'' for purposes of Rule 0-10 to take into account new 
    technologies used to disseminate securities industry information to 
    markets and market participants through increasingly diverse methods. 
    Technological developments regarding the amount of information 
    available electronically, the ease and speed of retrieving such 
    information, and the increasing interconnectivity between market 
    participants and data vendors all support a broader reading of the term 
    interrogation device.
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        \64\ The term ``securities information processor'' is defined in 
    Section 3(a)(22) of the Exchange Act. [15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(22).] 
    Currently, neither of the two registered exclusive securities 
    information processors is designated as a ``small business'' or 
    ``small organization'' under Rule 0-10.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Accordingly, for purposes of the small business definition, the 
    Commission believes it is appropriate to consider whether the term 
    interrogation device should refer to any device that may be used to 
    read or receive electronic information, including proprietary terminals 
    or personal computers via computer to computer interfaces, or gateway 
    access. Also, the Commission believes that it is appropriate to 
    consider whether this definition should include all interrogation 
    devices that display securities information such as quotations and 
    indications of interest in addition to devices that display last sale 
    data or transaction reports.65
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        \65\ Formerly, paragraph (g)(2) of Rule 0-10 referenced the 
    definition of ``interrogation device'' set forth in Rule 11Aa3-1. 
    This definition reflects the historical use of interrogation devices 
    to display only transaction reports or last sale data.
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    3. Transfer Agents and Issuers
        The Commission's proposal would retain the existing criteria based 
    on volume of transfer business and number of shareholder accounts for 
    determining whether a transfer agent is a ``small business'' or ``small 
    organization,'' 66 and would add the requirement that small 
    transfer agents restrict their activities to transferring the items of 
    small issuers as defined in Exchange Act Rule 0-10.67 The shares 
    of small issuers, as opposed to those of large publicly traded 
    companies, typically are held by a small portion of the investing 
    public and are less likely to be the subject of a substantial amount of 
    trading activity. Thus, the activities of small transfer agents, many 
    of which are not subject to registration under Section 17A of the 
    Exchange Act, are not likely to have a substantial effect on the 
    investing public or the operation of the national clearance and 
    settlement system. In contrast, transfer agents for large companies 
    whose shares are heavily traded are likely to have a far greater effect 
    on securities processing, generally, and on the operation of the 
    national clearance and settlement system.68
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        \66\ The term ``transfer agent'' is defined in Section 3(a)(25) 
    of the Exchange Act. [15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(25).] It is estimated that 
    approximately 180 registered transfer agents would be designated as 
    ``small businesses'' or ``small organizations'' under the proposed 
    amendments to Rule 0-10.
        \67\ Any transfer agent that transfers items for any issuer that 
    has total assets of greater than $5 million would not be deemed a 
    ``small business'' or ``small organization'' under the proposed 
    rule. Generally, transfer agents that transfer the items of small 
    issuers are not required to be registered pursuant to Section 
    17A(c)(1) of the Exchange Act and are not subject to Commission 
    regulation. In this regard, the Commission staff estimates that only 
    1,500 (or 21 percent) of the approximately 7,000 entities providing 
    transfer agent services in the United States are registered under 
    Section 17A of the Exchange Act. These 1,500 entities provide 
    services that are essential to the efficient functioning of the 
    national market system for securities. Of these 1,500 registered 
    transfer agents, approximately one-half are financial institutions 
    regulated by the various federal bank regulatory agencies. The 5,500 
    unregistered entities that provide transfer agent services generally 
    handle the transfer of small issuer securities and exempted 
    securities, such as municipal securities.
        \68\ See Securities and Exchange Commission, Study of Unsafe and 
    Unsound Practices of Broker-Dealers (1971), pp. 37-39.
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        Rule 0-10(a) currently applies the definition of ``small business'' 
    when
    
    [[Page 4112]]
    
