83_FR_31991 83 FR 31859 - Investment Company Liquidity Disclosure

83 FR 31859 - Investment Company Liquidity Disclosure

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 132 (July 10, 2018)

Page Range31859-31877
FR Document2018-14366

The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is adopting amendments to its forms designed to improve the reporting and disclosure of liquidity information by registered open-end investment companies. The Commission is adopting a new requirement that funds disclose information about the operation and effectiveness of their liquidity risk management program in their reports to shareholders. The Commission in turn is rescinding the requirement in Form N-PORT under the Investment Company Act of 1940 that funds publicly disclose aggregate liquidity classification information about their portfolios. In addition, the Commission is adopting amendments to Form N-PORT that will allow funds classifying the liquidity of their investments pursuant to their liquidity risk management programs to report multiple liquidity classification categories for a single position under specified circumstances. The Commission also is adding a new requirement to Form N-PORT that funds and other registrants report their holdings of cash and cash equivalents.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 132 (Tuesday, July 10, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 132 (Tuesday, July 10, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 31859-31877]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-14366]



[[Page 31859]]

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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

17 CFR Part 274

[Release No. IC-33142; File No. S7-04-18]
RIN 3235-AM30


Investment Company Liquidity Disclosure

AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is 
adopting amendments to its forms designed to improve the reporting and 
disclosure of liquidity information by registered open-end investment 
companies. The Commission is adopting a new requirement that funds 
disclose information about the operation and effectiveness of their 
liquidity risk management program in their reports to shareholders. The 
Commission in turn is rescinding the requirement in Form N-PORT under 
the Investment Company Act of 1940 that funds publicly disclose 
aggregate liquidity classification information about their portfolios. 
In addition, the Commission is adopting amendments to Form N-PORT that 
will allow funds classifying the liquidity of their investments 
pursuant to their liquidity risk management programs to report multiple 
liquidity classification categories for a single position under 
specified circumstances. The Commission also is adding a new 
requirement to Form N-PORT that funds and other registrants report 
their holdings of cash and cash equivalents.

DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective September 10, 2018.
    Compliance Dates: The applicable compliance dates are discussed in 
section II.D of this final rule.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Zeena Abdul-Rahman, Senior Counsel, or 
Thoreau Bartmann, Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551-6792, Division 
of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F 
Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-8549.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is adopting amendments to 
Form N-PORT [referenced in 17 CFR 274.150] under the Investment Company 
Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.] (``Investment Company Act'' or 
``Act'') and amendments to Form N-1A [referenced in 17 CFR 274.11A] 
under the Investment Company Act and the Securities Act of 1933 
(``Securities Act'') [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.].

Contents

I. Background
II. Discussion
    A. Amendments to Liquidity Public Reporting and Disclosure 
Requirements
    B. Amendments to Liquidity Reporting Requirements
    C. Treasury Asset Management Report and Evaluation of Other 
Approaches
    D. Compliance Dates
III. Economic Analysis
    A. Introduction
    B. Economic Baseline
    C. Economic Impacts
    D. Reasonable Alternatives
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
    A. Introduction
    B. Form N-PORT
    C. Form N-1A
V. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    A. Need for the Amendments
    B. Significant Issues Raised by Public Comment
    C. Small Entities Subject to the Amendments
    D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance 
Requirements
    E. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on Small Entities
VI. Statutory Authority
Text of Rules and Forms

I. Background

    On October 13, 2016, the Commission adopted new rules and forms as 
well as amendments to its rules and forms to modernize the reporting 
and disclosure of information by registered investment companies 
(``funds''),\1\ including information about the liquidity of funds' 
portfolios.\2\ In particular, the Commission adopted new Form N-PORT, 
which requires mutual funds and ETFs to report monthly portfolio 
investment information to the Commission in a structured data 
format.\3\ The Commission also adopted 17 CFR 270.22e-4 (``rule 22e-
4'') and related reforms to enhance the regulatory framework for 
liquidity risk management of funds.\4\ Among other things, rule 22e-4 
requires a fund to classify each portfolio investment into one of four 
defined liquidity categories, sometimes referred to as ``buckets.'' \5\
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    \1\ The term ``funds'' used in this release includes open-end 
management companies, including exchange-traded funds (``ETFs''), 
and excludes money market funds.
    \2\ Investment Company Reporting Modernization, Investment 
Company Act Release No. 32314 (Oct. 13, 2016) [81 FR 81870 (Nov. 18, 
2016)] (``Reporting Modernization Adopting Release''). See also 
Investment Company Liquidity Risk Management Programs, Investment 
Company Act Release No. 32315 (Oct. 13, 2016) [81 FR 82142 (Nov. 18, 
2016)] (``Liquidity Adopting Release'').
    \3\ Registered money market funds and small business investment 
companies are exempt from Form N-PORT reporting requirements.
    \4\ Specifically, we adopted rule 22e-4 and 17 CFR 270.30b1-10 
(``rule 30b1-10''), new Form N-LIQUID, as well as amendments to 
Forms N-1A, N-PORT, and N-CEN. See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra 
footnote 2.
    \5\ Rule 22e-4 requires each fund to adopt and implement a 
written liquidity risk management program reasonably designed to 
assess and manage the fund's liquidity risk. A fund's liquidity risk 
management program must incorporate certain specified elements, 
including the requirement that a fund classify the liquidity of each 
of the fund's portfolio investments into one of four defined 
liquidity categories: Highly liquid investments, moderately liquid 
investments, less liquid investments, and illiquid investments 
(``classification''). This classification is based on the number of 
days in which a fund reasonably expects an investment would be 
convertible to cash (or, in the case of the less-liquid and illiquid 
categories, sold or disposed of) without the conversion 
significantly changing the market value of the investment. Rule 22e-
4 requires funds to establish a highly liquid investment minimum, 
and includes requirements related to policies and procedures on 
redemptions in kind and evaluation of the liquidity of new unit 
investment trusts (``UITs''). Rule 22e-4 also includes other 
required elements, such as limits on purchases of illiquid 
investments, reporting to the board, and recordkeeping.
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    In connection with the liquidity classification requirement of rule 
22e-4, a fund is required to report confidentially to the Commission 
the liquidity classification assigned to each of the fund's portfolio 
investments on Form N-PORT.\6\ As originally adopted, Form N-PORT 
requires a fund to assign each portfolio holding to a single 
classification bucket and publicly disclose the aggregate percentage of 
its portfolio investments falling into each of the four liquidity 
classification categories noted above.\7\ Form N-PORT did not require 
funds to report the cash they hold.\8\
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    \6\ Item C.7 of Form N-PORT.
    \7\ Item B.8.a of Form N-PORT. This information would be 
disclosed to the public only for the third month of each fiscal 
quarter with a 60-day delay. Form N-PORT also required public 
reporting of the percentage of a fund's highly liquid investments 
that it has segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy margin 
requirements in connection with, derivatives transactions that are 
classified as moderately liquid, less liquid, or illiquid 
investments. Item B.8.b of Form N-PORT.
    \8\ Although the requirements of rule 22e-4 and Form N-PORT 
discussed above are in effect, the compliance date has not yet 
occurred. Accordingly, no funds are yet reporting this liquidity-
related information on Form N-PORT. We previously extended the 
compliance date for certain classification-related provisions of 
rule 22e-4 and their associated Form N-PORT reporting requirements 
by six months. See Investment Company Liquidity Risk Management 
Programs; Commission Guidance for In-Kind ETFs, Investment Company 
Act Release No. 33010 (Feb. 22, 2018) [83 FR 8342 (Feb. 27, 2018)] 
(``Liquidity Extension Release'').
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    Rule 22e-4 and the related rules and forms were designed to promote 
effective liquidity risk management throughout the fund industry and to 
enhance disclosure regarding fund liquidity and redemption 
practices.\9\ However, since we adopted these requirements, interested 
parties have

[[Page 31860]]

raised concerns that the public disclosure of a fund's aggregate 
liquidity classification information on Form N-PORT may not achieve our 
intended purpose and may confuse and mislead investors.\10\
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    \9\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at n.112 
and accompanying text.
    \10\ See Investment Company Liquidity Disclosure, Investment 
Company Act Release No. 33046 (Mar. 14, 2018) [83 FR 11905 (Mar. 19, 
2018)] (``Proposing Release'').
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    In light of these concerns,\11\ we proposed to replace the Form N-
PORT requirement for a fund to publicly report aggregate liquidity 
portfolio classification information on a quarterly basis with new 
disclosure in the fund's annual shareholder report that provides a 
narrative discussion of the operation and effectiveness of the fund's 
liquidity risk management program over the most recently completed 
fiscal year.\12\ We also proposed additional amendments to Form N-PORT 
that would allow a fund to report a single portfolio holding in 
multiple classification buckets under defined circumstances where 
splitting the holding into multiple buckets would provide the 
Commission with more or equally accurate information at lower cost to 
funds (and thus, to fund shareholders). Finally, we proposed additional 
amendments to Form N-PORT designed to help us monitor trends in the use 
of cash and cash equivalents and more accurately assess the composition 
of a fund's highly liquid investment minimum (``HLIM'').\13\
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    \11\ Letters detailing these concerns, as well as letters on the 
Proposing Release, are available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-04-18/s70418.htm (File No. S7-04-18). See, e.g., Letter from SIFMA 
AMG to Chairman Jay Clayton, Commissioner Stein, and Commissioner 
Piwowar (Sept. 12, 2017) (urging the SEC not to publicly disclose 
the liquidity classification information submitted via Form N-PORT); 
Letter from the Investment Company Institute to The Honorable Jay 
Clayton (July 20, 2017) (``ICI Pre-proposal Letter I'').
    \12\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10.
    \13\ See id.
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    We received 24 comment letters on the proposal. A significant 
majority of commenters generally supported replacing public disclosure 
of aggregate liquidity classification information on Form N-PORT with a 
new narrative discussion of a fund's liquidity risk management program 
in its report to shareholders.\14\ Some expressed concerns, however, 
about the placement and content of the discussion regarding the 
operation and effectiveness of the fund's liquidity risk management 
program in the annual report, and provided alternatives for us to 
consider.\15\ A few commenters objected to the proposed rescission of 
public aggregate liquidity reporting on Form N-PORT, arguing that 
classification information would be useful and understandable to 
investors, and would not result in the potential negative consequences 
suggested in the proposal.\16\ Commenters generally supported the other 
proposed changes to Form N-PORT.\17\ In addition, the majority of 
commenters urged us to re-examine more broadly the classification 
requirements and related elements of rule 22e-4.\18\ We discuss in 
Section II.C below additional efforts the Commission and its staff will 
take in relation to rule 22e-4 and its requirements.
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    \14\ See e.g., Comment Letter of Investment Company Institute 
(May 18, 2018) (``ICI Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of SIFMA AMG 
(May 18, 2018) (``SIFMA AMG Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of 
BlackRock Inc. (May 17, 2018) (``BlackRock Comment Letter'').
    \15\ See e.g., Comment Letter of the Capital Group Companies 
(May 18, 2018) (``Capital Group Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of 
Fidelity Investments (May 18, 2018) (``Fidelity Comment Letter''); 
ICI Comment Letter; Comment Letter of the Investment Adviser 
Association (May 18, 2018) (``IAA Comment Letter'').
    \16\ See Comment Letter of Better Markets (May 18, 2018) 
(``Better Markets Comment Letter''); Comment Letter of Americans for 
Financial Reform Education Fund (``AFR Comment Letter''); See 
Comment Letter of Ya Li, J.D. Candidate, Boston College of Law (May 
1, 2018) (``Ya Li Comment Letter'').
    \17\ See, e.g., Comment Letter of the Independent Directors 
Council (May 17, 2018) (``IDC Comment Letter''), Fidelity Comment 
Letter, and IAA Comment Letter (supporting our proposal to provide 
funds with the option to split a holding into more than one 
classification category in certain circumstances); ICI Comment 
Letter and Comment Letter of State Street Corporation (May 18, 2018) 
(``State Street Comment Letter'') (supporting our proposal to 
require additional disclosure relating to holdings of cash and cash 
equivalents not otherwise reported on Form N-PORT); SIFMA AMG 
Comment Letter and BlackRock Comment Letter (supporting our proposal 
to keep the percentage of the fund's highly liquid investments 
segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy margin requirements in 
connection with, certain derivatives transactions non-public).
    \18\ See e.g., Comment Letter of Federated Investors, Inc. (May 
15, 2018) (``Federated Comment Letter''); IAA Comment Letter; 
Comment Letter of the Vanguard Group, Inc. (May 17, 2018) 
(``Vanguard Comment Letter'').
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    Today, after considering comments we received, we are adopting 
amendments to Forms N-PORT and N-1A largely as proposed.\19\ The 
amendments will replace the requirement in Form N-PORT that a fund 
publicly disclose on an aggregate basis the percentage of its 
investments allocated to each liquidity classification category with a 
new narrative discussion in the fund's shareholder report regarding its 
liquidity risk management program.\20\
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    \19\ If any provision of rule 22e-4 or the related rules and 
forms, including the amendments adopted today, or the application 
thereof to any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, such 
invalidity shall not affect other provisions or the application of 
such provisions to other persons or circumstances that can be given 
effect without the invalid provision or application.
    \20\ We also are adopting, as proposed, a related change to make 
non-public (but not eliminate) the disclosure required under Item 
B.8 of Form N-PORT about the percentage of a fund's highly liquid 
investments segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy margin 
requirements in connection with, certain derivatives transactions, 
given that this information is only relevant when viewed together 
with full liquidity classification information. See Item B.8.b of 
Form N-PORT. The commenters that discussed this change supported 
keeping it non-public. See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter.
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    The Commission also is adopting amendments to Form N-PORT that will 
provide funds the flexibility to split a fund's portfolio holdings into 
more than one classification category in three specified circumstances 
when split reporting equally or more accurately reflects the liquidity 
of the investment or eases cost burdens. Finally, we are adopting as 
proposed a Form N-PORT requirement that funds, and other registrants, 
disclose their holdings of cash and cash equivalents not reported in 
Parts C and D of the Form.\21\ We discuss the comments and changes from 
the proposal below.
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    \21\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at n.15 (noting 
that the term ``registrant'' refers to entities required to file 
Form N-PORT, including all registered management investment 
companies, other than money market funds and small business 
investment companies, and all ETFs (regardless of whether they 
operate as UITs or management investment companies)).
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II. Discussion

A. Amendments to Liquidity Public Reporting and Disclosure Requirements

    Today we are replacing the requirement in Form N-PORT that a fund 
publicly disclose on an aggregate basis the percentage of its 
investments that it has allocated to each liquidity classification 
category with new narrative discussion in the fund's shareholder report 
regarding its liquidity risk management program.\22\ Funds already are 
required to disclose a summary of the principal risks of investing in 
the fund, including liquidity risk if applicable, in its 
prospectus.\23\
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    \22\ See revised Item B.8 of Form N-PORT and new Item 
27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A.
    \23\ See Item 4(b) of Form N-1A. In addition, Item 9(c) of Form 
N-1A requires a fund to disclose all principal risks of investing in 
the fund, including the risks to which the fund's particular 
portfolio as a whole is expected to be subject and the circumstances 
reasonably likely to affect adversely the fund's net asset value, 
yield, or total return.
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    The new narrative discussion will include disclosure about the 
operation and effectiveness of the fund's implementation of its 
required liquidity risk management program. Additionally, we are 
clarifying how funds should discuss liquidity events that materially 
affected performance in the management's discussion of fund performance 
(``MDFP'') section of the annual shareholder report.\24\ We expect

[[Page 31861]]

that the clarity we are providing and the shareholder report disclosure 
we are adopting will improve funds' disclosure about liquidity events 
that materially affect fund performance as well as the operation and 
effectiveness of their liquidity risk management programs.\25\ These 
disclosures will provide new and existing investors with a holistic 
view of the liquidity risks of the fund and how effectively the fund's 
liquidity risk management program managed those risks on an ongoing 
basis over the reporting period. This revised approach is designed to 
provide accessible and useful disclosure about liquidity risks and risk 
management to investors, with appropriate context, so that investors 
have a more comprehensive picture of the fund's liquidity risks and 
their management and may understand the nature and relevance of these 
risks to their investments.
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    \24\ See infra footnote 59 and accompanying text.
    \25\ See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A.
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1. Public Aggregate Liquidity Profile
    As noted in the Proposing Release, since the Commission adopted 
rule 22e-4 and the related reforms, Commission staff has engaged 
extensively with interested parties and we have received letters from 
industry participants discussing the complexities of the classification 
process. These letters raised three general types of concerns that 
informed our revised approach to public fund liquidity-related 
disclosure. First, the commenters described how variations in 
methodologies and assumptions used to conduct liquidity classification 
can significantly affect the classification information reported on 
Form N-PORT in ways that investors may not understand 
(``subjectivity'').\26\ Second, they suggested that Form N-PORT may not 
be the most accessible and useful way to communicate information about 
liquidity risk and may not provide the necessary context for investors 
to understand how the fund's classification results relate to its 
liquidity risk and risk management (``lack of context'').\27\ Third, 
they argued that because this reporting item on Form N-PORT singles out 
liquidity risk, and does not place it in a broader context of the risks 
and factors affecting a fund's risk, returns, and performance, it may 
inappropriately focus investors on one investing risk over others 
(``liquidity risk in isolation'').\28\
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    \26\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at nn.20-27 and 
accompanying text.
    \27\ See id., at nn.28-30 and accompanying text.
    \28\ See id., at n.31 and accompanying text.
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    As we discussed in the Proposing Release, these concerns led us to 
propose a new approach to liquidity-related disclosure. Most commenters 
on the proposal agreed with our approach, and supported replacing 
quarterly public disclosure of aggregate liquidity classification 
information on Form N-PORT with a new requirement that funds discuss 
the operation and effectiveness of their liquidity risk management 
program in their shareholder reports.\29\ These commenters generally 
reiterated the concerns that led us to propose these changes, stating 
that the new approach would be less likely to confuse or mislead 
investors.\30\ These commenters emphasized that classification data is 
inherently subject to variability due to model design and the 
assumptions used, and that this model risk introduces yet another 
element of subjectivity to the classification process.\31\ Several 
commenters also argued that the forward-looking nature of 
classification data, which is based on assumptions about how fast a 
fund could sell securities, makes the data inappropriate for public 
consumption.\32\
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    \29\ See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter; BlackRock Comment Letter; 
SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.
    \30\ See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter (``A narrative discussion 
about a fund's liquidity risk management program would provide 
shareholders with clearer, more understandable, and more useful 
information about the fund--in plain English.'').
    \31\ See Comment Letter of MSCI (May 18, 2018) (``MSCI Comment 
Letter'').
    \32\ See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter; SIFMA Comment Letter.
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    However, a few commenters objected to the proposed amendments, 
arguing that investors would benefit from being able to access the 
aggregated liquidity bucketing information of the funds in which they 
invest.\33\ They argued that the Commission should err on the side of 
providing more information to investors about their funds, rather than 
less.\34\ While these commenters acknowledged that there may be 
subjectivity in funds' classification decisions, they argued that 
subjectivity is inherent in finance and the use of subjective judgments 
was an intended consequence of the rule.\35\ One commenter stated that 
replacing a ``quantitative measure with a qualitative discussion is an 
inherently more subjective approach.'' \36\ One commenter also 
suggested that investors are capable of understanding the aggregate 
liquidity classification data and weighing its value in the context of 
other types of disclosure and information available to them.\37\ 
Finally, one commenter asserted that, because the Commission had not 
engaged in investor testing of classification data, any conclusions as 
to its utility or the potential confusion to investors would not have 
an empirical basis.\38\
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    \33\ See Ya Li Comment Letter; Better Markets Comment Letter; 
AFR Comment Letter; Comment Letter of Bondview (May 17, 2018) 
(``Bondview Comment Letter'').
    \34\ See Better Markets Comment Letter.
    \35\ See Better Markets Comment Letter; Bondview Comment Letter.
    \36\ See AFR Comment Letter.
    \37\ See Better Markets Comment Letter (arguing that investors 
``can and do read and digest a broad range of information when 
making investment decisions'' and stating that the aggregated 
liquidity classification data ``can easily be understood as it 
simply states the percentages of liquid-to-illiquid holdings a fund 
has in its portfolio. Investors and those who serve them then can 
add this liquidity classification information to their total mix of 
information and make better and more informed investment 
decisions.'').
    \38\ See Better Markets Comment Letter.
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    We continue to believe that it is important for investors to 
understand the liquidity risks of the funds they hold and how those 
risks are managed. We appreciate commenters' concerns regarding the 
elimination of public disclosure of aggregate liquidity classification 
reporting. We also recognize that subjectivity is inherent in many 
financial decisions and is in fact desirable to some extent in the 
classification information that is reported to us.\39\ However, the 
subjectivity of the classification process when applied to this public 
disclosure concerns us for several specific reasons.
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    \39\ Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at text 
accompanying n.597.
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    First, the quantitative presentation of the aggregate liquidity 
information may imply precision and uniformity in a way that obscures 
its subjectivity. When disclosure is clearly subjective, we believe 
investors are likely better able to understand and appreciate its 
nature. In this case, however, we believe the presentation of 
quantitative data may pose a significant risk of confusing and 
misleading investors.\40\ Second, we continue to share the concern 
expressed by many commenters that public dissemination of the aggregate 
classification information, without an accompanying full explanation to 
investors of the underlying subjectivity, model risk, methodological 
decisions, and assumptions that shape this information, may potentially 
be misleading to investors.\41\ Absent that kind of detailed contextual 
explanation, we believe that such aggregate classification data may not 
be useful for investors, as it would not result in an ``apples to 
apples'' comparison between

[[Page 31862]]

funds, and may result in investor confusion if they believe it 
does.\42\ Additionally, we continue to believe that public 
dissemination of the aggregate classification information could create 
perverse incentives to classify investments as more liquid, and may 
inappropriately highlight liquidity risk compared to other, potentially 
more salient risks of the fund.\43\ Finally, we are concerned that 
disclosing funds' aggregate liquidity profile may potentially create 
risks of coordinated investment behavior, if funds were to create more 
correlated portfolios by purchasing investments that they believed 
third parties, such as investors or regulators, may view as ``more 
liquid.'' \44\
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    \40\ For example, because the aggregate liquidity profile would 
be a backward looking review of a fund's liquidity presented only 
quarterly, with a 60-day delay, it may be misleading if investors 
were to base investing decisions on this information without being 
provided a significant amount of additional context about its 
staleness.
    \41\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at n.32.
    \42\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at text following 
n.13.
    \43\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10.
    \44\ See ICI Pre-proposal Letter I. These risks may both 
increase the possibility of correlated market movements in times of 
stress and may potentially reduce the utility of the classification 
data reported to us.
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    Additionally, we do not believe it is appropriate to adapt Form N-
PORT to add the level of detail and narrative context that we believe 
would be necessary for investors to appreciate better the fund's 
liquidity risk profile and the subjective nature of classification. The 
commenters who addressed potentially adapting Form N-PORT generally 
agreed that it may take significant detailed disclosure and nuanced 
explanation to effectively inform investors about the subjectivity and 
limitations of aggregate liquidity classification information so as to 
allow them to properly make use of the information.\45\ Such a long 
narrative discussion would not be consistent with the nature of, and 
could undermine the purpose of, Form N-PORT.\46\ Also, to the extent 
that such disclosure would need to be granular and detailed to 
effectively explain the process of compiling the liquidity information, 
it is not consistent with the careful balancing of investor interests 
that the Commission performed in determining to require disclosure of 
sensitive granular information, including position-level data, only on 
a non-public basis.
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    \45\ See, e.g., MSCI Comment Letter (``While we are generally in 
favor of promoting public transparency about fund liquidity, we 
agree with [the proposal]. The classification involves a high level 
of model risk . . . which does not allow a direct comparison of 
results obtained from different funds unless more and more technical 
information is provided on the nature of the models and the 
parameters used to generate the result.'').
    \46\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at n.33 (noting 
that ``due to the variability and subjective inputs required to 
engage in liquidity classification under rule 22e-4, providing 
effective information about liquidity classifications under that 
rule to investors poses more difficult and different challenges than 
the other data that is publicly disclosed on Form N-PORT, which is 
more objective and less likely to vary between funds based on their 
particular facts and circumstances''). See also Comment Letter of 
J.P. Morgan Asset Management (May 18, 2018) (``J.P. Morgan Comment 
Letter'') (``It would not be practical to provide an investor-
friendly explanation of each input, and associated effect on the 
classification output. Absent this information, however, investors 
may reasonably believe that they are looking at an objective 
assessment of a fund's liquidity profile.'').
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    For these reasons, and in light of the concerns above, it is our 
judgment that effective disclosure of liquidity risks and their 
management would be better achieved through prospectus and shareholder 
report disclosure rather than Form N-PORT. Most commenters agreed, 
suggesting that shareholder report disclosure would have the benefit of 
allowing funds to produce tailored disclosure suited to the particular 
liquidity risks and management practices of the specific fund.\47\ This 
would avoid use of a one-size-fits-all approach when providing 
liquidity risk information to investors, and would avoid giving 
investors the ``false impression that they can rely on the sole results 
of time bucketing for comparing liquidity of different funds in making 
their investment decisions.'' \48\ Accordingly, we are adopting the 
amendments to Form N-PORT eliminating public disclosure of aggregate 
liquidity classification information as proposed.
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    \47\ See, e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter (``AMG believes the 
proposal strikes the right balance and appropriately provides funds 
the flexibility to tailor their disclosure in the most meaningful 
way for their investors.''); IDC Comment Letter.
    \48\ See MSCI Comment Letter.
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2. Shareholder Report Liquidity Risk Disclosure
    We also are adopting, largely as proposed, a new requirement for 
funds to discuss briefly the operation and effectiveness of a fund's 
liquidity risk management program in the fund's report to shareholders. 
In response to commenters, we are moving this discussion of the 
operation and effectiveness of a fund's liquidity risk management 
program from the MDFP section of the annual report to a new section of 
the shareholder report (annual or semi-annual) following the discussion 
of board approval of advisory contracts.\49\ As proposed, this 
subsection will require funds to discuss the operation and 
effectiveness of their liquidity risk management program over the 
period covered. However, funds will have flexibility to cover an annual 
period that does not coincide with the fund's most recently completed 
fiscal year.\50\
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    \49\ New Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A.
    \50\ The item will require a discussion of the operation and 
effectiveness of the fund's liquidity risk management program during 
the period covered as part of the board's annual review of the 
funds' liquidity risk management program. Rule 22e-4(b)(2)(iii) 
requires a fund board to review, no less frequently than annually, a 
report prepared by the program administrator that addresses the 
operation of the program and its adequacy and effectiveness.
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    The majority of commenters generally agreed with our proposed 
requirement that funds provide a narrative discussion of the operation 
and effectiveness of a fund's liquidity risk management program, noting 
that such disclosure is a better way to provide investors with useful 
and accessible liquidity information and reduces the risk of investor 
confusion.\51\ However, some commenters suggested certain modifications 
to our proposed disclosure, largely focused on its placement.\52\ These 
commenters objected to including the narrative disclosure in the MDFP, 
arguing that, in many cases, the required liquidity disclosures would 
not concern primary drivers of fund performance. Commenters had a 
variety of ideas on where disclosure on the operation and effectiveness 
of the liquidity risk management program should be placed, with some 
suggesting that it be in its own subsection within the annual 
report,\53\ in the fund's Statement of Additional Information 
(``SAI''),\54\ or in the section of the shareholder report discussing 
the bases for the board's approval of the advisory contract.\55\ 
Several commenters also suggested that allowing funds to include the 
new disclosure in either the fund's annual or

