2011-22652. Order Making Fiscal Year 2012 Annual Adjustments to Registration Fee Rates  

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    I. Background

    The Commission collects fees under various provisions of the securities laws. Section 6(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 (“Securities Act”) requires the Commission to collect fees from issuers on the registration of securities.[1] Section 13(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) requires the Commission to collect fees on specified repurchases of securities.[2] Section 14(g) of the Exchange Act requires the Commission to collect fees on proxy solicitations and statements in corporate control transactions.[3]

    The Investor and Capital Markets Fee Relief Act of 2002 (“Fee Relief Act”) [4] has required the Commission to make annual adjustments to the fee rates applicable under these sections for each of the fiscal years 2003 through 2011 in an attempt to generate collections equal to yearly targets specified in the statute.[5] Under the Fee Relief Act, each year's fee rate has been announced on the preceding April 30, and has taken effect five days after the date of enactment of the Commission's regular appropriation.

    The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank Act”) changes many of the provisions related to these fees. The Start Printed Page 55140Dodd-Frank Act created new annual collection targets for FY 2012 and thereafter. It also changed the date by which the Commission must announce a new fiscal year's fee rate (August 31) and the date on which the new rate takes effect (October 1).

    II. Fiscal Year 2012 Annual Adjustment to the Fee Rate

    Section 6(b)(2) of the Securities Act, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, requires the Commission to make an annual adjustment to the fee rate applicable under Section 6(b).[6] The annual adjustment to the fee rate under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act also sets the annual adjustment to the fee rates under Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act.[7]

    Section 6(b)(2) sets forth the method for determining the annual adjustment to the fee rate under Section 6(b) for fiscal year 2012. Specifically, the Commission must adjust the fee rate under Section 6(b) to a “rate that, when applied to the baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering prices for [fiscal year 2012], is reasonably likely to produce aggregate fee collections under [Section 6(b)] that are equal to the target fee collection amount for [fiscal year 2012].” That is, the adjusted rate is determined by dividing the “target fee collection amount” for fiscal year 2012 by the “baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering prices” for fiscal year 2012.

    Section 6(b)(6)(A) specifies that the “target fee collection amount” for fiscal year 2012 is $425,000,000. Section 6(b)(6)(B) defines the “baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price” for fiscal year 2012 as “the baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price at which securities are proposed to be offered pursuant to registration statements filed with the Commission during [fiscal year 2012] as determined by the Commission, after consultation with the Congressional Budget Office and the Office of Management and Budget * * *.”

    To make the baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price for fiscal year 2012, the Commission used a methodology similar to that developed in consultation with the Congressional Budget Office (“CBO”) and Office of Management and Budget (“OMB”) to project the aggregate offering price for purposes of the fiscal year 2012 annual adjustment.[8] Using this methodology, the Commission determines the “baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price” for fiscal year 2012 to be $3,708,294,634,490.[9] Based on this estimate, the Commission calculates the fee rate for fiscal 2012 to be $114.60 per million. This adjusted fee rate applies to Section 6(b) of the Securities Act, as well as to Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act.

    III. Effective Dates of the Annual Adjustments

    The fiscal year 2012 annual adjustments to the fee rates applicable under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act will be effective on October 1, 2011, under the changes made by the Dodd-Frank Act.[10]

    IV. Conclusion

    Accordingly, pursuant to Section 6(b) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act,[11]

    It Is Hereby Ordered that the fee rates applicable under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act shall be $114.60 per million effective on October 1, 2011.

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    By the Commission.

    Elizabeth M. Murphy,

    Secretary.

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    Appendix A

    With the passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Congress has, among other things, established a target amount of monies to be collected from fees charged to issuers based on the value of their registrations. This appendix provides the formula for determining such fees, which the Commission adjusts annually. Congress has mandated that the Commission determine these fees based on the “aggregate maximum offering prices,” which measures the aggregate dollar amount of securities registered with the Commission over the course of the year. In order to maximize the likelihood that the amount of monies targeted by Congress will be collected, the fee rate must be set to reflect projected aggregate maximum offering prices. As a percentage, the fee rate equals the ratio of the target amounts of monies to the projected aggregate maximum offering prices.

    For 2012, the Commission has estimated the aggregate maximum offering prices by projecting forward the trend established in the previous decade. More specifically, an ARIMA model was used to forecast the value of the aggregate maximum offering prices for months subsequent to July 2011, the last month for which the Commission has data on the aggregate maximum offering prices.

    The following sections describe this process in detail.