    used with reference to an ``issuer'' or ``person'' under Sections 12, 
    13, 14, 15(d), or 16 of the Exchange Act.69 To clarify that 
    transfer agents who transfer items of issuers with total assets greater 
    than $5 million would not be considered small for purposes of the RFA, 
    the Commission is proposing to delete language in Rule 0-10(a) that 
    limits the definition of small business, as it refers to ``issuer'' or 
    ``person,'' to Sections 12, 13, 14, 15(d), or 16 of the Exchange 
    Act.70
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        \69\ 17 CFR 240.0-10(a).
        \70\ 15 U.S.C. 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), and 78p. The proposed 
    change would also clarify that a transfer agent, or any other 
    regulated entity under the Exchange Act (broker-dealer, exchange, 
    clearing agency, securities information processor, or bank municipal 
    securities dealer) would not be considered small under Rule 0-10 if 
    the entity is affiliated with an issuer that does not qualify as 
    ``small'' under Rule 0-10. See 17 CFR 240.0-10. For example, a 
    broker-dealer that is owned or controlled by a large public company 
    with greater than $5 million in assets would not be considered small 
    under Rule 0-10. While the Commission does not collect data that 
    would indicate how many broker-dealers or other regulated entities 
    may be affected by this proposed amendment, it believes such 
    amendment is consistent with the intent of the RFA that only 
    business and organizations that are ``independently owned'' may 
    qualify as small entities. See supra note 42.
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    4. Broker-Dealers
        Rule 0-10 under the Exchange Act currently defines ``small 
    business'' or ``small organization'' to include any broker 71 or 
    dealer 72 that has total capital of less than $500,000 and that is 
    not affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) that is 
    not a small business or small organization under the rule. For purposes 
    of defining whether a broker-dealer is a ``small business'' or ``small 
    organization,'' the Commission is proposing to retain the existing 
    capital standard currently set forth in Rule 0-10. The Commission, 
    however, is proposing to expand the affiliation standard applicable to 
    broker-dealers.
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        \71\ The term ``broker'' is defined in Section 3(a)(4) of the 
    Exchange Act. [15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(4).]
        \72\ The term ``dealer'' is defined in Section 3(a)(5) of the 
    Exchange Act. [15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(5).]
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The existing affiliation test, which looks only to whether a 
    broker-dealer controls, is controlled by, or is under common control 
    with, an entity other than a small business or small organization, 
    focuses primarily on relationships between broker-dealers based on 
    voting control or the sharing of profits. The structure and operation 
    of broker-dealer activities, however, suggest that other kinds of 
    business relationships, such as the contractual relationship between an 
    introducing broker and its clearing firm, can give rise to an 
    opportunity by which a clearing firm can exercise substantial influence 
    over the business of its introducing brokers. In order to better 
    conform its affiliation standard to the nature of business 
    relationships that exist between broker-dealers, the Commission 
    proposes to expand the definition of affiliation applicable to broker-
    dealers under Rule 0-10 to include arrangements whereby one broker-
    dealer introduces transactions in securities to another.
        From a functional perspective, introducing and clearing brokers act 
    as a unit in handling a customer's account. In most respects, 
    introducing brokers are dependent on clearing firms to clear and to 
    execute customer trades,73 to handle customer funds and 
    securities, and to handle many back-office functions, including issuing 
    confirmations of customer trades and customer account 
    statements.74 The respective duties and obligations of an 
    introducing broker and its clearing firm are described in the clearing 
    agreement executed by the parties. This agreement typically contains 
    various requirements imposed by the clearing firm with respect to the 
    handling of customer accounts by the clearing and introducing brokers, 
    and the clearing firm's maintenance of customer assets.75 In 
    addition, as a practical matter, clearing and introducing firms have 
    identical business interests to the extent that most introducing 
    brokers could not be in business without the capital, technology, and 
    back-office support provided by the clearing firm. In addition, as a 
    legal matter, for purposes of the Securities Investor Protection Act of 
    1970 76 and the Commission's financial responsibility rules, a 
    customer is the customer of the clearing firm.77
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        \73\ Even when introducing brokers execute their own trades, 
    they must provide the name of their clearing broker in order that 
    the trade may be settled and cleared.
        \74\ Increasingly, the back-office functions of introducing and 
    clearing firms are linked electronically, which allows introducing 
    brokers to transmit trades directly to the back-office systems 
    maintained by the clearing broker using either a personal computer 
    and modem or a terminal provided for this purpose by the clearing 
    broker. These electronic linkages facilitate communication between 
    introducing and clearing firms, and allow introducing firms to 
    monitor trade execution and settlement, but control over the 
    processing of securities trades remains with the clearing firm.
        \75\ For example, clearing agreements generally give clearing 
    brokers approval over margin customers and subject margin accounts 
    to the clearing firm's standards. Clearing brokers also may set 
    general creditworthiness standards for the introducing broker's 
    customers to ensure customer performance. Similarly, clearing 
    brokers can reject customer trades if they determine a customer is 
    unable to fully complete the trade entered through the introducing 
    broker. New York Stock Exchange Rule 382 specifically requires 
    clearing agreements to identify and allocate the respective 
    functions of the introducing and clearing firms in seven areas: the 
    opening, approving and monitoring of accounts; extensions of credit; 
    the maintenance of books and records; the receipt and delivery of 
    funds and securities; the safeguarding of funds and securities; 
    confirmations and statements; and the acceptance of orders and 
    executions of transactions. Although the customer places its order 
    directly with the introducing firm, the Commission considers the 
    account to be an account of the clearing firm, which has primary 
    legal responsibility with respect to the handling of customer funds 
    and securities, and for sending account statements to the customer. 
    Thus, both introducing and clearing firms have a shared 
    responsibility for ensuring that a customer's account is handled 
    properly.
        \76\ 15 U.S.C. 78aaa et seq.
        \77\ Exchange Act Release No. 31511, 57 FR 56973 (Dec. 2, 1992).
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        Under the Commission's proposal, an introducing broker that 
    introduces transactions to a large clearing firm generally would not be 
    considered a ``small business'' or ``small organization'' for purposes 
    of the RFA. An exception, however, would be carved out for introducing 
    firms that handle only investment company securities or interests or 
    participations in insurance company separate accounts. Typically, 
    persons or firms that limit their activities to these products are 
    small, sometimes one-person operations that combine limited securities 
    activities with broader tax, financial planning, and insurance 
    services. Applying this new affiliation standard in addition to the 
    existing total capital standard, it is estimated that approximately 12 
    percent of all registered broker-dealers could be characterized as the 
    type of independently owned and operated enterprise specifically 
    addressed under the RFA.78
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        \78\ See supra note 18 (RFA definitions of ``small business''). 
    See also Report to Accompany H.R. 4660, H.R. Rep. No. 519, 96th 
    Cong., 1st Sess., 19 (1980) (suggesting that the definition of 
    ``small businesses'' was intended to encompass businesses that are 
    independently owned and operated and not dominant in their field of 
    operation). Consistent with the RFA definitions of small business 
    and small organization, SBA regulations that address affiliation 
    consider whether individuals or firms have identical or 
    substantially identical business interests, as in the case of firms 
    that are economically dependent through contractual or other 
    relationships. 13 CFR 121.103(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission requests comments on whether alternative approaches 
    would be more appropriate for determining whether a broker-dealer 
    should be designated as small under Rule 0-10. One possible approach 
    would establish a revenue test. Other approaches would be based on a 
    broker-dealer's annual earnings or total assets. The Commission seeks 
    comment on these approaches and requests that commenters specifically 
    address what revenue, earnings, or total asset levels may be 
    appropriate for distinguishing small broker-dealers, and whether
    