[[Page 31863]]

semiannual report would ease some of the cost burdens of compliance 
with the new requirement by allowing funds to synchronize the new 
shareholder report disclosure with liquidity reporting to the 
board.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ See e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; Comment Letter of 
Wellington Management Company LLP (May 18, 2018) (``Wellington 
Comment Letter''); Fidelity Comment Letter; State Street Comment 
Letter.
    \52\ One commenter suggested that the new narrative disclosure 
included in the shareholder report be reported in a structured 
format. See Comment Letter of XBRL US, Inc. (May 18, 2018) (``XBRL 
US Comment Letter''). We are not creating an obligation to use a 
structured format at this time, but will consider the issue in 
connection with other Commission initiatives. See Fund Retail 
Investor Experience and Disclosure Request for Comment, Investment 
Company Act Release No. 33113 (June 5, 2018) [83 FR 26891 (June 11, 
2018)].
    \53\ See e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter; BlackRock Comment 
Letter.
    \54\ See Comment Letter of T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (May 
18, 2018) (``T. Rowe Comment Letter'').
    \55\ See e.g., IAA Comment Letter (stating that, because a 
fund's liquidity risk management program is within the purview of 
the fund's board, the new disclosure should ``recognize the board's 
governance function and such disclosure should be included in the 
section of the form that covers the process of fund operations and 
factors considered by the board in its review of the liquidity risk 
management program'').
    \56\ See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter (arguing that, if the 
required liquidity risk management disclosure must be included in 
the annual report, fund complexes offering multiple funds with 
fiscal year-ends spread throughout the year will be frustrated in 
their ability to leverage their board reporting for this new 
shareholder report requirement); Capital Group Comment Letter 
(noting that many fund families are expected to provide the annual 
liquidity risk management report to the board of all their funds at 
the same time once a year without regard to fiscal year ends).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We believe the approach to shareholder report liquidity disclosure 
that we are adopting addresses commenters' concerns. Funds are required 
to discuss in their MDFP factors that materially affected performance 
of the fund during the most recently completed fiscal year.\57\ 
Liquidity events are factors that may materially affect a fund's 
performance. Accordingly, to the extent a liquidity event has such an 
effect, this event must be discussed in the MDFP.\58\ This discussion 
of liquidity events in the MDFP should include sufficient specificity 
that investors can understand the liquidity event, how it affected 
performance, and any other relevant market conditions. This is 
consistent with the views of the commenters who asked that we clarify 
that factors that affected performance would include liquidity events 
and that such events should still be discussed in the MDFP section, 
even if we were to move the required new disclosure to a new 
section.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ See Disclosure of Mutual Fund Performance and Portfolio 
Managers, Investment Company Act Release No. 19382 (Apr. 6, 1993) 
[58 FR 21927 (Apr. 26, 1993)] (noting that the MDFP requires funds 
to ``explain what happened during the previous fiscal year and why 
it happened'').
    \58\ See Item 27(b)(7)(i) of Form N-1A. See also Shareholder 
Reports and Quarterly Portfolio Disclosure of Registered Management 
Investment Companies, Investment Company Act Release No. 26372 (Aug. 
9, 2004) [69 FR 49805 (Aug. 12, 2004)] (noting that ``investors rely 
on MDFP to explain the investment operations and performance of a 
mutual fund''). We understand that because liquidity events can 
materially affect fund performance during a fiscal year, funds 
currently discuss such events in their MDFP.
    \59\ See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter (suggesting that 
discussion of the overall structure and operations of the liquidity 
risk management program should be in the fund's SAI, but that the 
MDFP section could still contain disclosure of liquidity events and 
the use of liquidity risk management tools that had a material 
effect on the investment operations and performance of a fund); 
Vanguard Comment Letter (suggesting that focusing the MDFP narrative 
disclosure on material liquidity risks faced during the relevant 
period would help ensure that this disclosure does not become 
boilerplate).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    At the same time, we agree with those commenters who argued for 
moving the more operational disclosure outside of the MDFP because this 
information does not directly relate to performance results. Moving 
disclosure about the operation and effectiveness of the liquidity risk 
management program to a new subsection would be more effective and 
would avoid concerns about unduly focusing investors on liquidity risk 
and diluting the MDFP. Moving this disclosure to Item 27(d)(7) of Form 
N-1A may have several other benefits. The MDFP is included only in 
annual reports, not semi-annual reports. By moving this disclosure to a 
new subsection that may be included in either a fund's annual or semi-
annual report,\60\ it will allow funds to synchronize the required 
annual board review of liquidity risk management programs with the 
production of this discussion in the shareholder report, reducing costs 
and allowing funds to provide more effective disclosure.\61\ We believe 
that this new narrative disclosure will complement existing liquidity 
risk disclosure that funds already provide in their prospectus (if it 
is a principal investment risk of the fund) and as part of their 
discussion of the factors that materially affected performance in the 
MDFP. It also should keep more operational disclosure separate from the 
performance-related disclosure required in the MDFP section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A. The discussion 
required by Item 27(d)(7)(b) will be included in the shareholder 
report following the board's review of the fund's liquidity risk 
management program. Thus, for example, if the board reviews the 
operation of the fund's liquidity risk management program during the 
first half of a fund's fiscal year, the disclosure will be required 
in the semi-annual report for that period. However, if a board 
reviews the liquidity program more frequently than annually, the 
disclosure need only be included in the annual or semi-annual 
report, not both. See new Instruction to Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-
1A (clarifying that ``[i]f the board reviews the liquidity risk 
management program more frequently than annually, a fund may choose 
to include the discussion of the program's operation and 
effectiveness over the past year in one of either the fund's annual 
or semi-annual reports, but does not need to include it in both 
reports).
    \61\ Allowing this flexibility may result in the narrative 
disclosure potentially not consistently being in a single document 
(the annual report), but instead being in either the annual or semi-
annual report. This may lead to the risk that some investors may not 
review this data if they read only one of these shareholder reports 
and the narrative disclosure is in the other. Nonetheless, we 
believe that the benefits of the flexibility we are providing today 
(both in cost savings and potentially in better disclosure) justify 
this risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters suggested that we exempt funds that primarily 
hold assets that are highly liquid investments (``highly liquid 
funds'') and In-Kind ETFs from including this new narrative disclosure 
about liquidity risk management programs in their shareholder 
reports.\62\ They explained that because such funds face significantly 
lower liquidity risks, and are already treated differently and subject 
to less stringent requirements under rule 22e-4, it would be 
appropriate to exempt them from the requirement.\63\ We are not 
providing such an exemption. Highly liquid funds and In-Kind ETFs are 
exempt from certain requirements under the liquidity rule, but both 
still must have a liquidity risk management program. We believe that 
investors would benefit from a discussion of the operation and 
effectiveness of the liquidity risk management program of these funds, 
much like any other fund.\64\ However, we note that all funds may 
include tailored and proportionate discussion appropriate to the 
liquidity risks they face and the scale of their program. Highly liquid 
funds or In-Kind ETFs may face fewer, or different, liquidity risks 
than other funds, and thus the discussion in their shareholder reports 
may be proportionate or different than for other funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ See e.g., IDC Comment Letter; Vanguard Comment Letter; ICI 
Comment Letter; Capital Group Comment Letter. Rule 22e-4, in 
relevant part, defines a ``highly liquid investment'' as any cash 
held by a fund and any investment that the fund reasonably expects 
to be convertible to cash in current market conditions in three 
business days or less without the conversion to cash significantly 
changing the market value of the investment. Rule 22e-4(a)(6). The 
rule defines an ``In-Kind ETF'' as an ETF that meets redemptions 
through in-kind transfers of securities, positions and assets other 
than a de minimis amount of cash and that publishes its portfolio 
holdings daily. Rule 22e-4(a)(9).
    \63\ For example, highly liquid funds and In-Kind ETFs are not 
required to determine an HLIM. See rule 22e-4(b)(1)(iii).
    \64\ Highly liquid funds and In-Kind ETFs must consider a 
variety of factors specific to their operations as part of their 
liquidity risk management program, which may be relevant to 
investors. For example, both types of funds must analyze issues such 
as shareholder or portfolio concentration, holdings of cash and cash 
equivalents, and other factors. In-Kind ETFs must consider factors 
specific to ETFs, such as the operation of the arbitrage function 
and the level of active participation by market participants. See 
rule 22e-4(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To satisfy this new disclosure requirement, a fund generally may 
provide information that was provided to the board about the operation 
and effectiveness of the program, and insight into how the program 
functioned over the past year.\65\ This discussion should

[[Page 31864]]

provide investors with enough detail to appreciate the manner in which 
a fund manages its liquidity risk, and could, but is not required to, 
include discussion of the role of the classification process, the 15% 
illiquid investment limit, and the HLIM in the fund's liquidity risk 
management process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ The disclosure included in new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-
1A generally should provide a high level summary of the report that 
must be provided to the fund's board under rule 22e-4(b)(2)(iii) 
addressing the operation of the fund's liquidity risk management 
program and the adequacy and effectiveness of its implementation. We 
believe that the conclusions in this report may be largely 
consistent with the overall conclusions disclosed to investors in 
the shareholder report. Therefore, because funds will already need 
to prepare a report on the program for purposes of board reporting, 
we believe that the disclosure requirement we are adopting today 
would be unlikely to create significant additional burdens.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As part of this new disclosure, a fund might opt to discuss the 
particular liquidity risks that it faced over the past year, such as 
significant redemptions, changes in the overall market liquidity of the 
investments the fund holds, or other liquidity risks, and explain how 
those risks were managed and addressed. If the fund faced any 
significant liquidity challenges in the past year, it would discuss how 
those challenges affected the fund and how they were addressed 
(recognizing that this discussion may occur in the new sub-section or 
the MDFP, as appropriate). In the new sub-section, funds also may wish 
to provide context and other supplemental information about how 
liquidity risk is managed in relation to other investment risks of the 
fund. Additionally, one commenter suggested that funds can provide 
investors with useful empirical data metrics that would be informative 
of the fund's liquidity profile.\66\ We agree and believe that funds 
may include, as part of this new sub-section, a discussion of other 
empirical data metrics such as the fund's bid-ask spreads, portfolio 
turnover, or shareholder concentration issues (if any) and their effect 
on the fund's liquidity risk management.\67\ Overall, we believe that 
this disclosure will provide context and an accessible and useful 
explanation of the fund's liquidity risk in relation to its management 
practices and other investment risks as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \66\ See MSCI Comment Letter.
    \67\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We continue to believe, and commenters generally agreed, that this 
new disclosure will better inform investors about the fund's liquidity 
risk management practices than aggregate liquidity classification data 
on Form N-PORT.\68\ The shareholder report disclosure provides funds 
the opportunity to tailor the disclosure to their specific liquidity 
risks, explain the level of subjectivity involved in liquidity 
assessment, and give a narrative description of these risks and how 
they are managed within the context of the fund's investment strategy. 
Accordingly, we are adopting these changes substantially as proposed 
with the modifications discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \68\ See e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; Wellington Comment 
Letter; Fidelity Comment Letter; State Street Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Amendments to Liquidity Reporting Requirements

    We also are adopting certain changes to Form N-PORT related to 
liquidity data. As discussed in the Proposing Release, we believe these 
changes may enhance the liquidity data reported to us.\69\ In addition, 
for some funds, these changes also may reduce cost burdens as they 
comply with the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at text 
accompanying n.50.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Multiple Classification Categories
    We are adopting as proposed amendments to Form N-PORT to allow 
funds the option of splitting a fund's holding into more than one 
classification category in certain specified circumstances.\70\ The 
requirement to classify each entire position into a single 
classification category poses difficulties for certain holdings and may 
not accurately reflect the liquidity of that holding, or be reflective 
of the liquidity risk management practices of the fund. Commenters 
generally supported these proposed amendments to Form N-PORT, noting 
that they appreciated the flexibility and better accuracy that may 
result.\71\ However, as discussed below, three commenters raised 
questions or suggested amendments related to the third circumstance 
(``full liquidation'') \72\ and one questioned the utility of the first 
two circumstances (``differences in liquidity characteristics'' and 
``differences in sub-adviser classifications'').\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \70\ See new Item C.7.b of Form N-PORT and Instructions to Item 
C.7 of Form N-PORT. As discussed above, Form N-PORT required a fund 
to classify each holding into a single liquidity bucket.
    \71\ See IDC Comment Letter; Fidelity Comment Letter; IAA 
Comment Letter.
    \72\ SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter; J.P Morgan 
Comment Letter.
    \73\ MSCI Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters suggested that we not allow funds to classify 
portions of a portfolio holding separately because it would ``reduce 
the utility of the entire bucketing exercise.'' \74\ Similarly, a few 
commenters suggested that allowing funds to classify portions of a 
portfolio holding for some of their holdings could lead to inconsistent 
interpretations of the fund's classifications, and that we should 
instead require a fund to apply a uniform approach across all of its 
holdings.\75\ We believe that allowing funds to split classification in 
these circumstances will actually enhance, rather than reduce the 
utility of the process. Because funds will be required to indicate 
which circumstance led to their choice to split a classification, we 
will be able to identify which positions are split and why. This will 
allow us a more fine-grained understanding of funds' views of a 
position's liquidity. We also do not believe that we should require a 
fund to consistently use a single classification splitting approach for 
all its positions, as different positions may have different but 
equally valid circumstances justifying a split classification.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \74\ See MSCI Comment Letter.
    \75\ See State Street Comment Letter; MSCI Comment Letter.
    \76\ For example, a fund may have multiple sub-advisers that 
differ on position A's classification, and also have a different 
position that has differential liquidity characteristics for part of 
the position. We believe that requiring a fund to only use one of 
the circumstances in such a situation could result in worse, not 
better, data reported to us.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the first circumstance, even though a holding may nominally be a 
single security, different liquidity-affecting features may justify 
treating the holding as two or more separate investments for liquidity 
classification purposes. For example, a fund might hold an asset that 
includes a put option on a percentage (but not all) of the fund's 
holding of the asset.\77\ Such a feature may significantly affect the 
liquidity characteristics of the portion of the asset subject to the 
feature, such that the fund believes that the two portions of the asset 
should be classified into different buckets.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \77\ For example, if 30% of a holding is subject to a liquidity 
feature such as a put, and the other 70% is not, pursuant to the new 
Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N-PORT, a fund may split the 
position, evaluate the sizes it reasonably anticipates trading for 
each portion of the holding that is subject to the different 
liquidity characteristics, and classify each separate portion 
differently, as appropriate. The fund in such a case would use the 
classification process laid out in rule 22e-4, but would apply it 
separately to each portion of the holding that exhibits different 
liquidity characteristics.
    \78\ As another example, a fund might have purchased a portion 
of an equity position through a private placement that makes those 
shares restricted (and therefore illiquid) while also purchasing 
additional shares of the same security on the open market. In that 
case, certain shares of the same holding may have very different 
liquidity characteristics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As discussed above, commenters generally agreed that such an 
amendment would allow funds to more accurately reflect their liquidity 
profile and report their holdings in a manner more consistent with 
internal liquidity risk management programs.\79\ However,

[[Page 31865]]

one commenter suggested that this amendment would not be necessary, as 
such differences in liquidity characteristics should already result in 
the position being labeled as separate positions on Form N-PORT.\80\ 
Form N-PORT requires positions to be categorized based on CUSIP or 
other identifier, and in many circumstances, positions with differences 
in liquidity characteristics may have identical identifiers. 
Accordingly, we continue to believe that offering this flexibility is 
appropriate and providing clarity that a position can be split in such 
a circumstance would be useful. Therefore, we are adopting this 
amendment as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \79\ See, e.g., Comment Letter of ICE Data Services (May 18, 
2018) (``ICE Comment Letter''); Fidelity Comment Letter; ICI Comment 
Letter.
    \80\ MSCI Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Second, it is our understanding that when sub-advisers manage 
different portions or ``sleeves'' of a fund's portfolio, sub-advisers 
may have different views of the liquidity classification of a single 
holding that is held in multiple sleeves.\81\ We believe that allowing 
a fund to report each sub-adviser's classification of the proportional 
holding it manages, instead of putting the entire holding into a single 
category, will avoid the need for costly reconciliation and may provide 
useful information to the Commission on each sub-adviser's 
determination about the investment's liquidity.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \81\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at text preceding 
n.53.
    \82\ Similar to the ``differences in liquidity characteristics'' 
examples discussed above, the fund effectively will be treating the 
portions of the holding managed by different sub-advisers as if they 
were two separate and distinct investments, and bucketing them 
accordingly. See new Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Commenters generally agreed that this flexibility would allow for 
these benefits.\83\ However, one commenter suggested that splitting 
positions in this circumstance would merely signal an inconsistency 
between sub-adviser models and would not provide useful 
information.\84\ We disagree, and believe that getting more granular 
insight into sub-advisers' views on liquidity positions may be 
informative in some circumstances. We also believe it is appropriate to 
allow this flexibility to avoid unnecessary costs associated with the 
reconciliation process. Therefore, we are adopting this amendment as 
proposed.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \83\ See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter, ICE Comment Letter.
    \84\ MSCI Comment Letter.
    \85\ These amendments also would have the effect of making 
inapplicable staff FAQ 8 on the liquidity rule for funds that choose 
to rely on this option. See Liquidity Staff FAQs, available at 
https://www.sec.gov/investment/investment-company-liquidity-risk-management-programs-faq. FAQ 8 provides guidance for funds on the 
process of reconciling classifications for sub-advisers when 
reporting on Form N-PORT. As this is an option, not a requirement, 
the FAQ would still be relevant for those funds that choose not to 
rely on the optional reporting method. The staff will amend the FAQ 
accordingly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Third, it is our understanding that for internal risk management 
purposes some funds may currently classify their holdings 
proportionally across buckets, based on an assumed sale of the entire 
position.\86\ In such cases, it is our understanding that allowing a 
fund to have the option of reporting the position assuming a full 
liquidation on Form N-PORT would be more efficient and less costly than 
using a single classification category.\87\ We believe that in such 
cases, this form of reporting will not impair the Commission's 
monitoring and oversight efforts as compared to our approach of 
classifying based on ``sizes that the fund would reasonably anticipate 
trading.'' \88\ Further, we believe the approach, which allows, but 
does not require, funds to use the full liquidation/proportional 
approach, will maintain the quality of the information reported to us 
and potentially be less costly than the approach we adopted.\89\ 
Commenters generally agreed that permitting the option to use such a 
full liquidation approach would be useful,\90\ though one cautioned 
that it would not use such an approach in practice.\91\ This approach 
is optional, and therefore, if it could have negative consequences such 
as inflating the fund's illiquid investment bucket, a fund could choose 
not to use it. We are adopting this third circumstance as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \86\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at n.54.
    \87\ See id., at n.55.
    \88\ For example, a fund using the full liquidation approach and 
holding $100 million in Asset A could determine that it would be 
able to convert to cash $30 million of it in 1-3 days, but could 
only convert the remaining $70 million to cash in 3-7 days. This 
fund could choose to split the liquidity classification of the 
holding on Form N-PORT and report an allocation of 30% of Asset A in 
the Highly Liquid category and 70% of Asset A in the Moderately 
Liquid category. Such a fund would not use sizes that it reasonably 
anticipates trading when engaging in this analysis, but instead 
would assume liquidation of the whole position. See Proposing 
Release, supra footnote 10, at n.56.
    \89\ As discussed in the economic analysis below, allowing 
classification in multiple categories may be less costly if it 
better aligns with current fund systems or allows funds to avoid 
incurring costs related to the need to develop systems and processes 
to allocate each holding to exactly one classification bucket.
    \90\ ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment Letter; MSCI 
Comment Letter.
    \91\ J.P. Morgan Comment Letter (explaining that a full 
liquidation approach may result in negative consequences, by for 
example, inflating the amount of illiquid assets in a fund based 
solely on the calculation method used).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the proposal, we also requested comment on other circumstances 
where classification splitting might be appropriate. Commenters 
suggested that we also allow certain methods of classification 
splitting when a fund's reasonably anticipated trade size falls across 
multiple liquidity buckets.\92\ As discussed in the Liquidity Adopting 
Release, the reasonably anticipated trade size method for analyzing 
positions replaced the full liquidation approach that we originally 
proposed.\93\ Classifying liquidity based on reasonably anticipated 
trading sizes allows for a simpler analytic process in some respects 
and avoids certain issues where a full liquidation analysis may create 
disparate results between funds of different sizes.\94\ However, it 
also is an imperfect proxy for the actual liquidity characteristics of 
fund investments, potentially skewing classifications to more liquid 
``buckets.'' \95\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ SIFMA Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter. For example, if a 
fund had a $100 million position, and a reasonably anticipated trade 
size of $10 million, the fund might determine that $4 million of 
that trade size would fall in the highly liquid asset bucket, and $6 
million would fall in the moderately liquid asset bucket. Commenters 
differed on how funds should classify the remainder of the position 
($90 million) in this circumstance.
    \93\ Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2.
    \94\ Id. (discussing commenters' concerns that the full 
liquidation method ``could result in large funds' portfolio 
liquidity appearing artificially low compared to smaller funds 
because large funds are more likely to hold larger positions and 
determine that they could not quickly liquidate these positions 
entirely without a value impact'').
    \95\ For example, a fund with a $100 million position might 
determine that it could sell $10 million in 1-3 days and the rest in 
4-7 days using the full liquidation approach. However, using the 
reasonably anticipated trade size proxy, it might determine $10 
million was a reasonable trade size, and because it could sell that 
in 1-3 days, the fund would be permitted to bucket the entire 
position in the highly liquid category potentially skewing the 
classification to a more liquid bucket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We believe that allowing funds to split the reasonably anticipated 
trade size and use such a split in classifying the rest of a fund's 
position could further exacerbate these imperfections, leading to more 
distorted liquidity profiles for funds. The staff will continue to 
evaluate potential other approaches to liquidity risk management, 
including other approaches to classifying fund liquidity. Interested 
parties may provide feedback on the use of reasonably anticipated trade 
size as part of classification, and whether we should consider any 
further modifications.
    Two commenters asked us to clarify that funds may use these 
classification-splitting approaches not just for Form N-PORT reporting, 
but for all classification purposes under rule 22e-

[[Page 31866]]