    A. Baseline Estimate of the Aggregate Maximum Offering Prices for Fiscal Year 2012

    First, calculate the aggregate maximum offering prices (AMOP) for each month in the sample (July 2001-July 2011). Next, calculate the percentage change in the AMOP from month to month.

    Model the monthly percentage change in AMOP as a first order moving average process. The moving average approach allows one to model the effect that an exceptionally high (or low) observation of AMOP tends to be followed by a more “typical” value of AMOP.

    Use the estimated moving average model to forecast the monthly percent change in AMOP. These percent changes can then be applied to obtain forecasts of the total dollar value of registrations. The following is a more formal (mathematical) description of the procedure:

    1. Begin with the monthly data for AMOP. The sample spans ten years, from July 2001 to July 2011.

    2. Divide each month's AMOP (column C) by the number of trading days in that month (column B) to obtain the average daily AMOP (AAMOP, column D).

    3. For each month t, the natural logarithm of AAMOP is reported in column E.

    4. Calculate the change in log(AAMOP) from the previous month as Δt = log (AAMOPt)−log(AAMOPt-1). This approximates the percentage change.

    5. Estimate the first order moving average model Δt = α + βet-1 + et, where et denotes the forecast error for month t. The forecast error is simply the difference between the one-month ahead forecast and the actual realization of Δt. The forecast error is expressed as et = Δt − α − βet-1. The model can be estimated using standard commercially available software. Using least Start Printed Page 55141squares, the estimated parameter values are α = 0.0005219 and β = −0.87539.

    6. For the month of August 2011 forecast Δt = 8/11 = α + βet = 8/11. For all subsequent months, forecast Δt = α.

    7. Calculate forecasts of log(AAMOP). For example, the forecast of log(AAMOP) for October 2011 is given by FLAAMOPt = 10/11 = log(AAMOPt = 7/11) + Δt = 8/11t = 9/11 + Δt = 10/11.

    8. Under the assumption that et is normally distributed, the n-step ahead forecast of AAMOP is given by exp(FLAAMOPt + σn2/2), where σn denotes the standard error of the n-step ahead forecast.

    9. For October 2011, this gives a forecast AAMOP of $14.6 Billion (Column I), and a forecast AMOP of $307.6 Billion (Column J).

    10. Iterate this process through September 2012 to obtain a baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering prices for fiscal year 2012 of $3,708,294,634,490.

    B. Using the Forecasts From A To Calculate the New Fee Rate.

    1. Using the data from Table A, estimate the aggregate maximum offering prices between 10/1/11 and 9/30/12 to be $3,708,294,634,490.

    2. The rate necessary to collect the target $425,000,000 in fee revenues set by Congress is then calculated as: $425,000,000 ÷ $3,708,294,634,490 = 0.000114608.

    3. Round the result to the seventh decimal point, yielding a rate of 0.0001146 (or $114.60 per million).

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    Footnotes

    4.  Pub. L. 107-123, 115 Stat. 2390 (2002).

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    6.  The annual adjustments are designed to adjust the fee rate in a given fiscal year so that, when applied to the aggregate maximum offering price at which securities are proposed to be offered for the fiscal year, it is reasonably likely to produce total fee collections under Section 6(b) equal to the “target fee collection amount” specified in Section 6(b)(6)(A) for that fiscal year.

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    7.  See Sections 13(e)(6) and 14(g)(6) of the Exchange Act. On October 1, 2011, Sections 13(e)(4) and 14(g)(6) of the Exchange Act, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, will require an annual adjustment to the fee rates under Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act to the same level as the new the fee rate under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act.

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    8.  For the fiscal year 2011 estimate, the Commission used a ten-year series of monthly observations ending in March 2010. For fiscal year 2012, the Commission used a ten-year series ending in July 2011.

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    9.  Appendix A explains how we determined the “baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price” for fiscal year 2012 using our methodology, and then shows the purely arithmetical process of calculating the fiscal year 2012 annual adjustment based on that estimate. The appendix includes the data used by the Commission in making its “baseline estimate of the aggregate maximum offering price” for fiscal year 2012.

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    10.  On October 1, 2011, Section 6(b)(4) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(e)(6) and 14(g)(6) of the Exchange Act, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, will require the fiscal year 2012 annual adjustments to the fee rates applicable under Section 6(b) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(e) and 14(g) of the Exchange Act to be effective on October 1, 2011.

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    BILLING CODE 8011-01-P

    [FR Doc. 2011-22652 Filed 9-2-11; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE 8011-01-C

Document Information

Comments Received:
0 Comments
Published:
09/06/2011
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
2011-22652
Pages:
55139-55148 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release Nos. 33-9255, 34-65231/August 31, 2011
PDF File:
2011-22652.Pdf