    [[Page 4113]]
    
    revenue, earnings, or total asset levels should be averaged over a 
    period of years in order to account for annual fluctuations. Commenters 
    are asked to discuss how any proposed approach relates to the SBA size 
    standards.
    5. Request for Comment
        The Commission is soliciting comment on each of the proposed 
    amendments to Rule 0-10 and whether commenters believe the proposed 
    amendments sufficiently identify entities regulated under the Exchange 
    Act that should qualify as either a ``small business'' or a ``small 
    organization'' under Rule 0-10.
    
    III. Effects on Competition and Regulatory Flexibility 
    Considerations
    
        Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act 79 requires the 
    Commission, in adopting rules under the Exchange Act, to consider the 
    anticompetitive effects of such rules, if any, and to balance any 
    anticompetitive impact against the regulatory benefits gained in terms 
    of furthering the purposes of the Exchange Act. The Commission is of 
    the preliminary view that the proposed amendments to Rule 0-10 would 
    not have any effect on the regulation of entities under the Exchange 
    Act, or impose any burden on competition among such entities.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \79\ 15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission has conferred with the SBA and believes that no 
    regulatory flexibility analysis is required for the proposed 
    amendments. The definitions of the terms ``small business'' and ``small 
    organization'' and the proposed amendments do not impose any 
    substantive requirements on small businesses. Instead the definitions 
    are interpretations of terms used to identify those entities that the 
    Commission will study for RFA purposes when proposing and adopting 
    rules.80
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \80\ An initial regulatory flexibility analysis is required 
    whenever an agency is required by section 553 of the Administrative 
    Procedure Act or any other law to publish general notice of proposed 
    rulemaking for any proposed rule. The RFA does not state that 
    agencies that establish definitions of ``small business'' or ``small 
    organization'' do so pursuant to rulemaking. See 5 U.S.C. 
    Secs. 601(3), 601(4); see also Definitions of Small Entity and 
    Significant Economic Impact for Making Determinations Required by 
    the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, 51 FR 45831 (Dec. 22, 1986) 
    (Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation); NRC 
    Size Standard for Making Determinations Required by the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act of 1980, 50 FR 20913 (May 21, 1985) (Nuclear 
    Regulatory Commission invitation for public comment on proposed 
    definition of small entities); Proposed Establishment of Definitions 
    of ``Small Entities'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility 
    Act, 46 Fed. Reg. 23940 (Apr. 29, 1981) (Commodity Futures Trading 
    Commission); 1982 Adopting Release, 47 FR at 5216 (noting that the 
    rules providing the definitions of ``small business'' for entities 
    regulated under the securities laws also provide, as permitted by 
    the RFA, that the Commission may, in particular instances, define a 
    particular entity in a manner different from that set forth in the 
    rules).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    IV. Statutory Authority
    