4.\96\ The requirement to assign a position into a single bucket is 
specific to Form N-PORT.\97\ Rule 22e-4(b)(ii) requires funds to 
classify their positions among four categories for liquidity risk 
management purposes, but does not require positions to be put into a 
single category. Accordingly, we clarify that funds following the 
classification splitting approaches delineated on Form N-PORT may apply 
such splitting more generally in their classification processes under 
rule 22e-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ SIFMA Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter.
    \97\ See Item C.7 of Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    While we believe that we should permit funds to report liquidity 
classifications in the three ways discussed above, we also continue to 
believe it is necessary to limit split reporting to these circumstances 
in order to maintain the effectiveness of our monitoring efforts. As we 
stated in the Proposing Release, we believe that allowing funds to 
engage in such split reporting under these circumstances will allow for 
a more precise view of the liquidity of these securities.\98\ Because 
funds that choose to classify across multiple categories under this 
approach will be required to indicate which of the circumstances led to 
the split classification, we will be able to monitor more effectively 
the liquidity of a fund's portfolio and determine the circumstances 
leading to the classification. Therefore, we are amending Item C.7 of 
Form N-PORT to provide funds the option of splitting the classification 
categories reported for their investments on a percentage basis in 
these specified circumstances.\99\ We are also adopting new 
Instructions to Item C.7 that explain the specified circumstances where 
a fund may split classification categories.\100\ In addition, we are 
adopting new Item C.7.b, which will require funds taking advantage of 
the option to attribute multiple classifications to a holding to note 
which of the circumstances led the fund to split the classifications of 
the holdings.\101\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \98\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at text 
accompanying n.58.
    \99\ Revised Item C.7 of Form N-PORT and new Instructions to 
Item C.7 of Form N-PORT. Funds that choose not to take advantage of 
these options may continue to use the approach laid out in the final 
rule of bucketing an entire position based on the liquidity of the 
sizes the fund would reasonably anticipate trading.
    \100\ Revised Item C.7 of Form N-PORT and new Instructions to 
Item C.7 of Form N-PORT. These instructions provide an explanation 
for how funds that choose to take advantage of split reporting 
should implement it.
    \101\ New Item C.7.b of Form N-PORT. A fund may also choose to 
provide (but is not required to) additional context on its process 
for classifying portions of the same holding differently in the 
explanatory notes section of Form N-PORT. See Part E of Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Disclosure of Cash and Cash Equivalents
    We also are adopting as proposed amendments to Form N-PORT to 
require additional disclosure relating to a registrant's holdings of 
cash and cash equivalents not reported in Parts C and D of the 
Form.\102\ This disclosure will be made publicly available each 
quarter.\103\ Form N-PORT currently does not require registrants to 
specifically report the amount of cash and cash equivalents held by the 
registrant. As we noted in the Reporting Modernization Adopting 
Release, Part C of Form N-PORT was designed to require registrants to 
report certain information on an investment-by-investment basis about 
each investment held by the registrant.\104\ However, cash and certain 
cash equivalents are not considered an investment on Form N-PORT, and 
therefore registrants are not required to report them in Part C of the 
Form as an investment. Similarly, Part B.1 of Form N-PORT (assets and 
liabilities) will require information about a registrant's assets and 
liabilities, but does not require specific disclosure of a registrant's 
holdings of cash and cash equivalents.\105\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \102\ See supra footnote 21.
    \103\ See new Item B.2.f of Form N-PORT.
    \104\ See Reporting Modernization Adopting Release, supra 
footnote 2. Part D of Form N-PORT requires the disclosure of 
miscellaneous securities.
    \105\ In addition to cash, a registrant's disclosure of total 
assets on Part B.1.a. also could include certain non-cash assets 
that are not investments of the registrant, such as receivables for 
portfolio investments sold, interest receivable on portfolio 
investments, and receivables for shares of the registrant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Cash held by a fund is a highly liquid investment under rule 22e-4 
and would have been included in the aggregate liquidity profile that we 
are eliminating. Without the aggregate liquidity profile, we may not be 
able to effectively monitor whether a fund is compliant with its HLIM 
unless we know the amount of cash held by the fund. The additional 
disclosure of cash and certain cash equivalents by funds also will 
provide more complete information to be used in analyzing a fund's 
HLIM, as well as trends regarding the amount of cash being held, which 
also correlates to other activities the fund is experiencing, including 
net inflows and outflows.
    Most commenters who discussed this addition supported it. They 
agreed that providing this information is necessary for the 
Commission's monitoring of a fund's HLIM, and that this information 
would help provide a more complete picture of a fund's holdings.\106\ 
However, two commenters were concerned about potential investor 
confusion if they interpreted this item as the totality of a fund's 
highly liquid investments.\107\ They were concerned that investors 
could mistakenly believe that a fund's ability to meet redemption 
requests depended only on these cash holdings.\108\ One such commenter 
asked that the Commission make this item non-public to avoid these 
concerns,\109\ while another suggested changing the title of the item 
to further clarify that a fund may report cash equivalents in response 
to other items on the form.\110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \106\ ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment Letter; IDC 
Comment Letter.
    \107\ See, e.g., Fidelity Comment Letter.
    \108\ SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; Fidelity Comment Letter.
    \109\ SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.
    \110\ Fidelity Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    While we appreciate the concerns for investor confusion, we believe 
that the title of the item makes clear that it covers only cash and 
cash equivalents not reported in other parts of the form, and therefore 
investors would be on notice that this item does not necessarily 
include all cash or cash equivalents held by the fund. We also note 
that funds may provide further public explanations about their cash 
holdings as part of the explanatory notes associated with the item.
    We are therefore adopting as proposed amendments to Item B.2 of 
Form N-PORT (certain assets and liabilities) to include a new Item 
B.2.f, which will require registrants to report ``cash and cash 
equivalents not reported in Parts C and D.'' Current U.S. Generally 
Accepted Accounting Principles (``GAAP'') define cash equivalents as 
``short-term, highly liquid investments that . . . are . . . [r]eadily 
convertible to known amounts of cash . . . [and that are] [s]o near 
their maturity that they present insignificant risk of changes in value 
because of changes in interest rates.'' \111\ However, we understand 
that certain categories of investments currently reported on Part C of 
Form N-PORT (schedule of portfolio investments) could be reasonably 
considered by some registrants as cash equivalents. For example, Item 
C.4 of Form N-PORT requires registrants to identify asset type, 
including ``short-term investment vehicle (e.g., money market fund, 
liquidity pool, or other cash management vehicle),'' which could 
reasonably be categorized by some registrants as a cash equivalent. In 
order to ensure the amount reported under Item B.2.f is accurate and 
does

[[Page 31867]]

not double count items that are more appropriately reported in Parts C 
(Schedule of portfolio investments) and D (Miscellaneous securities) of 
Form N-PORT, we are requiring registrants to only include the cash and 
cash equivalents not reported in those sections.\112\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ See FASB Accounting Standards Codification Master 
Glossary.
    \112\ We also are adopting other amendments to Form N-PORT as 
proposed. In particular, we are amending General Instruction F 
(Public Availability) to remove the phrase ``of this form'' from 
parenthetical references to Item B.7 and Part D for consistency with 
other parenthetical cross references in the Form. We also are 
amending Part F (Exhibits) to fix a typographical error in the 
citation to Regulation S-X. In addition, for consistency with the 
amendments we are adopting, we are adding Item B.8 (Derivative 
Transactions) to General Instruction F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Treasury Asset Management Report and Evaluation of Other Approaches

    In its 2017 Asset Management and Insurance Report, the Department 
of Treasury highlighted the importance of robust liquidity risk 
management programs, but recommended that the Commission embrace a 
``principles-based approach to liquidity risk management rulemaking and 
any associated bucketing requirements.'' \113\ The proposal requested 
comment on whether there were advantages to the Treasury report's 
suggested approach and, if so, what additional steps should be taken to 
shift towards a more principles-based approach.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \113\ See A financial System That Creates Economic 
Opportunities; Asset Management and Insurance, U.S. Department of 
the Treasury (Oct. 2017) available at https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Documents/A-Financial-System-That-Creates-Economic-Opportunities-Asset_Management-Insurance.pdf.
    \114\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at n.49.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We received many comments that suggested alternative approaches to 
liquidity risk management regulation.\115\ Most of these commenters saw 
little benefit in the classification provisions of rule 22e-4, and 
associated requirements such as the HLIM.\116\ Some stated that if 
requirements related to classification were removed or if we allowed 
funds to design their own classification systems, the funds could 
define what qualifies as a highly liquid asset and an illiquid 
asset.\117\ Several of these commenters noted that they already have 
liquidity risk management practices in place that differ from the 
specific classification requirements of rule 22e-4, and that they 
expected to maintain their own processes alongside those required by 
the rule.\118\ They stated that this results in duplication of effort 
and wasted resources, and suggested that replacing the classification 
provisions with a principles-based approach would reduce burdens on 
funds and investors while still ensuring effective liquidity risk 
management practices by funds.\119\ We note that funds that believe 
they would have to maintain dual liquidity classification programs as 
part of their liquidity risk management may choose to seek an exemption 
from the Commission from the classification requirements of rule 22e-4 
if they believe that their existing systems would effectively 
accomplish the Commission's stated goals.\120\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \115\ See, e.g., Federated Comment Letter; Fidelity Comment 
Letter; Vanguard Comment Letter.
    \116\ See, e.g., Fidelity Comment Letter; Vanguard Comment 
Letter.
    \117\ See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter; Vanguard Comment 
Letter.
    \118\ See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter; Vanguard Comment 
Letter.
    \119\ See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter (``We believe that the 
bucketing requirement goes beyond what is necessary for a robust 
risk management regime, and will ultimately prove to be of limited 
additional utility to fund managers, fund boards, and fund 
shareholders.'').
    \120\ The Commission would evaluate appropriate terms and 
conditions for any exemption under the standard set forth in Section 
6(c) of the Investment Company Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    One commenter acknowledged that moving to a principles based 
approach would come at a cost, for example, because it would limit the 
Commission's ability to compare fund reporting in an ``apples-to-
apples'' manner.\121\ However, that commenter stated that such a cost 
would be worthwhile in light of the benefits and cost savings 
associated with allowing funds to continue to manage liquidity in the 
way they believed was most appropriate for their funds.\122\ Another 
commenter disagreed that moving to a principles-based approach was 
appropriate.\123\ One commenter also pointed to additional costs 
associated with moving to such a principles based approach in light of 
the expense and effort incurred already to comply with the rule.\124\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \121\ See ICI Comment Letter.
    \122\ Id.
    \123\ AFR Comment Letter (``[W]e continue to believe the 
Commission should require granular information about the liquidity 
classifications of individual assets; provide strong oversight of 
fund liquidity classifications; or strengthen and enforce the 15 
percent illiquid investments limit.'').
    \124\ See BlackRock Comment Letter (``Any material changes to 
the requirements of fund managers under rule 22e-4 at this point in 
time would have a cost of its own that would need to be factored in. 
We believe the proposed refinements to the disclosure associated 
with rule 22e-4 would be sufficient to address the material concerns 
raised by the industry, which were reflected in the Treasury report 
recommendation, without materially altering the rule at this late 
stage (a development that would be counterproductive at this 
time.'')). Conversely, one commenter cautioned the Commission from 
falling victim to the ``sunk cost fallacy'' arguing that the costs 
incurred already in complying with rule 22e-4 should not deter the 
Commission from moving to a principles-based approach. See Vanguard 
Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Today, we are modifying certain aspects of our liquidity framework, 
largely as proposed. However, we recognize that a broad range of 
commenters continue to believe that alternative approaches to 
classification would better achieve the Commission's goals. 
Accordingly, during and following the implementation of the rule and 
reporting requirements, the staff will continue its efforts to monitor 
and solicit feedback on implementation. As part of this monitoring, the 
staff will analyze the extent to which the liquidity classification 
process and data are achieving the Commission's goals and any other 
feedback provided from interested parties to the Commission.\125\ The 
staff will then inform the Commission what steps, if any, the staff 
recommends in light of this monitoring.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \125\ See infra footnote 129 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We expect that this evaluation will include, at a minimum: (i) The 
costs and benefits of rule 22e-4 and its associated classification 
requirements; (ii) whether there should be public dissemination of 
fund-specific liquidity classification information; (iii) whether the 
Commission should propose amendments to rule 22e-4 to move to a more 
principles-based approach in light of this evaluation; (iv) and whether 
the Commission should propose to require certain empirical data metrics 
be disclosed.\126\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \126\ See supra section II.A.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To properly engage in such an evaluation and to ground it on an 
empirical basis, we believe it is important for funds and the 
Commission to gain experience with the classification process, to allow 
analysis of its benefits and costs based on actual practice.\127\ 
Accordingly, we expect that this staff evaluation will take into 
account at least one full year's worth of liquidity classification data 
from large and small entities.\128\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \127\ Retrospective review of regulations is often viewed as a 
best practice in federal agency rulemaking. See e.g., Government 
Accountability Office, Opportunities remain for OMB to improve the 
transparency of rulemaking processes (Mar. 2016), available at 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/680/675810.pdf (``We have long advocated 
the potential usefulness to Congress, agencies, and the public of 
conducting retrospective regulatory analyses.'').
    \128\ One commenter argued that any such review of liquidity 
data should take into account a full year's worth of data at a 
minimum, and preferably more, to ensure that the data includes 
stressed periods and other fund outflows. See ICI Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We welcome public feedback as part of this evaluation, and have set 
up an email inbox where funds, investors, or other interested parties 
may submit

[[Page 31868]]

information, now and during the first year of reporting, to help assist 
the staff and the Commission.\129\ In particular, we would appreciate 
information about the following subjects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \129\ Email: [email protected].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     To what extent will funds continue to maintain separate 
liquidity risk management processes and practices alongside those 
required by the classification provisions of rule 22e-4? What costs are 
associated with maintaining such dual systems? Are there synergies or 
other benefits that would result? Do funds expect to eventually combine 
existing systems and rule 22e-4 classification programs over time, or 
do they expect to keep them separate?
     Were the implementation and ongoing cost estimates and 
assumptions made in adopting rule 22e-4 and rule and form amendments 
accurate? In particular, were the assumptions made about vendor usage 
and associated costs correct considering the widespread use of vendors 
(as opposed to in-house systems) that we understand has taken place?
     What benefits have investors, funds, and the markets 
gained from liquidity classification, including matters associated with 
classification such as the HLIM and the illiquid investment limit? Is 
there a way to retain these benefits while moving to a more principles-
based system? Do certain aspects of the classification process, such as 
the classification of illiquid investments and/or the classification of 
highly liquid investments, generate greater benefits than others?
     To what extent would investors and others benefit from 
public liquidity classification information? Are there other types of 
information that may allow investors to better understand the liquidity 
of their funds? For example, instead of classification information, 
would investors (or the Commission) be better able to evaluate fund 
liquidity through public disclosure of empirical data such as bid-ask 
spreads of portfolio securities, portfolio turnover, or shareholder 
concentration measures?
     If we were to propose amendments to rule 22e-4 to move to 
a more principles-based approach, would the benefits of such a new 
approach outweigh the costs of implementation? On what principles 
should we base such an approach?
    Finally, as we discussed in the proposal, our staff anticipates 
publishing a periodic report containing aggregated and anonymized 
information about the fund industry's liquidity may be beneficial. One 
commenter objected, arguing that even aggregated and anonymized 
classification data would still be derived from the same disparate and 
subjective inputs, and accordingly may be of limited value to the 
Commission or the public.\130\ As part of the staff evaluation noted in 
the proposal and discussed above, we expect that our staff will 
consider whether publishing such aggregated and anonymized 
classification data would be useful, and include a recommendation as 
part of that evaluation as to whether the staff should publish such a 
periodic report.\131\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \130\ ICI Comment Letter.
    \131\ Staff from the Division of Investment Management as well 
as staff from the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis also may 
publish ad hoc papers on fund liquidity based on Form N-PORT 
liquidity data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Compliance Dates

    As proposed, we are providing a tiered set of compliance dates 
based on asset size.\132\ However, in a change from the proposal, we 
are not aligning the compliance date for the amendments to Form N-1A we 
are adopting today with the revised compliance dates we previously 
adopted for the liquidity-related portions of Form N-PORT.\133\ 
Instead, we are providing additional time so that funds have at least a 
full year's experience with the liquidity risk management program 
before including the new narrative disclosure in their shareholder 
report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \132\ ``Larger entities'' are defined as funds that, together 
with other investment companies in the same ``group of related 
investment companies,'' have net assets of $1 billion or more as of 
the end of the most recent fiscal year of the fund. ``Smaller 
entities'' are defined as funds that, together with other investment 
companies in the same group of related investment companies, have 
net assets of less than $1 billion as of the end of its most recent 
fiscal year. See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at 
n.997.
    \133\ See Liquidity Extension Release, supra footnote 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A number of commenters argued that the first time a fund includes 
the new narrative disclosure on the operation of a fund's liquidity 
risk management program, it should have at least a year's experience 
operating a liquidity risk management program under the rule.\134\ We 
agree. Therefore, we are providing additional time so that funds would 
not need to comply with the new shareholder report amendments to Form 
N-1A until they have had their liquidity risk management programs in 
effect for a full year. We have provided additional time for funds to 
comply with certain aspects of the liquidity risk management program 
(classification and related elements).\135\ As result, we expect that 
only the aspects of the liquidity risk management program operation and 
effectiveness that are legally required to be in place need be 
discussed during the first reporting cycle.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \134\ See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter.
    \135\ Liquidity Extension Release, supra footnote 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    However, we are not changing the compliance date for the Form N-
PORT amendments from the proposal. Most commenters did not object to 
the proposed Form N-PORT compliance dates, although a few asked that 
funds be provided at least one year from adoption to implement the 
changes to Form N-PORT.\136\ We believe that we are adopting this 
change sufficiently in advance that funds should be able to implement 
this change without difficulty, and accordingly are not amending the 
proposed compliance dates for Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \136\ ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Below is a chart that describes the compliance dates for the Form 
N-PORT and Form N-1A amendments that we are adopting today.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    First N-PORT filing
                                 Compliance Date            date
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form N-PORT:
    Large Entities............  June 1, 2019.....  July 30, 2019.
    Small Entities............  March 1, 2020....  April 30, 2020.
Form N: \137\
    Large Entities............  Dec. 1, 2019.....
    Small Entities............  June 1, 2020.....
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ Funds that distribute annual or semi-annual shareholder reports
  after the compliance dates discussed above would be subject to the new
  requirement.


[[Page 31869]]

III. Economic Analysis

A. Introduction

    The Commission is sensitive to the potential economic effects of 
the amendments to Form N-PORT and Form N-1A that we are adopting. These 
effects include the benefits and costs to funds, their investors and 
investment advisers, issuers of the portfolio securities in which funds 
invest, and other market participants potentially affected by fund and 
investor behavior as well as any effects on efficiency, competition, 
and capital formation.

B. Economic Baseline

    The costs and benefits of the amendments as well as any impact on 
efficiency, competition, and capital formation are considered relative 
to an economic baseline. For the purposes of this economic analysis, 
the baseline is the regulatory framework and liquidity risk management 
practices currently in effect, and any expected changes to liquidity 
risk management practices, including any systems and processes that 
funds have already implemented in order to comply with the liquidity 
rule and related requirements as anticipated in the Liquidity Adopting 
Release and the Liquidity Extension Release.\138\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \138\ See supra footnotes 2 and 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The economic baseline's regulatory framework consists of the rule 
requirements adopted by the Commission on October 13, 2016 in the 
Liquidity Adopting Release. Under the baseline, larger entities must 
comply with some of the liquidity rule's requirements, such as the 
establishment of a liquidity risk management program, by December 1, 
2018 and must comply with other requirements, such as the 
classification of portfolio holdings, by June 1, 2019.\139\ Smaller 
entities must comply with some of the liquidity rule's requirements by 
June 1, 2019 and other requirements by December 1, 2019.\140\ Because 
these compliance dates have not yet occurred, the Commission has not 
yet received portfolio classification data and investors have not yet 
received aggregate portfolio classification disclosures from funds. 
Accordingly, the baseline does not include experience on the part of 
the Commission or investors with interpreting or analyzing the 
quantitative data that will be reported on Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \139\ See supra footnote 136 for a detailed description of 
larger and smaller entities. The compliance date for some of the 
requirements related to portfolio holding classification was 
delayed. See the Liquidity Extension Release, supra footnote 8, for 
a more detailed discussion of the requirements that were delayed.
    \140\ In a change from the proposal, we are not aligning the 
compliance dates for the amendments to Form N-1A with those for Form 
N-PORT, as discussed above in section II.D. As a result, funds would 
not need to comply with the new Form N-1A amendments until they have 
had their liquidity risk management program in effect for a full 
year. Moving the compliance date could provide benefits to funds 
relative to the proposal as they should be able to implement changes 
to shareholder reports with less difficulty.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The primary SEC-regulated entities affected by these amendments are 
mutual funds and ETFs. As of the end of 2017, there were 9,154 mutual 
funds managing assets of approximately $19 trillion,\141\ and there 
were 1,832 ETFs managing assets of approximately $3.4 trillion.\142\ 
Other potentially affected parties include investors, investment 
advisers that advise funds, issuers of the securities in which these 
funds invest, and other market participants that could be affected by 
fund and investor behavior.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \141\ See ICI, 2018 ICI Fact Book (58th ed., 2018) (``2018 ICI 
Fact Book''), available at https://www.ici.org/pdf/2018_factbook.pdf, at nn.52, 208, 212. The number of mutual funds 
includes funds that primarily invest in other mutual funds but 
excludes 382 money-market funds.
    \142\ See 2018 ICI Fact Book, supra footnote 145, at nn.218, 
219.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Economic Impacts

    We are mindful of the costs and benefits of the amendments to Form 
N-PORT and Form N-1A we are adopting. The Commission, where possible, 
has sought to quantify the benefits and costs, and effects on 
efficiency, competition and capital formation expected to result from 
these amendments. However, as discussed below, the Commission is unable 
to quantify certain of the economic effects because it lacks 
information necessary to provide reasonable estimates. The economic 
effects of the amendments fall into two categories: (1) Effects 
stemming from changes to public disclosure on Form N-PORT and Form N-
1A; (2) effects stemming from changes to non-public disclosure on Form 
N-PORT.
Changes to Public Disclosure
    The amendments to Form N-PORT and Form N-1A we are adopting alter 
the public disclosure of information about fund liquidity in three 
ways. First, the amendments rescind the requirement that funds publicly 
disclose their aggregate liquidity profile on a quarterly basis with a 
60-day delay in structured format on Form N-PORT.\143\ Second, the 
amendments require funds and other registrants to report to the 
Commission, on a non-public basis, the amount of cash and cash 
equivalents in their portfolio on Form N-PORT on a monthly basis and to 
publicly disclose this amount on a quarterly basis with a 60-day delay 
through EDGAR. Finally, the amendments require a fund to provide a 
narrative description of the fund's liquidity risk management program's 
operation and effectiveness in an unstructured format in the fund's 
shareholder report.\144\ Most commenters generally supported rescinding 
the requirement for quarterly public disclosure of aggregate liquidity 
classification information on Form N-PORT, adopting the requirement for 
funds to disclose their cash and cash equivalents on Form N-PORT, and 
requiring funds to provide a narrative discussion in the shareholder 
report.\145\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \143\ See supra footnote 1 for a definition of ``funds.'' The 
requirement to publicly disclose aggregate liquidity profiles does 
not apply to funds that are In-Kind ETFs under the baseline, so it 
is only rescinded for funds that are not In-Kind ETFs. In-Kind ETFs 
are included as funds that provide a narrative description of their 
liquidity risk management program pursuant to Form N-1A.
    \144\ The Commission will continue to receive non-public 
position level liquidity information on Form N-PORT.
    \145\ See Fidelity Comment Letter; J.P. Morgan Comment Letter; 
State Street Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter; SIFMA Comment 
Letter; Vanguard Comment Letter. One commenter recommended a delay 
in compliance to any changes to Form N-PORT or the reporting 
requirement of cash and cash equivalents. See State Street Comment 
Letter. The Commission changed the compliance dates for the Form N-
1A requirements from what it proposed, as discussed above in section 
II.D above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Funds and other registrants will experience benefits and costs 
associated with the amendments to public disclosure requirements on 
Form N-PORT. Funds will no longer incur the one-time and ongoing costs 
associated with preparing the portion of Form N-PORT associated with 
the aggregate liquidity profile. These costs likely would have 
constituted a small portion of the aggregate one-time costs of $158 
million and the ongoing costs of $3.9 million for Form N-PORT that we 
estimated in the Liquidity Adopting Release.\146\ At the same time, 
funds and other registrants will also incur additional costs, relative 
to the baseline, associated with the adoption of the requirement that 
they report their holdings of cash and cash equivalents on Form N-PORT. 
Because funds and other registrants are already preparing Form N-PORT 
and already need to keep track of their cash and cash equivalents

