-
Upon Written Request, Copies Available From: Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of FOIA Services, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-2736
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 350l et seq.), the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) has submitted to the Office of Management and Budget a request for extension of the previously approved collection of information discussed below.
Rule 17f-2 (17 CFR 270.17f-2), entitled “Custody of Investments by Registered Management Investment Company,” establishes safeguards for arrangements in which a registered management investment company or business development company (“fund”) is deemed to maintain custody of its own assets, such as when the fund maintains its assets in a facility that provides safekeeping but not custodial services.[1] The rule includes four distinct requirements that are an information collection under the Paperwork Reduction Act. First, fund's directors must prepare a resolution designating not more than five fund officers or responsible employees who may have access to the fund's assets. Secondly, the fund's board must vote to approve this resolution. Third, the designated access persons (two or more of whom must act jointly when handling fund assets) must prepare a written notation providing certain information about each deposit or withdrawal of fund assets and must transmit the notation to another officer or director designated by the directors. Lastly, an independent public accountant must verify the fund's assets three times each year, and two of those examinations must be unscheduled.[2]
Rule 17f-2's requirements are designed to safeguard fund assets from loss by requiring certain specific controls when those assets are not placed and maintained in the custody of a bank or other custodian as permitted under section 17(f) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-17(f)) (“Act”) and the rules thereunder. Specifically, the requirement that directors designate access persons is intended to ensure that directors evaluate the trustworthiness of insiders who handle fund assets. The requirements that access persons act jointly in handling fund assets, prepare a written notation of each transaction, and transmit the notation to another designated person are intended to reduce the risk of misappropriation of fund assets by access persons, and to ensure that adequate records are prepared, reviewed by a responsible third person, and available for examination by the Commission. The requirement that auditors verify fund assets without notice twice each year is intended to provide an additional deterrent to the misappropriation of fund assets and to detect any irregularities. Less frequent examinations by a fund's accountants could impair the ability of the Commission's examination staff to ascertain the fund's compliance with the rule.
The Commission staff estimates that each fund makes 974 responses and spends an average of 252 hours annually in complying with the rule's requirements.[3] Commission staff estimates that on an annual basis it takes: (i) 0.5 hours of fund accounting personnel at a total cost of $126 and 1 hour of fund attorney personnel time at a cost of $484, for a total of 1.5 hours and a cost of $610 to draft director resolutions; [4] (ii) 0.5 hours of the fund's board of directors at a total cost of $2,385 to adopt the resolution; [5] (iii) 244 hours for the fund's accounting personnel at a total cost of $81,086 to prepare written notations of transactions; [6] and (iv) 3 hours for the fund's controller or administrator at a total cost of $1,704 to assist the independent public accountants when they perform verifications of fund assets.[7] The total of these four requirements would then be 249 hours at a cost of $84,081 per respondent.[8] Commission staff estimates that approximately 165 funds file Form N-17f-2 each year.[9] Thus, the total annual ( print page 71676) hour burden for rule 17f-2 is estimated to be 41,085 hours.[10] Based on the total costs per fund listed above, the total cost of rule 17f-2's collection of information requirements is estimated to be approximately $13,873.[11]
The estimate of average burden hours is made solely for the purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act, and is not derived from a comprehensive or even a representative survey or study of the costs of Commission rules and forms. Complying with the collections of information required by rule 17f-2 is mandatory for those funds that maintain custody of their own assets. Responses will not be kept confidential. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid control number.
The public may view background documentation for this information collection at the following website: www.reginfo.gov. Find this particular information collection by selecting “Currently under 30-day Review—Open for Public Comments” or by using the search function. Written comments and recommendations for the proposed information collection should be sent within 30 days of publication of this notice by October 3, 2024 to (i) MBX.OMB.OIRA.SEC_desk_officer@omb.eop.gov and (ii) Austin Gerig, Director/Chief Data Officer, Securities and Exchange Commission, c/o Oluwaseun Ajayi, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549, or by sending an email to: PRA_Mailbox@sec.gov.
Dated: August 27, 2024.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
Footnotes
1. The rule generally requires all assets to be deposited in the safekeeping of a “bank or other company whose functions and physical facilities are supervised by Federal or State authority.”
Back to Citation2. The accountant must transmit to the Commission promptly after each examination a certificate describing the examination on Form N-17f-2; the preparation and filing of Form N-17f-2, which largely serves as a cover-sheet for the accountant's certification of their audit, is covered by a separate information collection; the third (scheduled) examination may coincide with the annual verification required for every fund by section 30(g) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 80a-29(g)).
Back to Citation3. The 974 responses are: 1 (one) response to draft and adopt the resolution and 973 notations; estimates of the number of hours are based on conversations with individuals in the fund industry; the actual number of hours may vary significantly depending on individual fund assets.
Back to Citation4. The estimate relating to fund accounting personnel is based on the following calculation: 0.5 (burden hours per fund) × $252 (senior accountant's hourly rate) = approximately $126; unless otherwise indicated, the hourly wage figures used herein are from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association's Management & Professional Earnings in the Securities Industry 2013, modified by Commission staff to account for an 1800-hour work-year and inflation, and multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size, employee benefits and overhead.
Back to Citation5. The staff has estimated the average cost of board of director time as $4,770 per hour, which was last adjusted for inflation through 2019; this is a combined cost for the entire board and assumes as average of 9 board members per board.
Back to Citation6. Respondents estimated that each fund makes 973 responses on an annual basis and spends a total of 0.25 hours per response; the staff assumes that the fund personnel involved are Accounts Payable Manager ($237 hourly rate), Senior Operations Manager ($425 hourly rate) and General Accounting Manager ($337 hourly rate); the blended average hourly rate of these personnel is $333 ($333 = (237 + 425 + 337)/3); the total estimated cost of preparing notations is based on the following calculation: 974 × 0.25 × $333 = $81,086.
Back to Citation7. This estimate is based on the following calculation: 3×$568 (fund controller's hourly rate) = $1,704.
Back to Citation8. 249 = 0.5 + 1 + 0.5 + 3 + 244; $84,081 = 126 + 484 + $2,385 + 81,086 + 1,704.
Back to Citation9. On average, each year approximately 165 funds filed Form N-17f-2 with the Commission during calendar years 2020-2022; as every fund subject to rule 17f-2 must file Form N-17f-2, we believe this is a good estimate for the number of respondents to the rule.
Back to Citation10. This estimate is based on the following calculation: 165 (funds) × 249 (total annual hourly burden per fund) = 41,085 hours for rule; the annual burden for rule 17f-2 does not include time spent preparing Form N-17f-2; the burden for Form N-17f-2 is included in a separate collection of information.
Back to Citation11. This estimate is based on the following calculation: $84,081 (total annual cost per fund) × 165 funds = $13,873,365.
Back to Citation[FR Doc. 2024-19629 Filed 8-30-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P
Document Information
- Published:
- 09/03/2024
- Department:
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Entry Type:
- Notice
- Document Number:
- 2024-19629
- Pages:
- 71675-71676 (2 pages)
- Docket Numbers:
- SEC File No. 270-233, OMB Control No. 3235-0223
- PDF File:
- 2024-19629.pdf