        The Commission is proposing to amend Rule 157 [17 CFR 230.157], 
    Rule 0-10 [17 CFR 240.0-10], Rule 0-10 [17 CFR 270.0-10], and Rule 0-7 
    [17 CFR 275.0-7] pursuant to chapter 6 of title 5 of the United States 
    Code (particularly section 601 thereof [5 U.S.C. 601]), and pursuant to 
    the Securities Act of 1933 [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.] (particularly 
    section 19 thereof [15 U.S.C. 77s]), the Securities Exchange Act of 
    1934 [15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.] (particularly section 23 thereof [15 
    U.S.C. 78w]), the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et 
    seq.] (particularly section 38 thereof [15 U.S.C. 80a-37]), and the 
    Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-1 et seq.] (particularly 
    section 211 thereof [15 U.S.C. 80b-11]).
    
    Text of Proposed Rule Amendments
    
    List of Subjects
    
    17 CFR Parts 230 and 270
    
        Investment companies, Securities.
    
    17 CFR Part 240
    
        Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
    
    17 CFR Part 275
    
        Investment advisers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Securities.
    
        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 230--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 230 continues to read, in part, 
    as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s, 77sss, 78c, 
    78d, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78w, 78ll(d), 78t, 80a-8, 80a-29, 80a-30, 
    and 80a-37, unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        2. Section 230.157 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 230.157  Small entities for purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility 
    Act.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) When used with reference to an investment company that is an 
    issuer for purposes of the Act, have the meaning ascribed to those 
    terms by Sec. 270.0-10 of this chapter.
    
    PART 240--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 
    1934
    
        3. The authority citation for Part 240 continues to read in part as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77eee, 77ggg, 
    77nnn, 77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78f, 78i, 78j, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m, 
    78n, 78o, 78p, 78q, 78s, 78w, 78x, 78ll(d), 79q, 79t, 80a-20, 80a-
    23, 80a-29, 80a-37, 80b-3, 80b-4 and 80b-11, unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 240.0-10 is amended to revise the section heading and 
    paragraphs (a), (b), (e), (g)(2), (g)(3), and (i); redesignate 
    paragraphs (h)(2) and (h)(3) as paragraphs (h)(3) and (h)(4), 
    respectively; and add paragraphs (h)(2), (j) and (k) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 240.0-10  Small entities under the Securities Exchange Act for 
    purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) When used with reference to an ``issuer'' or a ``person,'' 
    other than an investment company, mean an ``issuer'' or ``person'' 
    that, on the last day of its most recent fiscal year, had total assets 
    of $5,000,000 or less;
        (b) When used with reference to an ``issuer'' or ``person'' that is 
    an investment company, have the meaning ascribed to those terms by 
    Sec. 270.0-10 of this chapter;
    * * * * *
        (e) When used with reference to an exchange, mean any exchange 
    that:
        (1) Has been exempted from the reporting requirements of 
    Sec. 240.11Aa3-1; and
        (2) Is not affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) 
    that is not a small business or small organization as defined in this 
    section;
    * * * * *
        (g) * * *
        (2) Provided service to fewer than 100 interrogation devices or 
    moving tickers at all times during the preceding fiscal year (or in the 
    time that it has been in business, if shorter); and
        (3) Is not affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) 
    that is not a small business or small organization under this section;
        (h) * * *
        (2) Transferred items only of issuers that would be deemed ``small 
    businesses'' or ``small organizations'' as defined in this section;
    * * * * *
        (i) For purposes of paragraph (c) of this section, a broker or 
    dealer is affiliated with another person if:
        (1) Such broker or dealer controls, is controlled by, or is under 
    common control with such other person; a person
    