[[Page 31870]]

for valuation purposes, we expect that these additional costs will not 
be significant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \146\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at 
nn.1188-1191. We estimated the total one-time costs associated with 
the rule's disclosure and reporting requirements on Form N-PORT as 
being approximately $55 million for funds that will file reports on 
Form N-PORT in house and approximately $103 million for funds that 
will use a third-party service provider. Similarly, we estimated the 
total ongoing annual costs as being approximately $1.6 million for 
funds filing reports in house and $2.3 million for funds that will 
use a third-party service provider.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In aggregate, we expect any additional costs associated with the 
requirement that funds and other registrants disclose their holdings of 
cash and cash equivalents to be offset by the savings associated with 
funds no longer having to report an aggregate liquidity profile. 
Therefore, we expect that funds and other registrants will not 
experience a significant net economic effect associated with the direct 
costs of filing Form N-PORT.\147\ Additionally, to the extent that any 
risk of herding or correlated trading would exist if funds executed 
trades in order to make their aggregate liquidity profiles appear more 
liquid to investors, rescinding the requirement that funds publicly 
disclose an aggregate liquidity profile will mitigate such risk.\148\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \147\ See infra paragraph following footnote 190.
    \148\ See supra footnote 43.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Relative to the baseline, funds will incur costs associated with 
preparing an annual narrative discussion of their liquidity risk 
management programs in the fund's shareholder report. We estimate that 
funds will incur aggregate one-time costs of approximately $18 million 
and aggregate ongoing costs of approximately $9 million in preparing 
this narrative discussion.\149\ Several commenters suggested excluding 
funds that primarily hold highly liquid investments from providing the 
narrative discussion,\150\ and that the benefits of the narrative 
disclosure to investors that hold these funds would be outweighed by 
the costs of including the narrative in the shareholder report.\151\ We 
disagree because, even for funds that predominantly hold highly liquid 
investments, such discussion can benefit investors to the extent that 
such disclosures may enhance their understanding of liquidity risk 
management for individual funds and when comparing funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \149\ We estimate funds will incur an additional aggregate one-
time burden of 54,890 hours and an additional aggregate annual 
burden of 27,445 hours. See infra footnotes 194 and 197. Assuming a 
blended hourly rate of $329 for a compliance attorney ($345) and a 
senior officer ($313), that translates to an additional aggregate 
one-time burden of $18,058,810 = 54,890 x $329 and an additional 
aggregate annual burden of $9,029,405 = 27,445 x $329.
    \150\ See ICI Comment Letter; Capital Group Comment Letter.
    \151\ See Capital Group Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As discussed above, and in response to comments, the Commission is 
not adopting the requirement that the narrative disclosure be part of 
the MDFP and instead is requiring that the narrative disclosure of the 
operation and effectiveness of a fund's liquidity management programs 
be part of the fund's shareholder report (annual or semi-annual) in the 
section following the discussion of board approval of advisory 
contracts.\152\ Moving the narrative disclosure from the MDFP to this 
section of the shareholder report will allow funds to align the 
production of the narrative disclosure with the review of the liquidity 
risk management practices by the fund's board of directors, which may 
reduce costs to funds relative to the proposal by allowing funds to 
avail themselves of any efficiencies from the overlap between these 
requirements.\153\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \152\ However, as discussed in section II.A.2 above, funds 
should include in the MDFP a discussion of any events relating to a 
fund's liquidity that materially affected the fund's performance 
during the most recently completed fiscal year. One commenter stated 
that although such a disclosure would increase ``administrative and 
compliance burden on funds that face material liquidity risks, it 
may be eased by relevant disclosure that may already be included in 
the management discussion as a material factor that impacts fund 
performance. In order to ensure that investors receive proportionate 
liquidity risk disclosure relative to the risks within a particular 
fund, we believe the modest additional expense would be warranted.'' 
See Vanguard Comment Letter. Because we understand that funds often 
already discuss such events in their MDFP today, we agree with the 
commenter that increases in costs would be limited and that the 
disclosure would benefit investors in promoting informed decision-
making.
    \153\ See ICI Comment Letter. See also Capital Group Comment 
Letter. Further, another commenter suggested that moving the 
narrative disclosure from the MDFP would also benefit investors by 
reducing confusion for investors. See Blackrock Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Investors will also experience costs and benefits as a result of 
the changes to public disclosure requirements on Form N-PORT and Form 
N-1A that we are adopting.\154\ To the extent that aggregate liquidity 
profiles within the structured format of Form N-PORT could have helped 
certain investors make more informed investment choices that match 
their liquidity risk preferences, rescinding the aggregate liquidity 
profile requirement will reduce those investors' ability to make more 
informed investment choices.\155\ However, to the extent that portfolio 
holding classifications incorporate subjective factors that may be 
interpreted differently by different funds, aggregate liquidity 
profiles may not have been comparable across funds. Therefore, 
rescinding the aggregate liquidity profile requirement may reduce the 
likelihood that investors make investment choices based on any 
confusion about how the fund's liquidity risk profile should be 
interpreted.\156\ Further, the narrative discussion in shareholder 
reports may mitigate any reduction in investors' ability to make more 
informed investment choices, though this disclosure will be less 
frequent than the quarterly public disclosure of aggregate liquidity 
profiles that was previously adopted and will provide information about 
a fund's liquidity risk management rather than the aggregate liquidity 
profile of the fund's investments.\157\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \154\ See ICE Comment Letter (discussing the benefits to the 
``investing public'' by ``injecting additional rigor and discipline 
into funds' liquidity assessment procedures.'').
    \155\ See Better Markets Comment Letter (stating that the 
aggregated public reports in N-PORT would have benefited investors 
by empowering them to make more informed investment decisions 
through the analysis provided by third-party analysts). Another 
commenter stated that the removal of the aggregate liquidity 
profiles will reduce the information offered to the public and 
opposed the elimination of the public disclosure of funds' aggregate 
liquidity profiles. AFR Comment Letter.
    \156\ Even if aggregate liquidity profiles are not comparable 
across funds, they might be comparable across time for a given fund, 
which might provide useful information to investors. This would be 
the case if a fund maintains a consistent position classification 
process over time. Funds, however, may change their classification 
processes over time.
    \157\ See Comment Letter of Mutual Fund Directors Forum (May 18, 
2018) (``MFDF Comment Letter'') (discussing that the narrative 
disclosure will benefit investors by providing ``information on a 
fund's management of liquidity risk . . . in a format that will 
allow those investors to assess the importance of the 
information'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As discussed above, the compliance date for rule 22e-4 and related 
reporting on Form N-PORT has not yet occurred and the Commission has 
not yet received portfolio classification data from funds, nor is 
aggregated liquidity classification information currently being made 
public. As a result, the Commission's assessment of the costs and 
benefits of these changes is, necessarily, informed by qualitative 
concerns, together with what we know about the subjectivity of inputs, 
assumptions, and methods that funds are likely to utilize in 
classifying portfolio assets and the nature of the information to be 
reported. The liquidity classifications that funds would have used to 
construct an aggregate liquidity profile are based on several factors 
that are subjective and fund specific. Such factors include a fund's 
determination of the reasonably anticipated trade size for a given 
holding and its determination of what constitutes significant market 
impact.\158\ As a result of these subjective factors, aggregate 
liquidity profiles are likely to vary across otherwise similar funds, 
diminishing their comparability.\159\ However, without yet receiving 
and evaluating liquidity classification data,

[[Page 31871]]

we cannot anticipate with any quantitative precision the extent to 
which they will vary across otherwise similar funds as a result of the 
above factors.\160\ As a result, the adopted approach will enable the 
Commission to evaluate and consider how the quantitative data from 
funds' N-PORT filings might be fashioned into common quantitative 
metrics. This approach will also enable the Commission to assess the 
potential costs and benefits of future public dissemination of 
quantitative metrics derived from data contained in N-PORT filings and 
whether such metrics would be comparable across funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \158\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at 
section III.C.3.
    \159\ See supra footnotes 41 and 42.
    \160\ A few commenters objected to the proposed changes, arguing 
that the Commission should err on the side of providing more 
information and that investors would understand and use the 
aggregated liquidity information. See supra footnote 33 and 
accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The overall impact of the amendments on an investor's use of data 
for informing investment choices will likely depend on how the investor 
accesses and processes information about fund liquidity. If certain 
investors prefer to base their investment decisions on information that 
is accessible to them in an unstructured document, those investors will 
be more likely to use the narrative discussion of a fund's liquidity 
risk management program in shareholder reports than they would have 
been to use the aggregate liquidity profile within the structured 
format of Form N-PORT to inform their investment decisions. However, 
certain other investors may prefer to access, reuse, and compare the 
information about a fund's liquidity risk if included within a 
structured format on Form N-PORT. These investors will have a reduced 
ability to make as timely and accurate an analysis within an entity's 
filings, perform text analysis of an entity's narrative disclosures, 
and potentially combine narrative and numeric information when the 
narrative disclosures related to their liquidity risk management 
programs are provided to them in the unstructured format of an annual 
report. Further, there may be an increased burden on these third-party 
providers to search, parse, and assess the quality of the unstructured 
information in funds' annual reports. To the extent that certain 
investors rely on third parties to provide them with information for 
analysis, this increased burden may be partially or fully passed on to 
these investors in the form of higher costs.
    One commenter recommended that narrative disclosures, as well as 
all financial data, be reported in a consistent, structured format to 
promote comparison across filings and filers.\161\ While for some 
retail investors, an unstructured narrative disclosure will be useful 
and accessible, standardized, structured, machine-readable disclosures 
facilitate timely access and accurate identification and parsing of 
information for other investors and market participants relative to 
unstructured disclosures. As discussed in the Proposing Release, while 
we acknowledge that there are costs to our amendments for investors, 
filers, and third party platforms that prefer to access and use 
financial information in a structured format, we believe there are also 
benefits to investors that prefer the narrative discussion of a fund's 
liquidity risk management program accessible to them in an unstructured 
shareholder report.\162\ We are currently soliciting feedback on the 
use of structured data in fund investor disclosure generally.\163\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \161\ See XBRL US Comment Letter.
    \162\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at section 
III.C.
    \163\ See supra footnote 52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, the amendment to Form N-PORT that requires funds and other 
registrants to publicly disclose their holdings of cash and cash 
equivalents that are not reported in Parts C and D of the Form on a 
quarterly basis with a 60-day delay will give investors some 
potentially useful information about the most liquid assets that a fund 
previously had available to, for example, meet its redemption 
obligations.\164\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \164\ See supra section II.B.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Changes to Non-Public Disclosure
    In addition to the amendments to public disclosures of liquidity 
information discussed above, the amendments to Form N-PORT give funds 
the option to split a given holding into portions that may have 
different liquidity classifications on their non-public reports on Form 
N-PORT. Funds may benefit from the amendment because it gives them the 
option to either include an entire holding within a classification 
bucket or to allocate portions of the holding across classification 
buckets. This could benefit a fund and the fund's investors if a more 
granular approach to classification that assigns portions of a 
portfolio holding to separate classification buckets is more consistent 
with the fund's preferred approach to liquidity risk management. This 
approach also reduces the need for funds to develop systems and 
processes to allocate each holding to exactly one classification bucket 
for the purposes of regulatory compliance.\165\ In addition, to the 
extent that providing the option to choose the position classification 
method most suitable to a given fund results in disclosures on Form N-
PORT that more accurately reflect the fund's liquidity profile, the 
amendments may improve the Commission's ability to monitor liquidity 
risks in markets and protect investors from liquidity-related 
developments. However, we acknowledge that providing funds with this 
option does add an additional subjective decision to the portfolio 
holding classification process. Thus, the amendments could result in 
classifications that are less comparable across funds relative to the 
baseline.\166\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \165\ For example, funds that use multiple sub-advisers to 
manage different sleeves of a portfolio might have had to establish 
more complex systems and processes for combining the classifications 
of individual sub-advisers into a single classification for the 
portfolio's aggregate holding of a given security under the rule as 
originally adopted. The ability to split a portfolio holding across 
multiple classification buckets provides funds with a 
straightforward way of combining the classifications of different 
sub-advisers.
    \166\ Portfolio classifications on Form N-PORT will include 
CUSIPs or other identifiers that allow Commission staff to identify 
when different funds classify the same investment using different 
classification methods. However, comparing such classifications will 
require some method of adjustment between classifications based on, 
for example, reasonably anticipated trade size and those based on 
splitting a position into proportions that are assigned to different 
classification buckets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters supported the amendments to Form N-PORT that 
will give funds the option to split a given holding into portions that 
may have different liquidity classifications on their non-public 
reports on Form N-PORT, noting that this option will allow funds 
increased flexibility and higher precision when classifying the 
liquidity of an investment.\167\ One commenter, however, stated that 
this option is unlikely to reduce burdens or costs to funds, and is 
likely to be incompatible with the 15% illiquid asset restriction.\168\ 
We note that this approach is optional, and therefore funds could 
choose not to use it if it had negative consequences, such as inflating 
the fund's illiquid investment bucket. Several commenters recommended 
that the proportionality option be revised to include categories based 
on reasonably anticipated trade size, which would allow increased 
flexibility and potential increased efficiency for funds that choose to 
implement this classification option.\169\ We note that, while in some 
circumstances classifying liquidity based on reasonably anticipated 
trade size may be a simpler analytic approach

[[Page 31872]]

and avoids certain issues related to full liquidation, as discussed 
above in section II.B.1, it also is an imperfect proxy for the actual 
liquidity characteristics of fund investments, potentially skewing 
classifications to more liquid ``buckets.'' \170\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \167\ See Fidelity Comment Letter; IAA Comment Letter; State 
Street Comment Letter; ICE Comment Letter; and J.P. Morgan Comment 
Letter.
    \168\ See J.P. Morgan Comment Letter.
    \169\ See SIFMA Comment Letter and ICI Comment Letter.
    \170\ See supra footnote 95.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters suggested that we should not allow funds to 
classify portions of a portfolio holding separately because it would 
reduce the value of the information and would ``reduce the utility of 
the entire bucketing exercise.'' \171\ However, the Commission does not 
consider allowing portfolio splitting to affect its ability to monitor 
liquidity risks, an ability that ultimately benefits investors. The 
Commission is adopting amendments to Form N-PORT to allow funds the 
option of splitting a fund's holding into more than one classification 
category in certain specified circumstances as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \171\ See MSCI Comment Letter. Several commenters stated that 
allowing funds to classify portions of a portfolio holding for some 
of their holdings could lead to inconsistent interpretations of the 
funds classifications, and that we should instead require a fund to 
apply a uniform approach across all of its holdings. See State 
Street Comment Letter and MSCI Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
    The amendments we are adopting have several potential effects on 
efficiency, competition, and capital formation. First, if publicly 
disclosed aggregate liquidity profiles may have created an incentive 
for a fund to classify its holdings in a manner that led to a 
relatively more liquid aggregate liquidity profile in order to attract 
investors, the amendments remove any such incentive and potentially 
reduce the likelihood that funds compete based on their aggregate 
liquidity profiles. To the extent that a fund or other registrant's 
cash and cash equivalent holdings are interpreted by investors as being 
associated with lower liquidity risk, funds and other registrants may 
still have some incentive to compete based on their holdings of cash 
and cash equivalents as a result of the amendments.\172\ We do not 
expect the proposed amendments to require narrative discussions in 
shareholder reports to have a significant competitive effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \172\ However, because cash and cash equivalent holdings do not 
generate significant returns relative to other holdings, funds and 
other registrants may have an incentive to shift to non-cash or cash 
equivalent holdings that generate higher returns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Second, to the extent that those publicly disclosed aggregate 
liquidity profiles would have helped investors more accurately evaluate 
fund liquidity risk and make more informed investment decisions, the 
amendments could reduce allocative efficiency. The annual discussion of 
a fund's liquidity risk management program in shareholder reports and 
the requirement that funds and other registrants publicly disclose 
their holdings of cash and cash equivalents on Form N-PORT could 
mitigate this reduction in allocative efficiency if these requirements 
provide information that helps investors evaluate fund liquidity risk. 
Furthermore, to the extent that aggregate liquidity profiles on Form N-
PORT would have increased the likelihood of investors making investment 
choices based on any confusion about a fund's liquidity risk profile, 
which would have harmed the efficient allocation of capital, the 
amendments could increase allocative efficiency.
    Lastly, to the extent that the information provided by aggregate 
liquidity profiles would have promoted increased investment in certain 
funds, and the assets those funds invest in, rescinding the aggregate 
liquidity profile requirement could reduce capital formation. At the 
same time, we note that the new public disclosure requirements we are 
adopting could offset any reduction in capital formation.
    In summary, we note that all of the effects described above are 
conditioned upon the usefulness to investors of information that we 
will no longer require relative to the usefulness of additional 
disclosure requirements we are adopting. We cannot estimate the 
aggregate effect on efficiency, competition, or capital formation that 
will result from the new amendments because we do not know the extent 
to which aggregate liquidity risk profiles, narrative discussion of a 
fund's liquidity risk management program, or the amount of cash and 
cash equivalents held by a fund and other registrants are useful to 
investors in making more informed investment choices.\173\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \173\ See supra paragraph following footnote 157.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Reasonable Alternatives

    The Commission considered several alternatives to the amendments to 
funds public and non-public disclosure requirements that we are 
adopting.\174\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \174\ Several commenters also addressed potential costs 
associated with modifying the bucketing requirements of rule 22e-4. 
As discussed above, in section II.C, we are not adopting 
modifications to the rule 22e-4 bucketing requirements today.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    First, in order to address any potential issues with the 
interpretation of a fund's aggregate liquidity profile by investors, we 
could have maintained the public disclosure of this profile on Form N-
PORT and added a requirement that funds publicly disclose on Form N-
PORT additional information providing context and clarification 
regarding how their aggregate liquidity profiles were generated and 
should be interpreted. This alternative would have provided investors 
with some of the benefits of the additional context provided by the 
narrative discussion on Form N-1A that we are adopting, and, to the 
extent that it increased investors' understanding of a fund's aggregate 
liquidity profile, could have allowed them to make more informed 
investment choices relative to the baseline. However, some investors 
may believe that they can more easily obtain information in a fund's 
annual report compared to information in the fund's Form N-PORT filings 
if they are not as interested in being able to access, reuse, and 
compare the information if included in a structured format on Form N-
PORT. This alternative would have required these investors to seek out 
this additional information on EDGAR.
    Second, instead of requiring a fund to briefly discuss the 
operation and effectiveness of its liquidity risk management program in 
a shareholder report, we could have required a more specific discussion 
of the fund's exposure to liquidity risk over the preceding year, how 
the fund managed that risk, and how the fund's returns were affected 
over the preceding year. This alternative could have helped investors 
understand both a fund's liquidity risk and the fund's approach to 
managing that risk, which might lead to more informed investment 
decisions than a discussion of the fund's liquidity risk management 
program. However, this alternative could have been more costly for some 
funds to implement than the proposed narrative discussion in the 
shareholder report, and funds still have the flexibility to provide 
this information in the course of complying with the final rule if they 
think it will benefit their investors.\175\ Further, as discussed 
above, a fund should discuss, with specificity, as part of its MDFP, 
any factor such as liquidity events that the fund experienced that 
materially affected the fund's performance during the past fiscal 
year.\176\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \175\ See supra paragraph following footnote 65.
    \176\ See supra section II.A.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Third, we could have required funds to disclose an aggregate 
liquidity profile in their annual report along with additional 
information providing context and clarification regarding how its 
aggregate liquidity profile was generated and should be interpreted. If 
such disclosure increased investors'

[[Page 31873]]

understanding of a fund's aggregate liquidity profile, this would have 
allowed them to make more informed investment choices relative to the 
baseline, though they would have received this information at an annual 
rather than quarterly frequency. However, such disclosures still may 
not be able to fully explain how the subjective factors inherent in the 
classification process affect aggregate fund liquidity profiles, so 
they still may not be comparable across funds. Therefore, investors' 
ability to make more informed investment choices based on the inclusion 
of this information may be limited.
    Fourth, we could have amended both Form N-PORT and rule 22e-4 to 
prescribe an objective approach to classification in which the 
Commission would specify more precise criteria and guidance regarding 
how funds should classify different categories of investments. Such an 
approach could permit consistent comparisons of different funds' 
aggregate liquidity profiles, allowing investors to make more informed 
investment decisions without requiring funds to provide additional 
contextual discussion of their liquidity risk management programs. 
However, as discussed in the Liquidity Adopting Release, the Commission 
may not be able to respond as quickly as market participants to dynamic 
market conditions that might necessitate changes to such criteria and 
guidance.
    Fifth, we could have required that if funds chose to split the 
classification of any of their portfolio holdings across liquidity 
buckets when reporting them on the non-public portion of Form N-PORT, 
they do so for all of their portfolio holdings. This would have ensured 
that all of the portfolio holdings within a given fund could be 
interpreted more consistently for any monitoring purposes by the 
Commission. However, to the extent that being able to choose the 
classification approach appropriate to each portfolio holding more 
accurately reflects a manager's judgment of that portfolio holding's 
liquidity, any reduction in the consistency of portfolio 
classifications under the amendments we are adopting could be offset by 
a more accurate description of the manager's assessment of fund 
liquidity risk.

IV. Paperwork Reduction Act

A. Introduction

    The amendments to Form N-PORT and Form N-1A contain ``collections 
of information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
1995 (``PRA'').\177\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \177\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 through 3521.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The title for the existing collections of information are: ``Rule 
30b1-9 and Form N-PORT'' (OMB Control No. 3235-0730); and ``Form N-1A 
under the Securities Act of 1933 and under the Investment Company Act 
of 1940, Registration Statement of Open-End Management Investment 
Companies'' (OMB Control No. 3235-0307). The Commission is submitting 
these collections of information to the Office of Management and Budget 
(``OMB'') for review in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 
1320.11. 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 Commission is amending Form N-
PORT and Form N-1A. The amendments are designed to improve the 
reporting and disclosure of liquidity information by funds. We discuss 
below the collection of information burdens associated with these 
amendments. In the Proposing Release, the Commission solicited comment 
on the collection of information requirements and the accuracy of the 
Commission's statements in the Proposing Release.

B. Form N-PORT

    As discussed above, on October 13, 2016, the Commission adopted new 
Form N-PORT, which requires mutual funds and ETFs \178\ to report 
monthly portfolio investment information to the Commission in a 
structured data format.\179\ The Commission also adopted amendments to 
Form N-PORT requiring a fund to publicly report on Form N-PORT the 
aggregate percentage of its portfolio investments that falls into each 
of the four liquidity classification categories noted above.\180\ 
Today, the Commission is rescinding the requirement that funds publicly 
disclose their aggregate liquidity profile on a quarterly basis with a 
60-day delay. The Commission also is amending Form N-PORT to require 
funds and other registrants to report to the Commission on a non-public 
basis the amount of cash and cash equivalents in their portfolio on 
Form N-PORT on a monthly basis and to publicly disclose this amount on 
a quarterly basis with a 60 day delay.\181\ Finally, the Commission is 
amending Form N-PORT to allow funds the option of splitting a fund's 
holding into more than one liquidity classification category in certain 
specified circumstances.\182\ As of the end of 2017, there were 9,154 
mutual funds managing assets of approximately $19 trillion, and there 
were 1,832 ETFs managing assets of approximately $3.4 trillion.\183\ 
Preparing a report on Form N-PORT is mandatory and is a collection of 
information under the PRA, and the information required by Form N-PORT 
will be data-tagged in XML format. Except for certain reporting items 
specified in the form,\184\ responses to the reporting requirements 
will be kept confidential for reports filed with respect to the first 
two months of each quarter; the third month of the quarter will not be 
kept confidential, but made public sixty days after the quarter end.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \178\ Registered money market funds and small business 
investment companies are exempt from Form N-PORT reporting 
requirements.
    \179\ Reporting Modernization Adopting Release, supra footnote 
2.
    \180\ Item B.8.a of Form N-PORT. Form N-PORT also requires 
public reporting of the percentage of a fund's highly liquid 
investments that it has segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy 
margin requirements in connection with, derivatives transactions 
that are classified as moderately liquid, less liquid, or illiquid 
investments. Item B.8.b of Form N-PORT.
    \181\ See supra footnote 21 (noting that the term ``registrant'' 
refers to entities required to file Form N-PORT, including all 
registered management investment companies, other than money market 
funds and small business investment companies, and all ETFs 
(regardless of whether they operate as UITs or management investment 
companies)).
    \182\ See new Item C.7.b of Form N-PORT and Instructions to Item 
C.7 of Form N-PORT.
    \183\ See supra footnote 142 and accompanying text.
    \184\ These items include information reported with respect to a 
fund's Highly Liquid Investment Minimum (Item B.7), derivatives 
transactions (Item B.8), country of risk and economic exposure (Item 
C.5.b), delta (Items C.9.f.v, C.11.c.vii, or C.11.g.iv), liquidity 
classification for portfolio investments (Item C.7), or 
miscellaneous securities (Part D), or explanatory notes related to 
any of those topics (Part E) that is identifiable to any particular 
fund or adviser. See new General Instruction F of Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the Liquidity Adopting Release, we estimate that, for the 35% of 
funds that would file reports on Form N-PORT in house, the per fund 
average aggregate annual hour burden will be 144 hours per fund, and 
the average cost to license a third-party software solution will be 
$4,805 per fund per year.\185\ For the remaining 65% of funds that 
would retain the services of a third party to prepare and file reports 
on Form N-PORT on the fund's behalf, we estimate that the average 
aggregate annual hour burden will be 125 hours per fund, and each fund 
will pay an average fee of $11,440 per fund per year for the services 
of third-party service provider. In sum, we estimate that filing 
liquidity-related information on Form N-PORT will impose an average 
total annual hour burden of 144 hours on applicable

[[Page 31874]]

funds, and all applicable funds will incur on average, in the 
aggregate, external annual costs of $103,787,680, or $9,118 per 
fund.\186\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \185\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at 
n.1237 and accompanying text.
    \186\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at 
n.1238 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We are adopting, substantially as proposed, amendments to Form N-
PORT to rescind the requirement that a fund report the aggregate 
percentage of the fund's portfolio representing each of the four 
liquidity categories. As discussed above, we are rescinding this 
requirement because we believe, and commenters generally agree,\187\ 
that Form N-PORT may not be the most accessible and useful way to 
convey to the public information about a fund's liquidity risks and the 
fund's approach to liquidity risk management. Because there would no 
longer be public disclosure of a fund's aggregate liquidity 
classification information, we also will re-designate reporting about 
the amount of a fund's highly liquid investments that are segregated or 
pledged to cover less liquid derivatives transactions to the non-public 
portion of the form. Finally, we are adopting amendments to Form N-PORT 
to add an additional disclosure requirement relating to a fund's or 
other registrant's holdings of cash and cash equivalents not reported 
in Parts C and D of the Form \188\ and to allow funds the option of 
splitting a fund's holding into more than one classification category 
in three specified circumstances.\189\ We believe these additional 
amendments enhance the liquidity data reported to the Commission.\190\ 
In addition, for some funds, these changes may also reduce cost burdens 
as they comply with the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \187\ See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter; BlackRock Comment Letter; 
SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.
    \188\ See new Item B.2.f. of Form N-PORT.
    \189\ See new Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N-PORT.
    \190\ See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2, at n.293 
and accompanying text (discussing the Commission's need for the 
information reported on Form N-PORT).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Based on Commission staff experience, we believe that rescinding 
the requirement that funds publicly report the aggregate classification 
information on Form N-PORT will reduce the estimated burden hours and 
costs associated with Form N-PORT by approximately one hour. We 
believe, however, that this reduction in cost will be offset by the 
increase in cost associated with the other amendments to Form N-PORT, 
which we also estimate to be one hour. Therefore, we believe that there 
will be no substantive modification to the existing collection of 
information for Form N-PORT. Commenters did not provide comment on our 
estimated reduction in burden hours and costs associated with Form N-
PORT. As a result, the Commission believes that the current PRA burden 
estimates for the existing collection of information requirements 
remain appropriate.

C. Form N-1A

    Form N-1A is the registration form used by open-end investment 
companies. The respondents to the amendments to Form N-1A adopted today 
are open-end management investment companies registered or registering 
with the Commission. Compliance with the disclosure requirements of 
Form N-1A is mandatory, and the responses to the disclosure 
requirements are not confidential. In our most recent Paperwork 
Reduction Act submission for Form N-1A, we estimated for Form N-1A a 
total hour burden of 1,602,751 hours, and the total annual external 
cost burden is $131,139,208.\191\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \191\ This estimate is based on the last time the rule's 
information collection was submitted for PRA renewal in 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We are adopting, largely as proposed, amendments to Form N-1A to 
require funds disclose information about the operation and 
effectiveness of their liquidity risk management program in their 
reports to shareholders. Specifically, in response to commenters, we 
are moving the discussion of the operation and effectiveness of a 
fund's liquidity risk management program to the section of the 
shareholder report (annual or semi-annual) following the discussion of 
board approval of advisory contracts.\192\ As proposed, this subsection 
will require funds to discuss the operation and effectiveness of their 
liquidity risk management program over the period covered. However, 
funds will have flexibility to cover either the most recently completed 
fiscal year or the most recently completed calendar year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \192\ New Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Form N-1A generally imposes two types of reporting burdens on 
investment companies: (i) The burden of preparing and filing the 
initial registration statement; and (ii) the burden of preparing and 
filing post-effective amendments to a previously effective registration 
statement (including post-effective amendments filed pursuant to 17 CFR 
230.485(a) or (b) (``rule 230.485(a) or (b)'') under the Securities 
Act, as applicable). As in the proposal, we estimate that each fund 
will incur a one-time burden of an additional five hours \193\ to draft 
and finalize the required disclosure. In aggregate, we estimate that 
funds will incur a one-time burden of an additional 54,890 hours,\194\ 
to comply with the new Form N-1A disclosure requirements. Amortizing 
the one-time burden over a three-year period results in an average 
annual burden of an additional 18,296.7 hours.\195\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \193\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: 5 
Hours (3 hours for the compliance attorney to consult with the 
liquidity risk management program administrator and other investment 
personnel in order to produce an initial draft of the shareholder 
report disclosure + 2 hours for senior officers to familiarize 
themselves with the new disclosure and review the report). These 
calculations stem from the Commission's understanding of the time it 
takes to draft and review shareholder report disclosure.
    \194\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 5 
hours x 10,978 open-end funds (excluding money market funds and ETFs 
organized as UITs, and including ETFs that are management investment 
companies) = 54,890 hours. We estimate that there are 8 ETFs 
organized as UITs as of December 31, 2017.
    \195\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: 
54,890 hours / 3 = 18,296.7 average annual burden hours.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Based on Commission staff expertise and experience, we estimate 
that each fund will incur an ongoing burden of an additional 2.5 hours 
each year to review and update the required disclosure.\196\ In 
aggregate, we estimate that funds will incur an annual burden of an 
additional 27,445 hours,\197\ to comply with the new shareholder report 
disclosure requirements in Form N-1A.\198\ Amortizing these one-time 
and ongoing hour and cost burdens over three years results in an 
average annual increased burden of approximately 3.3 hours per fund, as 
in the proposal.\199\ In total, we estimate that funds will incur an 
average annual increased burden of approximately 45,741.7 hours,\200\ 
to comply with the shareholder report disclosure requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \196\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: 2.5 
hours (2 hours for the compliance attorney to consult with the 
liquidity risk management program administrator and other investment 
personnel in order to produce an initial draft of the shareholder 
report disclosure + .5 hours for senior officers to review the 
shareholder report).
    \197\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: 2.5 
hours x 10,978 open-end funds (excluding money market funds and ETFs 
organized as UITs, and including ETFs that are management investment 
companies) = 27,445 hours.
    \198\ The calculations included in this PRA have been modified 
from the Proposing Release to reflect updated estimates for the 
number of entities that the Commission believes will be required to 
comply with the new shareholder report amendments on Form N-1A. The 
estimated cost burdens per fund remain the same.
    \199\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: (5 
burden hours (year 1) + 2.5 burden hours (year 2) + 2.5 burden hours 
(year 3)) / 3 = 3.3
    \200\ This estimate is based on the following calculation: 
18,296.7 hours + 27,445 hours = 45,741.7 hours.

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[[Page 31875]]

V. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    The Commission has prepared the following Final Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis in accordance with section 3(a) of the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (``RFA'').\201\ It relates to new amendments to Form N-
PORT and new amendments to Form N-1A. We prepared an Initial Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA'') in conjunction with the Proposing 
Release in March 2018.\202\ The Proposing Release included, and 
solicited comment, on the IRFA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \201\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
    \202\ See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at section V.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. Need for the Amendments

    The Commission adopted rule 22e-4 and related rule and form 
amendments to enhance the regulatory framework for liquidity risk 
management of funds.\203\ In connection with rule 22e-4, a fund is 
required to publicly report on Form N-PORT the aggregate percentage of 
its portfolio investments that falls into each of the liquidity 
categories enumerated in rule 22e-4. This requirement was designed to 
enhance public disclosure regarding fund liquidity and redemption 
practices. However, since we adopted these requirements, we have 
received letters raising concerns that the public disclosure of a 
fund's aggregate liquidity classification information on Form N-PORT 
may not achieve our intended purpose and may confuse and mislead 
investors. As we discuss further in section II.A above, these letters 
have led us to believe that the approach of disclosing liquidity 
information to the public through Form N-PORT may not be the most 
accessible and useful way to convey fund liquidity information to the 
public, given that only the Commission, and not the public, would have 
access to the more granular information and can request information 
regarding the fund's methodologies and assumptions that would provide 
needed context to understand this reporting.\204\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \203\ See supra section I.
    \204\ See supra section II.A.1 at text accompanying footnote 27.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Significant Issues Raised by Public Comment

    In the Proposing Release, we requested comment on the IRFA, 
requesting in particular comment on the number of small entities that 
would be subject to the proposed amendments to Form N-1A and Form N-
PORT and whether these proposed amendments would have any effects that 
have not been discussed. We requested that commenters describe the 
nature of any effects on small entities subject to the proposed 
amendments to Form N-1A and Form N-PORT and provide empirical data to 
support the nature and extent of such effects. We also requested 
comment on the estimated compliance burdens of the proposed amendments 
to Form N-1A and Form N-PORT and how they would affect small entities. 
We did not receive comments regarding the impact of our proposal on 
small entities.

C. Small Entities Subject to the Amendments

    An investment company is a small entity if, together with other 
investment companies in the same group of related investment companies, 
it has net assets of $50 million or less as of the end of its most 
recent fiscal year.\205\ Commission staff estimates that, as of 
December 31, 2017, there were 54 open-end investment companies that 
would be considered small entities. This number includes open-end 
ETFs.\206\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \205\ See 17 CFR 270.0-10(a) (``rule 270.0-10(a)'') under the 
Investment Company Act.
    \206\ This estimate is derived from an analysis of data obtained 
from Morningstar Direct as well as data reported on Form N-SAR filed 
with the Commission for the period ending December 31, 2017. This 
estimate has been modified from the Proposing Release to reflect 
updated estimates for the number of small entities that the 
Commission believes will be required to comply with the new 
shareholder report amendments on Form N-1A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance 
Requirements

    We are adopting amendments to Form N-1A and Form N-PORT to enhance 
fund disclosure regarding a fund's liquidity risk management practices. 
Specifically, the amendments to Form N-PORT \207\ will rescind the 
requirement that funds publicly disclose aggregate liquidity 
classification information about their portfolios and amendments to 
Form N-1A will require funds to discuss certain aspects of their 
liquidity risk management program as part of their reports to 
shareholders.\208\ In addition, we are adopting amendments to Form N-
PORT to allow funds to report multiple classification categories for a 
single position in certain cases \209\ and require funds and other 
registrants to report their holdings of cash and cash equivalents.\210\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \207\ See revised Item B.8 of Form N-PORT.
    \208\ See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N-1A.
    \209\ See new Item C.7.b of Form N-PORT and Instructions to Item 
C.7 of Form N-PORT.
    \210\ See new Item B.2.f. of Form N-PORT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    All funds will be subject to the new disclosure and reporting 
requirements, including funds that are small entities. We estimate that 
54 funds are small entities that will be required to comply with the 
disclosure and reporting requirements. As discussed above, we do not 
believe that our amendments will change Form N-PORT's estimated burden 
hours and costs.\211\ We estimate that each fund will incur a one-time 
burden of an additional five hours,\212\ at a time cost of $1,645 \213\ 
each year to draft and finalize the required shareholder report 
disclosure required in Form N-1A. For purposes of this analysis, 
Commission staff estimates, based on outreach conducted with a variety 
of funds, that small fund groups will incur approximately the same 
initial and ongoing costs as large fund groups. Therefore, in the 
aggregate, we estimate that funds that are small entities will incur a 
one-time burden of an additional 270 hours,\214\ at a time cost of 
$88,830,\215\ to comply with the new Form N-1A disclosure requirements. 
Amortizing the one-time burden over a three-year period results in an 
average annual burden of an additional 90 hours,\216\ at a time cost of 
$29,610.\217\ We estimate that each fund will incur an ongoing burden 
of an additional 2.5 hours,\218\ at a time cost of $822.50,\219\ each 
year to review and update the required Form N-1A disclosure. Therefore, 
we estimate that funds that are small entities will incur an ongoing 
burden of an additional 135

[[Page 31876]]

hours,\220\ at a time cost of $44,415,\221\ to comply with the new Form 
N-1A disclosure requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \211\ See supra text accompanying footnote 152.
    \212\ See supra footnote 197 (noting that this estimate is based 
on the Commission staff's understanding of the time it takes it 
takes to draft and review shareholder report disclosure, including 
the time it takes for the compliance attorney to consult with the 
liquidity risk management program administrator and other investment 
personnel in order to produce an initial draft of the shareholder 
report disclosure as well as the time it takes for senior officers 
to familiarize themselves with the new disclosure and review the 
report).
    \213\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 5 
hours x $329 (blended rate for a compliance attorney ($345) and a 
senior officer ($313)) = $1,645.
    \214\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 5 
hours x 54 = 270 hours.
    \215\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 
$1,645 x 54 = $88,830.
    \216\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 270 
hours / 3 = 90 average annual burden hours.
    \217\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 
$88,830 / 3 = $29,610.
    \218\ See supra footnote 194 and accompanying text (noting that 
this estimate is based on the Commission staff's understanding of 
the time it takes it takes to review shareholder report disclosure, 
including the time it takes for the compliance attorney to consult 
with the liquidity risk management program administrator and other 
investment personnel in order to produce an initial draft of the 
shareholder report disclosure as well as the time it takes for 
senior officers to review the report).
    \219\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 2.5 
hours x $329 (blended rate for a compliance attorney ($345) and a 
senior officer ($313)) = $822.50.
    \220\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 2.5 
hours x 54 = 135 hours.
    \221\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 
$822.50 x 54 = $44,415.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Amortizing these one-time and ongoing hour and cost burdens over 
three years results in an average annual increased burden of 
approximately 4.2 hours,\222\ at a time cost of $1,370.83,\223\ per 
fund. In total, we estimate that funds that are small entities will 
incur an average annual increased burden of approximately 226.8 hours, 
at a time cost of $74,617.20,\224\ to comply with the new Form N-1A 
disclosure requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \222\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: (135 
hours + 90 hours) / 54 funds = 4.2 hours.
    \223\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 
($44,415 + $29,610) / 54 funds = $1,370.83.
    \224\ This estimate is based on the following calculations: 
226.8 hours x $329 (blended rate for a compliance attorney ($345) 
and a senior officer ($313)) = $74,617.20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on Small Entities

    The RFA directs the Commission to consider significant alternatives 
that would accomplish our stated objectives, while minimizing any 
significant economic impact on small entities. Alternatives in this 
category include: (i) Exempting funds that are small entities from the 
disclosure requirements on Form N-1A, or establishing different 
disclosure or reporting requirements, or different disclosure 
frequency, to account for resources available to small entities; (ii) 
clarifying, consolidating, or simplifying the compliance requirements 
under the amendments for small entities; (iii) using performance rather 
than design standards; and (iv) exempting funds that are small entities 
from other amendments to Form N-PORT.
    The Commission does not believe that exempting any subset of funds, 
including funds that are small entities, from the amendments would 
permit us to achieve our stated objectives. Nor do we believe that 
clarifying, consolidating, or simplifying the amendments for small 
entities would satisfy those objectives. In particular, we do not 
believe that the interest of investors would be served by these 
alternatives. We believe that all fund investors, including investors 
in funds that are small entities, would benefit from accessible and 
useful disclosure about liquidity risk, with appropriate context, so 
that investors may understand its nature and relevance to their 
investments.\225\ The changes we are making will allow funds of all 
sizes to more accurately reflect their liquidity.\226\ The current 
disclosure requirements for reports on Forms N-1A and N-PORT do not 
distinguish between small entities and other funds. Finally, we 
determined to use performance rather than design standards for all 
funds, regardless of size, because we believe that providing funds with 
the flexibility to determine how to design their shareholder report 
disclosures allows them the opportunity to tailor their disclosure to 
their specific risk profile. By contrast, we determined to use design 
standards for our amendments to Form N-PORT because we believe 
information reported to the Commission on the Form must be uniform to 
the extent practicable in order for the Commission to carry out its 
oversight and monitoring responsibilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \225\ See supra text accompanying footnote 192.
    \226\ See supra section IV.B at text accompanying footnote 188.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VI. Statutory Authority

    The Commission is adopting amendments to Form N-1A and Form N-PORT 
under the authority set forth in the Securities Act, particularly 
section 19 thereof [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.], the Exchange Act, 
particularly sections 10, 13, 15, and 23, and 35A thereof [15 U.S.C. 
78a et seq.], and the Investment Company Act, particularly, sections 8, 
30 and 38 thereof [15 U.S.C. 80a et seq.].

List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 274

    Investment companies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
Securities.

Text of Rules and Forms

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 17, chapter II of 
the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:

PART 274--FORMS PRESCRIBED UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940

0
1. The authority citation for part 274 continues to read, in part, as 
follows:

    Authority:  15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s, 78c(b), 78l, 78m, 
78n, 78o(d), 80a-8, 80a-24, 80a-26, 80a-29, and Pub. L. 111-203, sec 
939A, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010), unless otherwise noted.

* * * * *

0
2. Amend Form N-1A (referenced in 274.11A) by:
0
a. In Item 27, renumbering paragraph (d)(7) to (d)(7)(a); and
0
b. In Item 27, adding new paragraph (d)(7)(b).
    The addition reads as follows:

    Note:  The text of Form N-1A does not, and this amendment will 
not, appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.

Form N-1A

* * * * *

Item 27. Financial Statements

    (a) * * *
    (d) Annual and Semi-Annual Reports.
* * * * *
    7. Board Approvals and Liquidity Reviews.
    (a) Statement Regarding Basis for Approval of Investment Advisory 
Contract.
* * * * *
    (b) Statement Regarding Liquidity Risk Management Program. If the 
board of directors reviewed the Fund's liquidity risk management 
program pursuant to rule 22e-4(b)(2)(iii) of the Act [17 CFR 270.22e-
4(b)(2)(iii)] during the Fund's most recent fiscal half-year, briefly 
discuss the operation and effectiveness of the Fund's liquidity risk 
management program over the past year.

Instruction

    If the board reviews the liquidity risk management program more 
frequently than annually, a fund may choose to include the discussion 
of the program's operation and effectiveness over the past year in one 
of either the fund's annual or semi-annual reports, but does not need 
to include it in both reports.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Form N-PORT (referenced in Sec.  274.150) by:
0
a. In the General Instructions, revising the second paragraph of F. 
Public Availability;
0
b. In Part B, amending Item B.2 by adding Item B.2.f;
0
c. In Part B, revising Item B.8;
0
d. In Part C, revising Item C.7; and
0
e. Revising Part F.
    The revisions read as follows:

    Note:  The text of Form N-PORT does not, and this amendment will 
not, appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.

FORM N-PORT

MONTHLY PORTFOLIO INVESTMENTS REPORT

* * * * *

F. Public Availability

* * * * *
    The SEC does not intend to make public the information reported on 
Form N-PORT for the first and second months of each Fund's fiscal 
quarter that is identifiable to any particular fund or adviser, or any 
information

[[Page 31877]]

reported with respect to a Fund's Highly Liquid Investment Minimum 
(Item B.7), derivatives transactions (Item B.8), country of risk and 
economic exposure (Item C.5.b), delta (Items C.9.f.v, C.11.c.vii, or 
C.11.g.iv), liquidity classification for portfolio investments (Item 
C.7), or miscellaneous securities (Part D), or explanatory notes 
related to any of those topics (Part E) that is identifiable to any 
particular fund or adviser. However, the SEC may use information 
reported on this Form in its regulatory programs, including 
examinations, investigations, and enforcement actions.
* * * * *

Part B: Information About the Fund

* * * * *
    Item B.2.f. Cash and cash equivalents not reported in Parts C and 
D.
* * * * *
    Item B.8 Derivatives Transactions. For portfolio investments of 
open-end management investment companies, provide the percentage of the 
Fund's Highly Liquid Investments that it has segregated to cover or 
pledged to satisfy margin requirements in connection with derivatives 
transactions that are classified among the following categories as 
specified in rule 22e-4 [17 CFR 270.22e-4]:
    1. Moderately Liquid Investments
    2. Less Liquid Investments
    3. Illiquid Investments
* * * * *

Part C: Schedule of Portfolio Investments

* * * * *
    Item C.7.a Liquidity classification information.
    For portfolio investments of open-end management investment 
companies, provide the liquidity classification(s) for each portfolio 
investment among the following categories as specified in rule 22e-4 
[17 CFR 270.22e-4]. For portfolio investments with multiple liquidity 
classifications, indicate the percentage amount attributable to each 
classification.
    i. Highly Liquid Investments
    ii. Moderately Liquid Investments
    iii. Less Liquid Investments
    iv. Illiquid Investments
    Item C.7.b. If attributing multiple classification categories to 
the holding, indicate which of the three circumstances listed in the 
Instructions to Item C.7 is applicable.
    Instructions to Item C. 7 Funds may choose to indicate the 
percentage amount of a holding attributable to multiple classification 
categories only in the following circumstances: (1) If portions of the 
position have differing liquidity features that justify treating the 
portions separately; (2) if a fund has multiple sub-advisers with 
differing liquidity views; or (3) if the fund chooses to classify the 
position through evaluation of how long it would take to liquidate the 
entire position (rather than basing it on the sizes it would reasonably 
anticipated trading). In (1) and (2), a fund would classify using the 
reasonably anticipated trade size for each portion of the position.
* * * * *

Part F: Exhibits

    For reports filed for the end of the first and third quarters of 
the Fund's fiscal year, attach no later than 60 days after the end of 
the reporting period the Fund's complete portfolio holdings as of the 
close of the period covered by the report. These portfolio holdings 
must be presented in accordance with the schedules set forth in 
Sec. Sec.  210.12-12--210.12-14 of Regulation S-X [17 CFR 210.12-12--
210.12-14].
* * * * *

    By the Commission.