    [[Page 4114]]
    
    shall be deemed to control another person if that person has the right 
    to vote 25% or more of the voting securities of such other person or is 
    entitled to receive 25% or more of the net profits of such other person 
    or is otherwise able to direct or cause the direction of the management 
    or policies of such other person; or
        (2) Such broker or dealer introduces transactions in securities, 
    other than registered investment company securities or interests or 
    participations in insurance company separate accounts, to such other 
    person, or introduces accounts of customers or other brokers or 
    dealers, other than accounts that hold only registered investment 
    company securities or interests or participations in insurance company 
    separate accounts, to such other person that carries such accounts on a 
    fully disclosed basis.
        (j) For purposes of paragraphs (d) through (h) of this section, a 
    person is affiliated with another person if that person controls, is 
    controlled by, or is under common control with such other person; a 
    person shall be deemed to control another person if that person has the 
    right to vote 25% or more of the voting securities of such other person 
    or is entitled to receive 25% or more of the net profits of such other 
    person or is otherwise able to direct or cause the direction of the 
    management or policies of such other person.
        (k) For purposes of paragraph (g) of this section, ``interrogation 
    device'' shall refer to any device that may be used to read or receive 
    securities information, including quotations, indications of interest, 
    last sale data and transaction reports, and shall include proprietary 
    terminals or personal computers that receive securities information via 
    computer to computer interfaces or gateway access.
    
    PART 270--RULES AND REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
    
        5. The authority citation for Part 270 continues to read, in part, 
    as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq., 80a-37, 80a-38, unless 
    otherwise noted;
    * * * * *
        6. Section 270.0-10 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 270.0-10  Small entities under the Investment Company Act for 
    purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
        (a) General. For purposes of Commission rulemaking in accordance 
    with the provisions of Chapter Six of the Administrative Procedure Act 
    (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and unless otherwise defined for purposes of a 
    particular rulemaking, the term small business or small organization 
    for purposes of the Act shall mean an investment company that, together 
    with other investment companies in the same group of related investment 
    companies, has net assets of $50 million or less as of the end of its 
    most recent fiscal year. For purposes of this section:
        (1) In the case of a management company, the term group of related 
    investment companies shall mean two or more management companies 
    (including series thereof) that:
        (i) Hold themselves out to investors as related companies for 
    purposes of investment and investor services; and
        (ii) Either:
        (A) Have a common investment adviser or have investment advisers 
    that are affiliated persons of each other; or
        (B) Have a common administrator; and
        (2) In the case of a unit investment trust, the term group of 
    related investment companies shall mean two or more unit investment 
    trusts (including series thereof) that have a common sponsor.
        (b) Special rule for insurance company separate accounts. In 
    determining whether an insurance company separate account is a small 
    business or small entity pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section, the 
    assets of the separate account shall be cumulated with the assets of 
    the general account and all other separate accounts of the insurance 
    company.
        (c) Determination of net assets. The Commission may calculate its 
    determination of the net assets of a group of related investment 
    companies based on the net assets of each investment company in the 
    group as of the end of such company's fiscal year.
    
    PART 275--RULES AND REGULATIONS, INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF 1940
    
        7. The authority citation for Part 275 continues to read, in part, 
    as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 80b-1 et seq., 80b-11, unless otherwise 
    noted.
    * * * * *
        8. Section 275.0-7 is amended by revising the section heading and 
    paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2) and (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 275.0-7  Small entities under the Investment Advisers Act for 
    purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) Manages assets with a total value of $50 million or less, in 
    discretionary or non-discretionary accounts, as of the end of its most 
    recent fiscal year, provided that the adviser's own assets related to 
    its advisory business do not exceed in value $50,000 as of the end of 
    its most recent fiscal year; and
        (2) Is not affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) 
    that is not a small business or small organization as defined in this 
    section, Sec. 240.0-10 or Sec. 270.0-10 of this chapter.
        (b) For purposes of this section, a person is affiliated with 
    another person if that person controls, is controlled by, or is under 
    common control with such other person; a person shall be deemed to 
    control another person if that person has the right to vote 25% or more 
    of the voting securities of such other person or is entitled to receive 
    25% or more of the net profits of such other person or is otherwise 
    able to direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of 
    such other person.
    
        Dated: January 22, 1997.
    
        By the Commission.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-2010 Filed 1-27-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/28/1997
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule amendments.
Document Number:
97-2010
Dates:
Comments should be received on or before February 27, 1997.
Pages:
4106-4114 (9 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release Nos. 33-7383, 34-38190, IC-22478, and IA-1609, File No. S7-4- 97
PDF File:
97-2010.pdf
CFR: (6)
17 CFR 230.157
17 CFR 240.0-10
17 CFR 240.11Aa3-1
17 CFR 270.0-10
17 CFR 270.0-10
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