    Dated: June 28, 2018.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-14366 Filed 7-9-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 8011-01-P



                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                       31859

                                           SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE                                  Contents                                                one of four defined liquidity categories,
                                           COMMISSION                                               I. Background
                                                                                                                                                            sometimes referred to as ‘‘buckets.’’ 5
                                                                                                    II. Discussion                                             In connection with the liquidity
                                           17 CFR Part 274                                             A. Amendments to Liquidity Public                    classification requirement of rule 22e–4,
                                                                                                          Reporting and Disclosure Requirements             a fund is required to report
                                           [Release No. IC–33142; File No. S7–04–18]                                                                        confidentially to the Commission the
                                                                                                       B. Amendments to Liquidity Reporting
                                           RIN 3235–AM30                                                  Requirements                                      liquidity classification assigned to each
                                                                                                       C. Treasury Asset Management Report and              of the fund’s portfolio investments on
                                           Investment Company Liquidity                                   Evaluation of Other Approaches                    Form N–PORT.6 As originally adopted,
                                                                                                       D. Compliance Dates                                  Form N–PORT requires a fund to assign
                                           Disclosure                                               III. Economic Analysis                                  each portfolio holding to a single
                                           AGENCY:  Securities and Exchange                            A. Introduction
                                                                                                                                                            classification bucket and publicly
                                           Commission.                                                 B. Economic Baseline
                                                                                                       C. Economic Impacts                                  disclose the aggregate percentage of its
                                           ACTION: Final rule.                                         D. Reasonable Alternatives                           portfolio investments falling into each
                                                                                                    IV. Paperwork Reduction Act                             of the four liquidity classification
                                           SUMMARY:     The Securities and Exchange                    A. Introduction                                      categories noted above.7 Form N–PORT
                                           Commission (‘‘Commission’’) is                              B. Form N–PORT                                       did not require funds to report the cash
                                           adopting amendments to its forms                            C. Form N–1A                                         they hold.8
                                           designed to improve the reporting and                    V. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis                   Rule 22e–4 and the related rules and
                                           disclosure of liquidity information by                      A. Need for the Amendments                           forms were designed to promote
                                           registered open-end investment                              B. Significant Issues Raised by Public               effective liquidity risk management
                                           companies. The Commission is adopting                          Comment                                           throughout the fund industry and to
                                           a new requirement that funds disclose                       C. Small Entities Subject to the
                                                                                                                                                            enhance disclosure regarding fund
                                                                                                          Amendments
                                           information about the operation and                         D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and           liquidity and redemption practices.9
                                           effectiveness of their liquidity risk                          Other Compliance Requirements                     However, since we adopted these
                                           management program in their reports to                      E. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on               requirements, interested parties have
                                           shareholders. The Commission in turn                           Small Entities
                                           is rescinding the requirement in Form                    VI. Statutory Authority                                    5 Rule 22e–4 requires each fund to adopt and

                                           N–PORT under the Investment                              Text of Rules and Forms                                 implement a written liquidity risk management
                                                                                                                                                            program reasonably designed to assess and manage
                                           Company Act of 1940 that funds                           I. Background                                           the fund’s liquidity risk. A fund’s liquidity risk
                                           publicly disclose aggregate liquidity                                                                            management program must incorporate certain
                                           classification information about their                     On October 13, 2016, the Commission                   specified elements, including the requirement that
                                                                                                                                                            a fund classify the liquidity of each of the fund’s
                                           portfolios. In addition, the Commission                  adopted new rules and forms as well as                  portfolio investments into one of four defined
                                           is adopting amendments to Form N–                        amendments to its rules and forms to                    liquidity categories: Highly liquid investments,
                                           PORT that will allow funds classifying                   modernize the reporting and disclosure                  moderately liquid investments, less liquid
                                           the liquidity of their investments                       of information by registered investment                 investments, and illiquid investments
                                                                                                                                                            (‘‘classification’’). This classification is based on the
                                           pursuant to their liquidity risk                         companies (‘‘funds’’),1 including                       number of days in which a fund reasonably expects
                                           management programs to report                            information about the liquidity of funds’               an investment would be convertible to cash (or, in
                                           multiple liquidity classification                        portfolios.2 In particular, the                         the case of the less-liquid and illiquid categories,
                                           categories for a single position under                   Commission adopted new Form N–                          sold or disposed of) without the conversion
                                                                                                                                                            significantly changing the market value of the
                                           specified circumstances. The                             PORT, which requires mutual funds and                   investment. Rule 22e–4 requires funds to establish
                                           Commission also is adding a new                          ETFs to report monthly portfolio                        a highly liquid investment minimum, and includes
                                           requirement to Form N–PORT that                          investment information to the                           requirements related to policies and procedures on
                                           funds and other registrants report their                 Commission in a structured data                         redemptions in kind and evaluation of the liquidity
                                                                                                                                                            of new unit investment trusts (‘‘UITs’’). Rule 22e–
                                           holdings of cash and cash equivalents.                   format.3 The Commission also adopted                    4 also includes other required elements, such as
                                           DATES: Effective Date: This rule is                      17 CFR 270.22e–4 (‘‘rule 22e–4’’) and                   limits on purchases of illiquid investments,
                                           effective September 10, 2018.                            related reforms to enhance the                          reporting to the board, and recordkeeping.
                                                                                                                                                               6 Item C.7 of Form N–PORT.
                                              Compliance Dates: The applicable                      regulatory framework for liquidity risk
                                                                                                                                                               7 Item B.8.a of Form N–PORT. This information
                                           compliance dates are discussed in                        management of funds.4 Among other                       would be disclosed to the public only for the third
                                           section II.D of this final rule.                         things, rule 22e–4 requires a fund to                   month of each fiscal quarter with a 60-day delay.
                                           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                    classify each portfolio investment into                 Form N–PORT also required public reporting of the
                                                                                                                                                            percentage of a fund’s highly liquid investments
                                           Zeena Abdul-Rahman, Senior Counsel,                                                                              that it has segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy
                                                                                                       1 The term ‘‘funds’’ used in this release includes
                                           or Thoreau Bartmann, Senior Special                                                                              margin requirements in connection with,
                                                                                                    open-end management companies, including                derivatives transactions that are classified as
                                           Counsel, at (202) 551–6792, Division of                  exchange-traded funds (‘‘ETFs’’), and excludes          moderately liquid, less liquid, or illiquid
                                           Investment Management, Securities and                    money market funds.                                     investments. Item B.8.b of Form N–PORT.
                                           Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,                       2 Investment Company Reporting Modernization,
                                                                                                                                                               8 Although the requirements of rule 22e–4 and

                                           Washington, DC 20549–8549.                               Investment Company Act Release No. 32314 (Oct.          Form N–PORT discussed above are in effect, the
                                                                                                    13, 2016) [81 FR 81870 (Nov. 18, 2016)] (‘‘Reporting    compliance date has not yet occurred. Accordingly,
                                           SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The                           Modernization Adopting Release’’). See also             no funds are yet reporting this liquidity-related
                                           Commission is adopting amendments to                     Investment Company Liquidity Risk Management            information on Form N–PORT. We previously
                                           Form N–PORT [referenced in 17 CFR                        Programs, Investment Company Act Release No.            extended the compliance date for certain
                                                                                                    32315 (Oct. 13, 2016) [81 FR 82142 (Nov. 18, 2016)]     classification-related provisions of rule 22e–4 and
                                           274.150] under the Investment                            (‘‘Liquidity Adopting Release’’).                       their associated Form N–PORT reporting
                                           Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a–1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES




                                                                                                       3 Registered money market funds and small
                                                                                                                                                            requirements by six months. See Investment
                                           et seq.] (‘‘Investment Company Act’’ or                  business investment companies are exempt from           Company Liquidity Risk Management Programs;
                                           ‘‘Act’’) and amendments to Form N–1A                     Form N–PORT reporting requirements.                     Commission Guidance for In-Kind ETFs,
                                           [referenced in 17 CFR 274.11A] under                        4 Specifically, we adopted rule 22e–4 and 17 CFR     Investment Company Act Release No. 33010 (Feb.
                                                                                                    270.30b1–10 (‘‘rule 30b1–10’’), new Form N–             22, 2018) [83 FR 8342 (Feb. 27, 2018)] (‘‘Liquidity
                                           the Investment Company Act and the                       LIQUID, as well as amendments to Forms N–1A, N–         Extension Release’’).
                                           Securities Act of 1933 (‘‘Securities Act’’)              PORT, and N–CEN. See Liquidity Adopting Release,           9 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote

                                           [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.].                                 supra footnote 2.                                       2, at n.112 and accompanying text.



                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   16:38 Jul 09, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00019   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\10JYR1.SGM    10JYR1


                                           31860                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           raised concerns that the public                            consider.15 A few commenters objected                     The Commission also is adopting
                                           disclosure of a fund’s aggregate liquidity                 to the proposed rescission of public                    amendments to Form N–PORT that will
                                           classification information on Form N–                      aggregate liquidity reporting on Form                   provide funds the flexibility to split a
                                           PORT may not achieve our intended                          N–PORT, arguing that classification                     fund’s portfolio holdings into more than
                                           purpose and may confuse and mislead                        information would be useful and                         one classification category in three
                                           investors.10                                               understandable to investors, and would                  specified circumstances when split
                                              In light of these concerns,11 we                        not result in the potential negative                    reporting equally or more accurately
                                           proposed to replace the Form N–PORT                        consequences suggested in the                           reflects the liquidity of the investment
                                           requirement for a fund to publicly                         proposal.16 Commenters generally                        or eases cost burdens. Finally, we are
                                           report aggregate liquidity portfolio                       supported the other proposed changes                    adopting as proposed a Form N–PORT
                                           classification information on a quarterly                  to Form N–PORT.17 In addition, the                      requirement that funds, and other
                                           basis with new disclosure in the fund’s                    majority of commenters urged us to re-                  registrants, disclose their holdings of
                                           annual shareholder report that provides                    examine more broadly the classification                 cash and cash equivalents not reported
                                           a narrative discussion of the operation                    requirements and related elements of                    in Parts C and D of the Form.21 We
                                           and effectiveness of the fund’s liquidity                  rule 22e–4.18 We discuss in Section II.C                discuss the comments and changes from
                                           risk management program over the most                      below additional efforts the Commission                 the proposal below.
                                           recently completed fiscal year.12 We                       and its staff will take in relation to rule
                                           also proposed additional amendments                                                                                II. Discussion
                                                                                                      22e–4 and its requirements.
                                           to Form N–PORT that would allow a                             Today, after considering comments                    A. Amendments to Liquidity Public
                                           fund to report a single portfolio holding                  we received, we are adopting                            Reporting and Disclosure Requirements
                                           in multiple classification buckets under                   amendments to Forms N–PORT and N–                          Today we are replacing the
                                           defined circumstances where splitting                      1A largely as proposed.19 The                           requirement in Form N–PORT that a
                                           the holding into multiple buckets would                    amendments will replace the                             fund publicly disclose on an aggregate
                                           provide the Commission with more or                        requirement in Form N–PORT that a                       basis the percentage of its investments
                                           equally accurate information at lower                      fund publicly disclose on an aggregate                  that it has allocated to each liquidity
                                           cost to funds (and thus, to fund                           basis the percentage of its investments                 classification category with new
                                           shareholders). Finally, we proposed                        allocated to each liquidity classification              narrative discussion in the fund’s
                                           additional amendments to Form N–                           category with a new narrative                           shareholder report regarding its
                                           PORT designed to help us monitor                           discussion in the fund’s shareholder                    liquidity risk management program.22
                                           trends in the use of cash and cash                         report regarding its liquidity risk                     Funds already are required to disclose a
                                           equivalents and more accurately assess                     management program.20                                   summary of the principal risks of
                                           the composition of a fund’s highly                                                                                 investing in the fund, including
                                           liquid investment minimum                                     15 See e.g., Comment Letter of the Capital Group
                                                                                                                                                              liquidity risk if applicable, in its
                                           (‘‘HLIM’’).13                                              Companies (May 18, 2018) (‘‘Capital Group
                                                                                                      Comment Letter’’); Comment Letter of Fidelity           prospectus.23
                                              We received 24 comment letters on                       Investments (May 18, 2018) (‘‘Fidelity Comment             The new narrative discussion will
                                           the proposal. A significant majority of                    Letter’’); ICI Comment Letter; Comment Letter of the    include disclosure about the operation
                                           commenters generally supported                             Investment Adviser Association (May 18, 2018)
                                                                                                                                                              and effectiveness of the fund’s
                                           replacing public disclosure of aggregate                   (‘‘IAA Comment Letter’’).
                                                                                                         16 See Comment Letter of Better Markets (May 18,     implementation of its required liquidity
                                           liquidity classification information on                    2018) (‘‘Better Markets Comment Letter’’); Comment      risk management program. Additionally,
                                           Form N–PORT with a new narrative                           Letter of Americans for Financial Reform Education      we are clarifying how funds should
                                           discussion of a fund’s liquidity risk                      Fund (‘‘AFR Comment Letter’’); See Comment
                                                                                                                                                              discuss liquidity events that materially
                                           management program in its report to                        Letter of Ya Li, J.D. Candidate, Boston College of
                                                                                                      Law (May 1, 2018) (‘‘Ya Li Comment Letter’’).           affected performance in the
                                           shareholders.14 Some expressed                                17 See, e.g., Comment Letter of the Independent      management’s discussion of fund
                                           concerns, however, about the placement                     Directors Council (May 17, 2018) (‘‘IDC Comment         performance (‘‘MDFP’’) section of the
                                           and content of the discussion regarding                    Letter’’), Fidelity Comment Letter, and IAA             annual shareholder report.24 We expect
                                           the operation and effectiveness of the                     Comment Letter (supporting our proposal to
                                                                                                      provide funds with the option to split a holding
                                           fund’s liquidity risk management                           into more than one classification category in certain   disclosure required under Item B.8 of Form N–
                                           program in the annual report, and                          circumstances); ICI Comment Letter and Comment          PORT about the percentage of a fund’s highly liquid
                                           provided alternatives for us to                            Letter of State Street Corporation (May 18, 2018)       investments segregated to cover, or pledged to
                                                                                                      (‘‘State Street Comment Letter’’) (supporting our       satisfy margin requirements in connection with,
                                              10 See Investment Company Liquidity Disclosure,         proposal to require additional disclosure relating to   certain derivatives transactions, given that this
                                                                                                      holdings of cash and cash equivalents not otherwise     information is only relevant when viewed together
                                           Investment Company Act Release No. 33046 (Mar.                                                                     with full liquidity classification information. See
                                                                                                      reported on Form N–PORT); SIFMA AMG Comment
                                           14, 2018) [83 FR 11905 (Mar. 19, 2018)] (‘‘Proposing                                                               Item B.8.b of Form N–PORT. The commenters that
                                                                                                      Letter and BlackRock Comment Letter (supporting
                                           Release’’).                                                                                                        discussed this change supported keeping it non-
                                                                                                      our proposal to keep the percentage of the fund’s
                                              11 Letters detailing these concerns, as well as
                                                                                                      highly liquid investments segregated to cover, or       public. See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter.
                                           letters on the Proposing Release, are available at         pledged to satisfy margin requirements in                  21 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at
                                           https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-04-18/                     connection with, certain derivatives transactions       n.15 (noting that the term ‘‘registrant’’ refers to
                                           s70418.htm (File No. S7–04–18). See, e.g., Letter          non-public).                                            entities required to file Form N–PORT, including all
                                           from SIFMA AMG to Chairman Jay Clayton,                       18 See e.g., Comment Letter of Federated             registered management investment companies,
                                           Commissioner Stein, and Commissioner Piwowar               Investors, Inc. (May 15, 2018) (‘‘Federated Comment     other than money market funds and small business
                                           (Sept. 12, 2017) (urging the SEC not to publicly           Letter’’); IAA Comment Letter; Comment Letter of        investment companies, and all ETFs (regardless of
                                           disclose the liquidity classification information          the Vanguard Group, Inc. (May 17, 2018)                 whether they operate as UITs or management
                                           submitted via Form N–PORT); Letter from the                (‘‘Vanguard Comment Letter’’).                          investment companies)).
                                           Investment Company Institute to The Honorable Jay             19 If any provision of rule 22e–4 or the related        22 See revised Item B.8 of Form N–PORT and new
                                           Clayton (July 20, 2017) (‘‘ICI Pre-proposal Letter I’’).   rules and forms, including the amendments               Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A.
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                                              12 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10.
                                                                                                      adopted today, or the application thereof to any           23 See Item 4(b) of Form N–1A. In addition, Item
                                              13 See id.
                                                                                                      person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, such     9(c) of Form N–1A requires a fund to disclose all
                                              14 See e.g., Comment Letter of Investment               invalidity shall not affect other provisions or the     principal risks of investing in the fund, including
                                           Company Institute (May 18, 2018) (‘‘ICI Comment            application of such provisions to other persons or      the risks to which the fund’s particular portfolio as
                                           Letter’’); Comment Letter of SIFMA AMG (May 18,            circumstances that can be given effect without the      a whole is expected to be subject and the
                                           2018) (‘‘SIFMA AMG Comment Letter’’); Comment              invalid provision or application.                       circumstances reasonably likely to affect adversely
                                           Letter of BlackRock Inc. (May 17, 2018)                       20 We also are adopting, as proposed, a related      the fund’s net asset value, yield, or total return.
                                           (‘‘BlackRock Comment Letter’’).                            change to make non-public (but not eliminate) the          24 See infra footnote 59 and accompanying text.




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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                  31861

                                           that the clarity we are providing and the                related disclosure. Most commenters on                them.37 Finally, one commenter
                                           shareholder report disclosure we are                     the proposal agreed with our approach,                asserted that, because the Commission
                                           adopting will improve funds’ disclosure                  and supported replacing quarterly                     had not engaged in investor testing of
                                           about liquidity events that materially                   public disclosure of aggregate liquidity              classification data, any conclusions as to
                                           affect fund performance as well as the                   classification information on Form N–                 its utility or the potential confusion to
                                           operation and effectiveness of their                     PORT with a new requirement that                      investors would not have an empirical
                                           liquidity risk management programs.25                    funds discuss the operation and                       basis.38
                                           These disclosures will provide new and                   effectiveness of their liquidity risk                    We continue to believe that it is
                                           existing investors with a holistic view of               management program in their                           important for investors to understand
                                           the liquidity risks of the fund and how                  shareholder reports.29 These                          the liquidity risks of the funds they hold
                                           effectively the fund’s liquidity risk                    commenters generally reiterated the                   and how those risks are managed. We
                                           management program managed those                         concerns that led us to propose these                 appreciate commenters’ concerns
                                           risks on an ongoing basis over the                       changes, stating that the new approach                regarding the elimination of public
                                           reporting period. This revised approach                  would be less likely to confuse or                    disclosure of aggregate liquidity
                                           is designed to provide accessible and                    mislead investors.30 These commenters                 classification reporting. We also
                                           useful disclosure about liquidity risks                  emphasized that classification data is                recognize that subjectivity is inherent in
                                           and risk management to investors, with                   inherently subject to variability due to              many financial decisions and is in fact
                                           appropriate context, so that investors                   model design and the assumptions used,                desirable to some extent in the
                                           have a more comprehensive picture of                     and that this model risk introduces yet               classification information that is
                                           the fund’s liquidity risks and their                     another element of subjectivity to the                reported to us.39 However, the
                                           management and may understand the                        classification process.31 Several                     subjectivity of the classification process
                                           nature and relevance of these risks to                   commenters also argued that the                       when applied to this public disclosure
                                           their investments.                                       forward-looking nature of classification              concerns us for several specific reasons.
                                                                                                    data, which is based on assumptions                      First, the quantitative presentation of
                                           1. Public Aggregate Liquidity Profile                    about how fast a fund could sell                      the aggregate liquidity information may
                                              As noted in the Proposing Release,                    securities, makes the data inappropriate              imply precision and uniformity in a way
                                           since the Commission adopted rule 22e–                   for public consumption.32                             that obscures its subjectivity. When
                                           4 and the related reforms, Commission                       However, a few commenters objected                 disclosure is clearly subjective, we
                                           staff has engaged extensively with                       to the proposed amendments, arguing                   believe investors are likely better able to
                                           interested parties and we have received                  that investors would benefit from being               understand and appreciate its nature. In
                                           letters from industry participants                       able to access the aggregated liquidity               this case, however, we believe the
                                           discussing the complexities of the                       bucketing information of the funds in                 presentation of quantitative data may
                                           classification process. These letters                    which they invest.33 They argued that                 pose a significant risk of confusing and
                                           raised three general types of concerns                   the Commission should err on the side                 misleading investors.40 Second, we
                                           that informed our revised approach to                    of providing more information to                      continue to share the concern expressed
                                           public fund liquidity-related disclosure.                investors about their funds, rather than              by many commenters that public
                                           First, the commenters described how                      less.34 While these commenters                        dissemination of the aggregate
                                           variations in methodologies and                          acknowledged that there may be                        classification information, without an
                                           assumptions used to conduct liquidity                    subjectivity in funds’ classification                 accompanying full explanation to
                                           classification can significantly affect the              decisions, they argued that subjectivity              investors of the underlying subjectivity,
                                           classification information reported on                   is inherent in finance and the use of                 model risk, methodological decisions,
                                           Form N–PORT in ways that investors                       subjective judgments was an intended                  and assumptions that shape this
                                           may not understand (‘‘subjectivity’’).26                 consequence of the rule.35 One                        information, may potentially be
                                           Second, they suggested that Form N–                      commenter stated that replacing a                     misleading to investors.41 Absent that
                                           PORT may not be the most accessible                      ‘‘quantitative measure with a qualitative             kind of detailed contextual explanation,
                                           and useful way to communicate                            discussion is an inherently more                      we believe that such aggregate
                                           information about liquidity risk and                     subjective approach.’’ 36 One commenter               classification data may not be useful for
                                           may not provide the necessary context                    also suggested that investors are capable             investors, as it would not result in an
                                           for investors to understand how the                      of understanding the aggregate liquidity              ‘‘apples to apples’’ comparison between
                                           fund’s classification results relate to its              classification data and weighing its
                                           liquidity risk and risk management                       value in the context of other types of                   37 See Better Markets Comment Letter (arguing

                                                                                                    disclosure and information available to               that investors ‘‘can and do read and digest a broad
                                           (‘‘lack of context’’).27 Third, they argued                                                                    range of information when making investment
                                           that because this reporting item on Form                    29 See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter; BlackRock
                                                                                                                                                          decisions’’ and stating that the aggregated liquidity
                                           N–PORT singles out liquidity risk, and                                                                         classification data ‘‘can easily be understood as it
                                                                                                    Comment Letter; SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.             simply states the percentages of liquid-to-illiquid
                                           does not place it in a broader context of                   30 See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter (‘‘A narrative    holdings a fund has in its portfolio. Investors and
                                           the risks and factors affecting a fund’s                 discussion about a fund’s liquidity risk              those who serve them then can add this liquidity
                                           risk, returns, and performance, it may                   management program would provide shareholders         classification information to their total mix of
                                                                                                    with clearer, more understandable, and more useful    information and make better and more informed
                                           inappropriately focus investors on one                   information about the fund—in plain English.’’).      investment decisions.’’).
                                           investing risk over others (‘‘liquidity                     31 See Comment Letter of MSCI (May 18, 2018)          38 See Better Markets Comment Letter.
                                           risk in isolation’’).28                                  (‘‘MSCI Comment Letter’’).                               39 Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2,

                                              As we discussed in the Proposing                         32 See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter; SIFMA Comment
                                                                                                                                                          at text accompanying n.597.
                                           Release, these concerns led us to                        Letter.                                                  40 For example, because the aggregate liquidity
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                                                                                                       33 See Ya Li Comment Letter; Better Markets
                                           propose a new approach to liquidity-                                                                           profile would be a backward looking review of a
                                                                                                    Comment Letter; AFR Comment Letter; Comment           fund’s liquidity presented only quarterly, with a 60-
                                                                                                    Letter of Bondview (May 17, 2018) (‘‘Bondview         day delay, it may be misleading if investors were
                                             25 See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A.              Comment Letter’’).                                    to base investing decisions on this information
                                             26 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at           34 See Better Markets Comment Letter.
                                                                                                                                                          without being provided a significant amount of
                                           nn.20–27 and accompanying text.                             35 See Better Markets Comment Letter; Bondview     additional context about its staleness.
                                             27 See id., at nn.28–30 and accompanying text.         Comment Letter.                                          41 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at
                                             28 See id., at n.31 and accompanying text.                36 See AFR Comment Letter.                         n.32.



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                                           31862                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           funds, and may result in investor                        the extent that such disclosure would                    fund’s most recently completed fiscal
                                           confusion if they believe it does.42                     need to be granular and detailed to                      year.50
                                           Additionally, we continue to believe                     effectively explain the process of                          The majority of commenters generally
                                           that public dissemination of the                         compiling the liquidity information, it is               agreed with our proposed requirement
                                           aggregate classification information                     not consistent with the careful                          that funds provide a narrative
                                           could create perverse incentives to                      balancing of investor interests that the                 discussion of the operation and
                                           classify investments as more liquid, and                 Commission performed in determining                      effectiveness of a fund’s liquidity risk
                                           may inappropriately highlight liquidity                  to require disclosure of sensitive                       management program, noting that such
                                           risk compared to other, potentially more                 granular information, including                          disclosure is a better way to provide
                                           salient risks of the fund.43 Finally, we                 position-level data, only on a non-                      investors with useful and accessible
                                           are concerned that disclosing funds’                     public basis.                                            liquidity information and reduces the
                                           aggregate liquidity profile may                             For these reasons, and in light of the                risk of investor confusion.51 However,
                                           potentially create risks of coordinated                  concerns above, it is our judgment that                  some commenters suggested certain
                                           investment behavior, if funds were to                    effective disclosure of liquidity risks                  modifications to our proposed
                                           create more correlated portfolios by                     and their management would be better                     disclosure, largely focused on its
                                           purchasing investments that they                         achieved through prospectus and                          placement.52 These commenters
                                           believed third parties, such as investors                shareholder report disclosure rather                     objected to including the narrative
                                           or regulators, may view as ‘‘more                        than Form N–PORT. Most commenters                        disclosure in the MDFP, arguing that, in
                                           liquid.’’ 44                                             agreed, suggesting that shareholder                      many cases, the required liquidity
                                              Additionally, we do not believe it is                 report disclosure would have the benefit                 disclosures would not concern primary
                                           appropriate to adapt Form N–PORT to                      of allowing funds to produce tailored                    drivers of fund performance.
                                           add the level of detail and narrative                    disclosure suited to the particular                      Commenters had a variety of ideas on
                                           context that we believe would be                         liquidity risks and management                           where disclosure on the operation and
                                           necessary for investors to appreciate                    practices of the specific fund.47 This                   effectiveness of the liquidity risk
                                           better the fund’s liquidity risk profile                 would avoid use of a one-size-fits-all                   management program should be placed,
                                           and the subjective nature of                             approach when providing liquidity risk                   with some suggesting that it be in its
                                           classification. The commenters who                       information to investors, and would                      own subsection within the annual
                                           addressed potentially adapting Form N–                   avoid giving investors the ‘‘false                       report,53 in the fund’s Statement of
                                           PORT generally agreed that it may take                   impression that they can rely on the sole                Additional Information (‘‘SAI’’),54 or in
                                           significant detailed disclosure and                                                                               the section of the shareholder report
                                                                                                    results of time bucketing for comparing
                                           nuanced explanation to effectively                                                                                discussing the bases for the board’s
                                                                                                    liquidity of different funds in making
                                           inform investors about the subjectivity                                                                           approval of the advisory contract.55
                                                                                                    their investment decisions.’’ 48
                                           and limitations of aggregate liquidity                                                                            Several commenters also suggested that
                                                                                                    Accordingly, we are adopting the
                                           classification information so as to allow                                                                         allowing funds to include the new
                                                                                                    amendments to Form N–PORT
                                           them to properly make use of the                                                                                  disclosure in either the fund’s annual or
                                                                                                    eliminating public disclosure of
                                           information.45 Such a long narrative
                                                                                                    aggregate liquidity classification
                                           discussion would not be consistent with                                                                              50 The item will require a discussion of the
                                                                                                    information as proposed.                                 operation and effectiveness of the fund’s liquidity
                                           the nature of, and could undermine the
                                                                                                                                                             risk management program during the period
                                           purpose of, Form N–PORT.46 Also, to                      2. Shareholder Report Liquidity Risk                     covered as part of the board’s annual review of the
                                                                                                    Disclosure                                               funds’ liquidity risk management program. Rule
                                              42 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at                                                                22e–4(b)(2)(iii) requires a fund board to review, no
                                           text following n.13.                                        We also are adopting, largely as                      less frequently than annually, a report prepared by
                                              43 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10.          proposed, a new requirement for funds                    the program administrator that addresses the
                                              44 See ICI Pre-proposal Letter I. These risks may
                                                                                                    to discuss briefly the operation and                     operation of the program and its adequacy and
                                           both increase the possibility of correlated market                                                                effectiveness.
                                                                                                    effectiveness of a fund’s liquidity risk
                                           movements in times of stress and may potentially                                                                     51 See e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter;

                                           reduce the utility of the classification data reported   management program in the fund’s                         Comment Letter of Wellington Management
                                           to us.                                                   report to shareholders. In response to                   Company LLP (May 18, 2018) (‘‘Wellington
                                              45 See, e.g., MSCI Comment Letter (‘‘While we are
                                                                                                    commenters, we are moving this                           Comment Letter’’); Fidelity Comment Letter; State
                                           generally in favor of promoting public transparency      discussion of the operation and                          Street Comment Letter.
                                           about fund liquidity, we agree with [the proposal].                                                                  52 One commenter suggested that the new
                                           The classification involves a high level of model        effectiveness of a fund’s liquidity risk                 narrative disclosure included in the shareholder
                                           risk . . . which does not allow a direct comparison      management program from the MDFP                         report be reported in a structured format. See
                                           of results obtained from different funds unless more     section of the annual report to a new                    Comment Letter of XBRL US, Inc. (May 18, 2018)
                                           and more technical information is provided on the                                                                 (‘‘XBRL US Comment Letter’’). We are not creating
                                           nature of the models and the parameters used to
                                                                                                    section of the shareholder report
                                                                                                                                                             an obligation to use a structured format at this time,
                                           generate the result.’’).                                 (annual or semi-annual) following the                    but will consider the issue in connection with other
                                              46 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at       discussion of board approval of advisory                 Commission initiatives. See Fund Retail Investor
                                           n.33 (noting that ‘‘due to the variability and           contracts.49 As proposed, this                           Experience and Disclosure Request for Comment,
                                           subjective inputs required to engage in liquidity                                                                 Investment Company Act Release No. 33113 (June
                                           classification under rule 22e–4, providing effective
                                                                                                    subsection will require funds to discuss
                                                                                                                                                             5, 2018) [83 FR 26891 (June 11, 2018)].
                                           information about liquidity classifications under        the operation and effectiveness of their                    53 See e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter;
                                           that rule to investors poses more difficult and          liquidity risk management program over                   BlackRock Comment Letter.
                                           different challenges than the other data that is         the period covered. However, funds will                     54 See Comment Letter of T. Rowe Price
                                           publicly disclosed on Form N–PORT, which is
                                           more objective and less likely to vary between           have flexibility to cover an annual                      Associates, Inc. (May 18, 2018) (‘‘T. Rowe Comment
                                           funds based on their particular facts and                period that does not coincide with the                   Letter’’).
                                                                                                                                                                55 See e.g., IAA Comment Letter (stating that,
                                           circumstances’’). See also Comment Letter of J.P.
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                                           Morgan Asset Management (May 18, 2018) (‘‘J.P.                                                                    because a fund’s liquidity risk management
                                                                                                      47 See, e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter (‘‘AMG
                                           Morgan Comment Letter’’) (‘‘It would not be                                                                       program is within the purview of the fund’s board,
                                           practical to provide an investor-friendly                believes the proposal strikes the right balance and      the new disclosure should ‘‘recognize the board’s
                                           explanation of each input, and associated effect on      appropriately provides funds the flexibility to tailor   governance function and such disclosure should be
                                           the classification output. Absent this information,      their disclosure in the most meaningful way for          included in the section of the form that covers the
                                           however, investors may reasonably believe that they      their investors.’’); IDC Comment Letter.                 process of fund operations and factors considered
                                                                                                      48 See MSCI Comment Letter.
                                           are looking at an objective assessment of a fund’s                                                                by the board in its review of the liquidity risk
                                           liquidity profile.’’).                                     49 New Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A.                  management program’’).



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                    31863

                                           semiannual report would ease some of                        At the same time, we agree with those                 disclosure about liquidity risk
                                           the cost burdens of compliance with the                  commenters who argued for moving the                     management programs in their
                                           new requirement by allowing funds to                     more operational disclosure outside of                   shareholder reports.62 They explained
                                           synchronize the new shareholder report                   the MDFP because this information does                   that because such funds face
                                           disclosure with liquidity reporting to                   not directly relate to performance                       significantly lower liquidity risks, and
                                           the board.56                                             results. Moving disclosure about the                     are already treated differently and
                                              We believe the approach to                            operation and effectiveness of the                       subject to less stringent requirements
                                           shareholder report liquidity disclosure                  liquidity risk management program to a                   under rule 22e–4, it would be
                                           that we are adopting addresses                           new subsection would be more effective                   appropriate to exempt them from the
                                           commenters’ concerns. Funds are                          and would avoid concerns about unduly                    requirement.63 We are not providing
                                           required to discuss in their MDFP                        focusing investors on liquidity risk and                 such an exemption. Highly liquid funds
                                           factors that materially affected                         diluting the MDFP. Moving this                           and In-Kind ETFs are exempt from
                                           performance of the fund during the most                  disclosure to Item 27(d)(7) of Form N–                   certain requirements under the liquidity
                                           recently completed fiscal year.57                        1A may have several other benefits. The                  rule, but both still must have a liquidity
                                           Liquidity events are factors that may                    MDFP is included only in annual                          risk management program. We believe
                                           materially affect a fund’s performance.                  reports, not semi-annual reports. By                     that investors would benefit from a
                                           Accordingly, to the extent a liquidity                   moving this disclosure to a new                          discussion of the operation and
                                           event has such an effect, this event must                subsection that may be included in                       effectiveness of the liquidity risk
                                           be discussed in the MDFP.58 This                         either a fund’s annual or semi-annual                    management program of these funds,
                                           discussion of liquidity events in the                    report,60 it will allow funds to                         much like any other fund.64 However,
                                           MDFP should include sufficient                           synchronize the required annual board                    we note that all funds may include
                                           specificity that investors can understand                review of liquidity risk management                      tailored and proportionate discussion
                                           the liquidity event, how it affected                     programs with the production of this                     appropriate to the liquidity risks they
                                           performance, and any other relevant                      discussion in the shareholder report,                    face and the scale of their program.
                                           market conditions. This is consistent                    reducing costs and allowing funds to                     Highly liquid funds or In-Kind ETFs
                                           with the views of the commenters who                     provide more effective disclosure.61 We                  may face fewer, or different, liquidity
                                           asked that we clarify that factors that                  believe that this new narrative                          risks than other funds, and thus the
                                           affected performance would include                       disclosure will complement existing                      discussion in their shareholder reports
                                           liquidity events and that such events                    liquidity risk disclosure that funds                     may be proportionate or different than
                                           should still be discussed in the MDFP                    already provide in their prospectus (if it               for other funds.
                                           section, even if we were to move the                     is a principal investment risk of the                       To satisfy this new disclosure
                                           required new disclosure to a new                         fund) and as part of their discussion of                 requirement, a fund generally may
                                           section.59                                               the factors that materially affected                     provide information that was provided
                                                                                                    performance in the MDFP. It also should                  to the board about the operation and
                                              56 See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter (arguing that, if
                                                                                                    keep more operational disclosure                         effectiveness of the program, and insight
                                           the required liquidity risk management disclosure        separate from the performance-related                    into how the program functioned over
                                           must be included in the annual report, fund              disclosure required in the MDFP                          the past year.65 This discussion should
                                           complexes offering multiple funds with fiscal year-      section.
                                           ends spread throughout the year will be frustrated          Several commenters suggested that we                     62 See e.g., IDC Comment Letter; Vanguard
                                           in their ability to leverage their board reporting for                                                            Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter; Capital Group
                                           this new shareholder report requirement); Capital
                                                                                                    exempt funds that primarily hold assets
                                                                                                                                                             Comment Letter. Rule 22e–4, in relevant part,
                                           Group Comment Letter (noting that many fund              that are highly liquid investments                       defines a ‘‘highly liquid investment’’ as any cash
                                           families are expected to provide the annual              (‘‘highly liquid funds’’) and In-Kind                    held by a fund and any investment that the fund
                                           liquidity risk management report to the board of all     ETFs from including this new narrative                   reasonably expects to be convertible to cash in
                                           their funds at the same time once a year without                                                                  current market conditions in three business days or
                                           regard to fiscal year ends).                                                                                      less without the conversion to cash significantly
                                                                                                       60 See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A. The
                                              57 See Disclosure of Mutual Fund Performance                                                                   changing the market value of the investment. Rule
                                                                                                    discussion required by Item 27(d)(7)(b) will be
                                           and Portfolio Managers, Investment Company Act                                                                    22e–4(a)(6). The rule defines an ‘‘In-Kind ETF’’ as
                                                                                                    included in the shareholder report following the
                                           Release No. 19382 (Apr. 6, 1993) [58 FR 21927 (Apr.                                                               an ETF that meets redemptions through in-kind
                                                                                                    board’s review of the fund’s liquidity risk
                                           26, 1993)] (noting that the MDFP requires funds to                                                                transfers of securities, positions and assets other
                                                                                                    management program. Thus, for example, if the
                                           ‘‘explain what happened during the previous fiscal                                                                than a de minimis amount of cash and that
                                                                                                    board reviews the operation of the fund’s liquidity
                                           year and why it happened’’).                             risk management program during the first half of a       publishes its portfolio holdings daily. Rule 22e–
                                              58 See Item 27(b)(7)(i) of Form N–1A. See also
                                                                                                    fund’s fiscal year, the disclosure will be required in   4(a)(9).
                                           Shareholder Reports and Quarterly Portfolio                                                                          63 For example, highly liquid funds and In-Kind
                                                                                                    the semi-annual report for that period. However, if
                                           Disclosure of Registered Management Investment           a board reviews the liquidity program more               ETFs are not required to determine an HLIM. See
                                           Companies, Investment Company Act Release No.            frequently than annually, the disclosure need only       rule 22e–4(b)(1)(iii).
                                           26372 (Aug. 9, 2004) [69 FR 49805 (Aug. 12, 2004)]       be included in the annual or semi-annual report,            64 Highly liquid funds and In-Kind ETFs must

                                           (noting that ‘‘investors rely on MDFP to explain the     not both. See new Instruction to Item 27(d)(7)(b) of     consider a variety of factors specific to their
                                           investment operations and performance of a mutual        Form N–1A (clarifying that ‘‘[i]f the board reviews      operations as part of their liquidity risk
                                           fund’’). We understand that because liquidity            the liquidity risk management program more               management program, which may be relevant to
                                           events can materially affect fund performance            frequently than annually, a fund may choose to           investors. For example, both types of funds must
                                           during a fiscal year, funds currently discuss such       include the discussion of the program’s operation        analyze issues such as shareholder or portfolio
                                           events in their MDFP.                                    and effectiveness over the past year in one of either    concentration, holdings of cash and cash
                                              59 See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter (suggesting      the fund’s annual or semi-annual reports, but does       equivalents, and other factors. In-Kind ETFs must
                                           that discussion of the overall structure and             not need to include it in both reports).                 consider factors specific to ETFs, such as the
                                           operations of the liquidity risk management                 61 Allowing this flexibility may result in the        operation of the arbitrage function and the level of
                                           program should be in the fund’s SAI, but that the        narrative disclosure potentially not consistently        active participation by market participants. See rule
                                           MDFP section could still contain disclosure of           being in a single document (the annual report), but      22e–4(b)(1).
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                                           liquidity events and the use of liquidity risk           instead being in either the annual or semi-annual           65 The disclosure included in new Item

                                           management tools that had a material effect on the       report. This may lead to the risk that some investors    27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A generally should provide
                                           investment operations and performance of a fund);        may not review this data if they read only one of        a high level summary of the report that must be
                                           Vanguard Comment Letter (suggesting that focusing        these shareholder reports and the narrative              provided to the fund’s board under rule 22e–
                                           the MDFP narrative disclosure on material liquidity      disclosure is in the other. Nonetheless, we believe      4(b)(2)(iii) addressing the operation of the fund’s
                                           risks faced during the relevant period would help        that the benefits of the flexibility we are providing    liquidity risk management program and the
                                           ensure that this disclosure does not become              today (both in cost savings and potentially in better    adequacy and effectiveness of its implementation.
                                           boilerplate).                                            disclosure) justify this risk.                                                                      Continued




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                                           31864               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           provide investors with enough detail to                  level of subjectivity involved in                       a uniform approach across all of its
                                           appreciate the manner in which a fund                    liquidity assessment, and give a                        holdings.75 We believe that allowing
                                           manages its liquidity risk, and could,                   narrative description of these risks and                funds to split classification in these
                                           but is not required to, include                          how they are managed within the                         circumstances will actually enhance,
                                           discussion of the role of the                            context of the fund’s investment                        rather than reduce the utility of the
                                           classification process, the 15% illiquid                 strategy. Accordingly, we are adopting                  process. Because funds will be required
                                           investment limit, and the HLIM in the                    these changes substantially as proposed                 to indicate which circumstance led to
                                           fund’s liquidity risk management                         with the modifications discussed above.                 their choice to split a classification, we
                                           process.                                                                                                         will be able to identify which positions
                                              As part of this new disclosure, a fund                B. Amendments to Liquidity Reporting
                                                                                                                                                            are split and why. This will allow us a
                                           might opt to discuss the particular                      Requirements
                                                                                                                                                            more fine-grained understanding of
                                           liquidity risks that it faced over the past                We also are adopting certain changes                  funds’ views of a position’s liquidity.
                                           year, such as significant redemptions,                   to Form N–PORT related to liquidity                     We also do not believe that we should
                                           changes in the overall market liquidity                  data. As discussed in the Proposing                     require a fund to consistently use a
                                           of the investments the fund holds, or                    Release, we believe these changes may                   single classification splitting approach
                                           other liquidity risks, and explain how                   enhance the liquidity data reported to                  for all its positions, as different
                                           those risks were managed and                             us.69 In addition, for some funds, these                positions may have different but equally
                                           addressed. If the fund faced any                         changes also may reduce cost burdens                    valid circumstances justifying a split
                                           significant liquidity challenges in the                  as they comply with the rule.                           classification.76
                                           past year, it would discuss how those                    1. Multiple Classification Categories                      In the first circumstance, even though
                                           challenges affected the fund and how                                                                             a holding may nominally be a single
                                           they were addressed (recognizing that                       We are adopting as proposed                          security, different liquidity-affecting
                                           this discussion may occur in the new                     amendments to Form N–PORT to allow                      features may justify treating the holding
                                           sub-section or the MDFP, as                              funds the option of splitting a fund’s                  as two or more separate investments for
                                           appropriate). In the new sub-section,                    holding into more than one                              liquidity classification purposes. For
                                           funds also may wish to provide context                   classification category in certain                      example, a fund might hold an asset that
                                           and other supplemental information                       specified circumstances.70 The                          includes a put option on a percentage
                                           about how liquidity risk is managed in                   requirement to classify each entire                     (but not all) of the fund’s holding of the
                                           relation to other investment risks of the                position into a single classification                   asset.77 Such a feature may significantly
                                           fund. Additionally, one commenter                        category poses difficulties for certain                 affect the liquidity characteristics of the
                                           suggested that funds can provide                         holdings and may not accurately reflect                 portion of the asset subject to the
                                           investors with useful empirical data                     the liquidity of that holding, or be                    feature, such that the fund believes that
                                           metrics that would be informative of the                 reflective of the liquidity risk                        the two portions of the asset should be
                                           fund’s liquidity profile.66 We agree and                 management practices of the fund.                       classified into different buckets.78
                                           believe that funds may include, as part                  Commenters generally supported these                       As discussed above, commenters
                                           of this new sub-section, a discussion of                 proposed amendments to Form N–                          generally agreed that such an
                                           other empirical data metrics such as the                 PORT, noting that they appreciated the                  amendment would allow funds to more
                                           fund’s bid-ask spreads, portfolio                        flexibility and better accuracy that may                accurately reflect their liquidity profile
                                           turnover, or shareholder concentration                   result.71 However, as discussed below,                  and report their holdings in a manner
                                           issues (if any) and their effect on the                  three commenters raised questions or                    more consistent with internal liquidity
                                           fund’s liquidity risk management.67                      suggested amendments related to the                     risk management programs.79 However,
                                           Overall, we believe that this disclosure                 third circumstance (‘‘full
                                           will provide context and an accessible                   liquidation’’) 72 and one questioned the                   75 See State Street Comment Letter; MSCI

                                           and useful explanation of the fund’s                     utility of the first two circumstances                  Comment Letter.
                                           liquidity risk in relation to its                        (‘‘differences in liquidity                                76 For example, a fund may have multiple sub-

                                                                                                    characteristics’’ and ‘‘differences in sub-             advisers that differ on position A’s classification,
                                           management practices and other                                                                                   and also have a different position that has
                                           investment risks as appropriate.                         adviser classifications’’).73                           differential liquidity characteristics for part of the
                                              We continue to believe, and                              Other commenters suggested that we                   position. We believe that requiring a fund to only
                                           commenters generally agreed, that this                   not allow funds to classify portions of                 use one of the circumstances in such a situation
                                                                                                    a portfolio holding separately because it               could result in worse, not better, data reported to
                                           new disclosure will better inform                                                                                us.
                                           investors about the fund’s liquidity risk                would ‘‘reduce the utility of the entire                   77 For example, if 30% of a holding is subject to

                                           management practices than aggregate                      bucketing exercise.’’ 74 Similarly, a few               a liquidity feature such as a put, and the other 70%
                                           liquidity classification data on Form N–                 commenters suggested that allowing                      is not, pursuant to the new Instructions to Item C.7
                                                                                                    funds to classify portions of a portfolio               of Form N–PORT, a fund may split the position,
                                           PORT.68 The shareholder report                                                                                   evaluate the sizes it reasonably anticipates trading
                                           disclosure provides funds the                            holding for some of their holdings could                for each portion of the holding that is subject to the
                                           opportunity to tailor the disclosure to                  lead to inconsistent interpretations of                 different liquidity characteristics, and classify each
                                           their specific liquidity risks, explain the              the fund’s classifications, and that we                 separate portion differently, as appropriate. The
                                                                                                    should instead require a fund to apply                  fund in such a case would use the classification
                                                                                                                                                            process laid out in rule 22e–4, but would apply it
                                           We believe that the conclusions in this report may                                                               separately to each portion of the holding that
                                                                                                      69 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at
                                           be largely consistent with the overall conclusions                                                               exhibits different liquidity characteristics.
                                           disclosed to investors in the shareholder report.        text accompanying n.50.                                    78 As another example, a fund might have
                                                                                                      70 See new Item C.7.b of Form N–PORT and
                                           Therefore, because funds will already need to                                                                    purchased a portion of an equity position through
                                           prepare a report on the program for purposes of          Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT. As             a private placement that makes those shares
                                                                                                    discussed above, Form N–PORT required a fund to
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                                           board reporting, we believe that the disclosure                                                                  restricted (and therefore illiquid) while also
                                           requirement we are adopting today would be               classify each holding into a single liquidity bucket.   purchasing additional shares of the same security
                                           unlikely to create significant additional burdens.         71 See IDC Comment Letter; Fidelity Comment
                                                                                                                                                            on the open market. In that case, certain shares of
                                             66 See MSCI Comment Letter.                            Letter; IAA Comment Letter.                             the same holding may have very different liquidity
                                             67 Id.                                                   72 SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; ICI Comment
                                                                                                                                                            characteristics.
                                             68 See e.g., SIFMA AMG Comment Letter;                 Letter; J.P Morgan Comment Letter.                         79 See, e.g., Comment Letter of ICE Data Services
                                                                                                      73 MSCI Comment Letter.
                                           Wellington Comment Letter; Fidelity Comment                                                                      (May 18, 2018) (‘‘ICE Comment Letter’’); Fidelity
                                           Letter; State Street Comment Letter.                       74 See MSCI Comment Letter.                           Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                    31865

                                           one commenter suggested that this                           Third, it is our understanding that for              classification splitting might be
                                           amendment would not be necessary, as                     internal risk management purposes                       appropriate. Commenters suggested that
                                           such differences in liquidity                            some funds may currently classify their                 we also allow certain methods of
                                           characteristics should already result in                 holdings proportionally across buckets,                 classification splitting when a fund’s
                                           the position being labeled as separate                   based on an assumed sale of the entire                  reasonably anticipated trade size falls
                                           positions on Form N–PORT.80 Form N–                      position.86 In such cases, it is our                    across multiple liquidity buckets.92 As
                                           PORT requires positions to be                            understanding that allowing a fund to                   discussed in the Liquidity Adopting
                                           categorized based on CUSIP or other                      have the option of reporting the position               Release, the reasonably anticipated
                                           identifier, and in many circumstances,                   assuming a full liquidation on Form N–                  trade size method for analyzing
                                           positions with differences in liquidity                  PORT would be more efficient and less                   positions replaced the full liquidation
                                           characteristics may have identical                       costly than using a single classification               approach that we originally proposed.93
                                           identifiers. Accordingly, we continue to                 category.87 We believe that in such                     Classifying liquidity based on
                                           believe that offering this flexibility is                cases, this form of reporting will not                  reasonably anticipated trading sizes
                                           appropriate and providing clarity that a                 impair the Commission’s monitoring                      allows for a simpler analytic process in
                                           position can be split in such a                          and oversight efforts as compared to our                some respects and avoids certain issues
                                           circumstance would be useful.                            approach of classifying based on ‘‘sizes                where a full liquidation analysis may
                                           Therefore, we are adopting this                          that the fund would reasonably                          create disparate results between funds
                                           amendment as proposed.                                   anticipate trading.’’ 88 Further, we                    of different sizes.94 However, it also is
                                              Second, it is our understanding that                  believe the approach, which allows, but                 an imperfect proxy for the actual
                                           when sub-advisers manage different                       does not require, funds to use the full                 liquidity characteristics of fund
                                           portions or ‘‘sleeves’’ of a fund’s                      liquidation/proportional approach, will                 investments, potentially skewing
                                           portfolio, sub-advisers may have                         maintain the quality of the information                 classifications to more liquid
                                           different views of the liquidity                         reported to us and potentially be less                  ‘‘buckets.’’ 95
                                           classification of a single holding that is               costly than the approach we adopted.89                     We believe that allowing funds to
                                           held in multiple sleeves.81 We believe                   Commenters generally agreed that                        split the reasonably anticipated trade
                                           that allowing a fund to report each sub-                 permitting the option to use such a full                size and use such a split in classifying
                                           adviser’s classification of the                          liquidation approach would be useful,90                 the rest of a fund’s position could
                                           proportional holding it manages, instead                 though one cautioned that it would not                  further exacerbate these imperfections,
                                           of putting the entire holding into a                     use such an approach in practice.91 This                leading to more distorted liquidity
                                           single category, will avoid the need for                 approach is optional, and therefore, if it              profiles for funds. The staff will
                                           costly reconciliation and may provide                    could have negative consequences such                   continue to evaluate potential other
                                           useful information to the Commission                     as inflating the fund’s illiquid                        approaches to liquidity risk
                                           on each sub-adviser’s determination                      investment bucket, a fund could choose                  management, including other
                                           about the investment’s liquidity.82                      not to use it. We are adopting this third               approaches to classifying fund liquidity.
                                              Commenters generally agreed that this                 circumstance as proposed.                               Interested parties may provide feedback
                                           flexibility would allow for these                           In the proposal, we also requested                   on the use of reasonably anticipated
                                           benefits.83 However, one commenter                       comment on other circumstances where                    trade size as part of classification, and
                                           suggested that splitting positions in this
                                                                                                                                                            whether we should consider any further
                                           circumstance would merely signal an                      reconciling classifications for sub-advisers when       modifications.
                                           inconsistency between sub-adviser                        reporting on Form N–PORT. As this is an option,
                                           models and would not provide useful                      not a requirement, the FAQ would still be relevant         Two commenters asked us to clarify
                                           information.84 We disagree, and believe                  for those funds that choose not to rely on the          that funds may use these classification-
                                                                                                    optional reporting method. The staff will amend the     splitting approaches not just for Form
                                           that getting more granular insight into                  FAQ accordingly.
                                           sub-advisers’ views on liquidity                            86 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at
                                                                                                                                                            N–PORT reporting, but for all
                                           positions may be informative in some                     n.54.                                                   classification purposes under rule 22e–
                                                                                                       87 See id., at n.55.
                                           circumstances. We also believe it is
                                                                                                       88 For example, a fund using the full liquidation      92 SIFMA Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter.
                                           appropriate to allow this flexibility to
                                                                                                    approach and holding $100 million in Asset A            For example, if a fund had a $100 million position,
                                           avoid unnecessary costs associated with                  could determine that it would be able to convert to     and a reasonably anticipated trade size of $10
                                           the reconciliation process. Therefore,                   cash $30 million of it in 1–3 days, but could only      million, the fund might determine that $4 million
                                           we are adopting this amendment as                        convert the remaining $70 million to cash in 3–7        of that trade size would fall in the highly liquid
                                           proposed.85                                              days. This fund could choose to split the liquidity     asset bucket, and $6 million would fall in the
                                                                                                    classification of the holding on Form N–PORT and        moderately liquid asset bucket. Commenters
                                                                                                    report an allocation of 30% of Asset A in the Highly    differed on how funds should classify the
                                             80 MSCI    Comment Letter.                             Liquid category and 70% of Asset A in the               remainder of the position ($90 million) in this
                                             81 See  Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at       Moderately Liquid category. Such a fund would not       circumstance.
                                           text preceding n.53.                                     use sizes that it reasonably anticipates trading when     93 Liquidity Adopting Release, supra footnote 2.
                                              82 Similar to the ‘‘differences in liquidity          engaging in this analysis, but instead would assume       94 Id. (discussing commenters’ concerns that the
                                           characteristics’’ examples discussed above, the fund     liquidation of the whole position. See Proposing        full liquidation method ‘‘could result in large funds’
                                           effectively will be treating the portions of the         Release, supra footnote 10, at n.56.                    portfolio liquidity appearing artificially low
                                           holding managed by different sub-advisers as if they        89 As discussed in the economic analysis below,
                                                                                                                                                            compared to smaller funds because large funds are
                                           were two separate and distinct investments, and          allowing classification in multiple categories may      more likely to hold larger positions and determine
                                           bucketing them accordingly. See new Instructions         be less costly if it better aligns with current fund    that they could not quickly liquidate these positions
                                           to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT.                              systems or allows funds to avoid incurring costs        entirely without a value impact’’).
                                              83 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter, ICE         related to the need to develop systems and                95 For example, a fund with a $100 million
                                           Comment Letter.                                          processes to allocate each holding to exactly one       position might determine that it could sell $10
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                                              84 MSCI Comment Letter.                               classification bucket.                                  million in 1–3 days and the rest in 4–7 days using
                                              85 These amendments also would have the effect           90 ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment
                                                                                                                                                            the full liquidation approach. However, using the
                                           of making inapplicable staff FAQ 8 on the liquidity      Letter; MSCI Comment Letter.                            reasonably anticipated trade size proxy, it might
                                           rule for funds that choose to rely on this option. See      91 J.P. Morgan Comment Letter (explaining that a     determine $10 million was a reasonable trade size,
                                           Liquidity Staff FAQs, available at https://              full liquidation approach may result in negative        and because it could sell that in 1–3 days, the fund
                                           www.sec.gov/investment/investment-company-               consequences, by for example, inflating the amount      would be permitted to bucket the entire position in
                                           liquidity-risk-management-programs-faq. FAQ 8            of illiquid assets in a fund based solely on the        the highly liquid category potentially skewing the
                                           provides guidance for funds on the process of            calculation method used).                               classification to a more liquid bucket.



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                                           31866               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           4.96 The requirement to assign a                         2. Disclosure of Cash and Cash                            picture of a fund’s holdings.106
                                           position into a single bucket is specific                Equivalents                                               However, two commenters were
                                           to Form N–PORT.97 Rule 22e–4(b)(ii)                                                                                concerned about potential investor
                                           requires funds to classify their positions                  We also are adopting as proposed                       confusion if they interpreted this item
                                           among four categories for liquidity risk                 amendments to Form N–PORT to                              as the totality of a fund’s highly liquid
                                           management purposes, but does not                        require additional disclosure relating to                 investments.107 They were concerned
                                           require positions to be put into a single                a registrant’s holdings of cash and cash                  that investors could mistakenly believe
                                           category. Accordingly, we clarify that                   equivalents not reported in Parts C and                   that a fund’s ability to meet redemption
                                           funds following the classification                       D of the Form.102 This disclosure will be                 requests depended only on these cash
                                           splitting approaches delineated on Form                  made publicly available each quarter.103                  holdings.108 One such commenter asked
                                           N–PORT may apply such splitting more                     Form N–PORT currently does not                            that the Commission make this item
                                           generally in their classification                        require registrants to specifically report                non-public to avoid these concerns,109
                                           processes under rule 22e–4.                              the amount of cash and cash equivalents                   while another suggested changing the
                                              While we believe that we should                       held by the registrant. As we noted in                    title of the item to further clarify that a
                                           permit funds to report liquidity                         the Reporting Modernization Adopting                      fund may report cash equivalents in
                                           classifications in the three ways                        Release, Part C of Form N–PORT was                        response to other items on the form.110
                                           discussed above, we also continue to                     designed to require registrants to report                    While we appreciate the concerns for
                                           believe it is necessary to limit split                   certain information on an investment-                     investor confusion, we believe that the
                                           reporting to these circumstances in                      by-investment basis about each                            title of the item makes clear that it
                                           order to maintain the effectiveness of                   investment held by the registrant.104                     covers only cash and cash equivalents
                                           our monitoring efforts. As we stated in                  However, cash and certain cash                            not reported in other parts of the form,
                                           the Proposing Release, we believe that                   equivalents are not considered an                         and therefore investors would be on
                                           allowing funds to engage in such split                   investment on Form N–PORT, and                            notice that this item does not
                                           reporting under these circumstances                      therefore registrants are not required to                 necessarily include all cash or cash
                                           will allow for a more precise view of the                report them in Part C of the Form as an                   equivalents held by the fund. We also
                                           liquidity of these securities.98 Because                 investment. Similarly, Part B.1 of Form                   note that funds may provide further
                                           funds that choose to classify across                     N–PORT (assets and liabilities) will                      public explanations about their cash
                                           multiple categories under this approach                  require information about a registrant’s                  holdings as part of the explanatory notes
                                           will be required to indicate which of the                assets and liabilities, but does not                      associated with the item.
                                           circumstances led to the split                           require specific disclosure of a                             We are therefore adopting as proposed
                                           classification, we will be able to monitor               registrant’s holdings of cash and cash                    amendments to Item B.2 of Form N–
                                           more effectively the liquidity of a fund’s               equivalents.105                                           PORT (certain assets and liabilities) to
                                           portfolio and determine the                                                                                        include a new Item B.2.f, which will
                                                                                                       Cash held by a fund is a highly liquid
                                           circumstances leading to the                                                                                       require registrants to report ‘‘cash and
                                                                                                    investment under rule 22e–4 and would
                                           classification. Therefore, we are                                                                                  cash equivalents not reported in Parts C
                                                                                                    have been included in the aggregate
                                           amending Item C.7 of Form N–PORT to                                                                                and D.’’ Current U.S. Generally
                                                                                                    liquidity profile that we are eliminating.
                                           provide funds the option of splitting the                                                                          Accepted Accounting Principles
                                                                                                    Without the aggregate liquidity profile,
                                           classification categories reported for                                                                             (‘‘GAAP’’) define cash equivalents as
                                                                                                    we may not be able to effectively
                                           their investments on a percentage basis                                                                            ‘‘short-term, highly liquid investments
                                                                                                    monitor whether a fund is compliant
                                           in these specified circumstances.99 We                                                                             that . . . are . . . [r]eadily convertible to
                                                                                                    with its HLIM unless we know the
                                           are also adopting new Instructions to                                                                              known amounts of cash . . . [and that
                                                                                                    amount of cash held by the fund. The
                                           Item C.7 that explain the specified                                                                                are] [s]o near their maturity that they
                                                                                                    additional disclosure of cash and certain                 present insignificant risk of changes in
                                           circumstances where a fund may split                     cash equivalents by funds also will
                                           classification categories.100 In addition,                                                                         value because of changes in interest
                                                                                                    provide more complete information to                      rates.’’ 111 However, we understand that
                                           we are adopting new Item C.7.b, which                    be used in analyzing a fund’s HLIM, as
                                           will require funds taking advantage of                                                                             certain categories of investments
                                                                                                    well as trends regarding the amount of                    currently reported on Part C of Form N–
                                           the option to attribute multiple                         cash being held, which also correlates to
                                           classifications to a holding to note                                                                               PORT (schedule of portfolio
                                                                                                    other activities the fund is experiencing,                investments) could be reasonably
                                           which of the circumstances led the fund                  including net inflows and outflows.
                                           to split the classifications of the                                                                                considered by some registrants as cash
                                           holdings.101                                                Most commenters who discussed this                     equivalents. For example, Item C.4 of
                                                                                                    addition supported it. They agreed that                   Form N–PORT requires registrants to
                                             96 SIFMA    Comment Letter; ICI Comment Letter.        providing this information is necessary                   identify asset type, including ‘‘short-
                                             97 See  Item C.7 of Form N–PORT.                       for the Commission’s monitoring of a                      term investment vehicle (e.g., money
                                              98 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at       fund’s HLIM, and that this information                    market fund, liquidity pool, or other
                                           text accompanying n.58.                                  would help provide a more complete                        cash management vehicle),’’ which
                                              99 Revised Item C.7 of Form N–PORT and new

                                           Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT. Funds
                                                                                                                                                              could reasonably be categorized by
                                           that choose not to take advantage of these options       explanatory notes section of Form N–PORT. See             some registrants as a cash equivalent. In
                                           may continue to use the approach laid out in the         Part E of Form N–PORT.                                    order to ensure the amount reported
                                                                                                      102 See supra footnote 21.
                                           final rule of bucketing an entire position based on                                                                under Item B.2.f is accurate and does
                                           the liquidity of the sizes the fund would reasonably       103 See new Item B.2.f of Form N–PORT.

                                           anticipate trading.                                        104 See Reporting Modernization Adopting
                                                                                                                                                                106 ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment
                                              100 Revised Item C.7 of Form N–PORT and new           Release, supra footnote 2. Part D of Form N–PORT
                                                                                                                                                              Letter; IDC Comment Letter.
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                                           Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT. These           requires the disclosure of miscellaneous securities.        107 See, e.g., Fidelity Comment Letter.
                                           instructions provide an explanation for how funds          105 In addition to cash, a registrant’s disclosure of
                                                                                                                                                                108 SIFMA AMG Comment Letter; Fidelity
                                           that choose to take advantage of split reporting         total assets on Part B.1.a. also could include certain
                                           should implement it.                                     non-cash assets that are not investments of the           Comment Letter.
                                              101 New Item C.7.b of Form N–PORT. A fund may                                                                     109 SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.
                                                                                                    registrant, such as receivables for portfolio
                                                                                                                                                                110 Fidelity Comment Letter.
                                           also choose to provide (but is not required to)          investments sold, interest receivable on portfolio
                                           additional context on its process for classifying        investments, and receivables for shares of the              111 See FASB Accounting Standards Codification

                                           portions of the same holding differently in the          registrant.                                               Master Glossary.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                      31867

                                           not double count items that are more                     those required by the rule.118 They                           Today, we are modifying certain
                                           appropriately reported in Parts C                        stated that this results in duplication of                 aspects of our liquidity framework,
                                           (Schedule of portfolio investments) and                  effort and wasted resources, and                           largely as proposed. However, we
                                           D (Miscellaneous securities) of Form N–                  suggested that replacing the                               recognize that a broad range of
                                           PORT, we are requiring registrants to                    classification provisions with a                           commenters continue to believe that
                                           only include the cash and cash                           principles-based approach would                            alternative approaches to classification
                                           equivalents not reported in those                        reduce burdens on funds and investors                      would better achieve the Commission’s
                                           sections.112                                             while still ensuring effective liquidity                   goals. Accordingly, during and
                                                                                                    risk management practices by funds.119                     following the implementation of the
                                           C. Treasury Asset Management Report                      We note that funds that believe they                       rule and reporting requirements, the
                                           and Evaluation of Other Approaches                       would have to maintain dual liquidity                      staff will continue its efforts to monitor
                                              In its 2017 Asset Management and                      classification programs as part of their                   and solicit feedback on implementation.
                                           Insurance Report, the Department of                      liquidity risk management may choose                       As part of this monitoring, the staff will
                                           Treasury highlighted the importance of                   to seek an exemption from the                              analyze the extent to which the liquidity
                                           robust liquidity risk management                         Commission from the classification                         classification process and data are
                                           programs, but recommended that the                       requirements of rule 22e–4 if they                         achieving the Commission’s goals and
                                           Commission embrace a ‘‘principles-                       believe that their existing systems                        any other feedback provided from
                                           based approach to liquidity risk                         would effectively accomplish the                           interested parties to the Commission.125
                                           management rulemaking and any                            Commission’s stated goals.120                              The staff will then inform the
                                           associated bucketing requirements.’’ 113                    One commenter acknowledged that                         Commission what steps, if any, the staff
                                           The proposal requested comment on                        moving to a principles based approach                      recommends in light of this monitoring.
                                           whether there were advantages to the                     would come at a cost, for example,                            We expect that this evaluation will
                                           Treasury report’s suggested approach                     because it would limit the                                 include, at a minimum: (i) The costs and
                                           and, if so, what additional steps should                 Commission’s ability to compare fund                       benefits of rule 22e–4 and its associated
                                           be taken to shift towards a more                         reporting in an ‘‘apples-to-apples’’                       classification requirements; (ii) whether
                                           principles-based approach.114                            manner.121 However, that commenter                         there should be public dissemination of
                                              We received many comments that                        stated that such a cost would be                           fund-specific liquidity classification
                                           suggested alternative approaches to                      worthwhile in light of the benefits and                    information; (iii) whether the
                                           liquidity risk management regulation.115                 cost savings associated with allowing                      Commission should propose
                                           Most of these commenters saw little                      funds to continue to manage liquidity in                   amendments to rule 22e–4 to move to a
                                           benefit in the classification provisions                 the way they believed was most                             more principles-based approach in light
                                           of rule 22e–4, and associated                            appropriate for their funds.122 Another                    of this evaluation; (iv) and whether the
                                           requirements such as the HLIM.116                        commenter disagreed that moving to a                       Commission should propose to require
                                           Some stated that if requirements related                 principles-based approach was                              certain empirical data metrics be
                                           to classification were removed or if we                  appropriate.123 One commenter also                         disclosed.126
                                           allowed funds to design their own                        pointed to additional costs associated                        To properly engage in such an
                                           classification systems, the funds could                  with moving to such a principles based                     evaluation and to ground it on an
                                           define what qualifies as a highly liquid                 approach in light of the expense and                       empirical basis, we believe it is
                                           asset and an illiquid asset.117 Several of               effort incurred already to comply with                     important for funds and the
                                           these commenters noted that they                         the rule.124                                               Commission to gain experience with the
                                           already have liquidity risk management                                                                              classification process, to allow analysis
                                                                                                       118 See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter; Vanguard
                                           practices in place that differ from the                                                                             of its benefits and costs based on actual
                                                                                                    Comment Letter.
                                           specific classification requirements of                     119 See, e.g., T. Rowe Comment Letter (‘‘We
                                                                                                                                                               practice.127 Accordingly, we expect that
                                           rule 22e–4, and that they expected to                    believe that the bucketing requirement goes beyond         this staff evaluation will take into
                                           maintain their own processes alongside                   what is necessary for a robust risk management             account at least one full year’s worth of
                                                                                                    regime, and will ultimately prove to be of limited         liquidity classification data from large
                                                                                                    additional utility to fund managers, fund boards,
                                              112 We also are adopting other amendments to
                                                                                                    and fund shareholders.’’).
                                                                                                                                                               and small entities.128
                                           Form N–PORT as proposed. In particular, we are              120 The Commission would evaluate appropriate              We welcome public feedback as part
                                           amending General Instruction F (Public                   terms and conditions for any exemption under the           of this evaluation, and have set up an
                                           Availability) to remove the phrase ‘‘of this form’’
                                           from parenthetical references to Item B.7 and Part
                                                                                                    standard set forth in Section 6(c) of the Investment       email inbox where funds, investors, or
                                                                                                    Company Act.                                               other interested parties may submit
                                           D for consistency with other parenthetical cross            121 See ICI Comment Letter.
                                           references in the Form. We also are amending Part           122 Id.
                                           F (Exhibits) to fix a typographical error in the                                                                    22e–4 should not deter the Commission from
                                                                                                       123 AFR Comment Letter (‘‘[W]e continue to
                                           citation to Regulation S–X. In addition, for                                                                        moving to a principles-based approach. See
                                           consistency with the amendments we are adopting,         believe the Commission should require granular
                                                                                                                                                               Vanguard Comment Letter.
                                           we are adding Item B.8 (Derivative Transactions) to      information about the liquidity classifications of           125 See infra footnote 129 and accompanying text.
                                           General Instruction F.                                   individual assets; provide strong oversight of fund
                                                                                                                                                                 126 See supra section II.A.2.
                                              113 See A financial System That Creates Economic      liquidity classifications; or strengthen and enforce
                                                                                                                                                                 127 Retrospective review of regulations is often
                                                                                                    the 15 percent illiquid investments limit.’’).
                                           Opportunities; Asset Management and Insurance,              124 See BlackRock Comment Letter (‘‘Any material        viewed as a best practice in federal agency
                                           U.S. Department of the Treasury (Oct. 2017)                                                                         rulemaking. See e.g., Government Accountability
                                           available at https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/      changes to the requirements of fund managers
                                                                                                    under rule 22e–4 at this point in time would have          Office, Opportunities remain for OMB to improve
                                           press-releases/Documents/A-Financial-System-                                                                        the transparency of rulemaking processes (Mar.
                                           That-Creates-Economic-Opportunities-Asset_               a cost of its own that would need to be factored in.
                                                                                                    We believe the proposed refinements to the                 2016), available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/680/
                                           Management-Insurance.pdf.                                                                                           675810.pdf (‘‘We have long advocated the potential
                                                                                                    disclosure associated with rule 22e–4 would be
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                                              114 See Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at
                                                                                                    sufficient to address the material concerns raised by      usefulness to Congress, agencies, and the public of
                                           n.49.                                                    the industry, which were reflected in the Treasury         conducting retrospective regulatory analyses.’’).
                                              115 See, e.g., Federated Comment Letter; Fidelity                                                                  128 One commenter argued that any such review
                                                                                                    report recommendation, without materially altering
                                           Comment Letter; Vanguard Comment Letter.                 the rule at this late stage (a development that would      of liquidity data should take into account a full
                                              116 See, e.g., Fidelity Comment Letter; Vanguard
                                                                                                    be counterproductive at this time.’’)). Conversely,        year’s worth of data at a minimum, and preferably
                                           Comment Letter.                                          one commenter cautioned the Commission from                more, to ensure that the data includes stressed
                                              117 See, e.g., J.P. Morgan Comment Letter;            falling victim to the ‘‘sunk cost fallacy’’ arguing that   periods and other fund outflows. See ICI Comment
                                           Vanguard Comment Letter.                                 the costs incurred already in complying with rule          Letter.



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                                           31868               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           information, now and during the first                                instead of classification information,                                    time so that funds have at least a full
                                           year of reporting, to help assist the staff                          would investors (or the Commission) be                                    year’s experience with the liquidity risk
                                           and the Commission.129 In particular,                                better able to evaluate fund liquidity                                    management program before including
                                           we would appreciate information about                                through public disclosure of empirical                                    the new narrative disclosure in their
                                           the following subjects.                                              data such as bid-ask spreads of portfolio                                 shareholder report.
                                              • To what extent will funds continue                              securities, portfolio turnover, or                                           A number of commenters argued that
                                           to maintain separate liquidity risk                                  shareholder concentration measures?                                       the first time a fund includes the new
                                           management processes and practices                                      • If we were to propose amendments                                     narrative disclosure on the operation of
                                           alongside those required by the                                      to rule 22e–4 to move to a more                                           a fund’s liquidity risk management
                                           classification provisions of rule 22e–4?                             principles-based approach, would the                                      program, it should have at least a year’s
                                           What costs are associated with                                       benefits of such a new approach                                           experience operating a liquidity risk
                                           maintaining such dual systems? Are                                   outweigh the costs of implementation?                                     management program under the rule.134
                                           there synergies or other benefits that                               On what principles should we base such                                    We agree. Therefore, we are providing
                                           would result? Do funds expect to                                     an approach?                                                              additional time so that funds would not
                                           eventually combine existing systems                                     Finally, as we discussed in the                                        need to comply with the new
                                           and rule 22e–4 classification programs                               proposal, our staff anticipates                                           shareholder report amendments to Form
                                           over time, or do they expect to keep                                 publishing a periodic report containing                                   N–1A until they have had their liquidity
                                           them separate?                                                       aggregated and anonymized information                                     risk management programs in effect for
                                              • Were the implementation and                                     about the fund industry’s liquidity may                                   a full year. We have provided additional
                                           ongoing cost estimates and assumptions                               be beneficial. One commenter objected,                                    time for funds to comply with certain
                                           made in adopting rule 22e–4 and rule                                 arguing that even aggregated and                                          aspects of the liquidity risk management
                                           and form amendments accurate? In                                     anonymized classification data would                                      program (classification and related
                                           particular, were the assumptions made                                still be derived from the same disparate                                  elements).135 As result, we expect that
                                           about vendor usage and associated costs                              and subjective inputs, and accordingly                                    only the aspects of the liquidity risk
                                           correct considering the widespread use                               may be of limited value to the                                            management program operation and
                                           of vendors (as opposed to in-house                                   Commission or the public.130 As part of                                   effectiveness that are legally required to
                                           systems) that we understand has taken                                the staff evaluation noted in the                                         be in place need be discussed during the
                                           place?                                                               proposal and discussed above, we                                          first reporting cycle.
                                              • What benefits have investors, funds,                            expect that our staff will consider                                          However, we are not changing the
                                           and the markets gained from liquidity                                whether publishing such aggregated and                                    compliance date for the Form N–PORT
                                           classification, including matters                                    anonymized classification data would                                      amendments from the proposal. Most
                                           associated with classification such as                               be useful, and include a                                                  commenters did not object to the
                                           the HLIM and the illiquid investment                                 recommendation as part of that                                            proposed Form N–PORT compliance
                                           limit? Is there a way to retain these                                evaluation as to whether the staff should                                 dates, although a few asked that funds
                                           benefits while moving to a more                                      publish such a periodic report.131                                        be provided at least one year from
                                           principles-based system? Do certain                                                                                                            adoption to implement the changes to
                                           aspects of the classification process,                               D. Compliance Dates                                                       Form N–PORT.136 We believe that we
                                           such as the classification of illiquid                                  As proposed, we are providing a                                        are adopting this change sufficiently in
                                           investments and/or the classification of                             tiered set of compliance dates based on                                   advance that funds should be able to
                                           highly liquid investments, generate                                  asset size.132 However, in a change from                                  implement this change without
                                           greater benefits than others?                                        the proposal, we are not aligning the                                     difficulty, and accordingly are not
                                              • To what extent would investors and                              compliance date for the amendments to                                     amending the proposed compliance
                                           others benefit from public liquidity                                 Form N–1A we are adopting today with                                      dates for Form N–PORT.
                                           classification information? Are there                                the revised compliance dates we                                              Below is a chart that describes the
                                           other types of information that may                                  previously adopted for the liquidity-                                     compliance dates for the Form N–PORT
                                           allow investors to better understand the                             related portions of Form N–PORT.133                                       and Form N–1A amendments that we
                                           liquidity of their funds? For example,                               Instead, we are providing additional                                      are adopting today.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      First N–PORT
                                                                                                                                                                         Compliance Date                                                 filing date

                                           Form N–PORT:
                                               Large Entities    .....................................................................   June 1, 2019 ............................................................................   July 30, 2019.
                                               Small Entities   ......................................................................   March 1, 2020 ..........................................................................    April 30, 2020.
                                           Form N: 137
                                               Large Entities    .....................................................................   Dec. 1, 2019.
                                               Small Entities   ......................................................................   June 1, 2020.
                                             137 Funds that distribute annual or semi-annual shareholder reports after the compliance dates discussed above would be subject to the new
                                           requirement.


                                             129 Email:  IM-Liquidity@sec.gov.                                    132 ‘‘Larger entities’’ are defined as funds that,                      fiscal year. See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra
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                                             130 ICIComment Letter.                                             together with other investment companies in the                           footnote 2, at n.997.
                                             131 Staff from the Division of Investment                          same ‘‘group of related investment companies,’’                              133 See Liquidity Extension Release, supra
                                                                                                                have net assets of $1 billion or more as of the end                       footnote 8.
                                           Management as well as staff from the Division of                     of the most recent fiscal year of the fund. ‘‘Smaller                        134 See, e.g., ICI Comment Letter.
                                           Economic and Risk Analysis also may publish ad                       entities’’ are defined as funds that, together with
                                                                                                                                                                                             135 Liquidity Extension Release, supra footnote 8.
                                           hoc papers on fund liquidity based on Form N–                        other investment companies in the same group of
                                                                                                                                                                                             136 ICI Comment Letter; State Street Comment
                                           PORT liquidity data.                                                 related investment companies, have net assets of
                                                                                                                less than $1 billion as of the end of its most recent                     Letter.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                   31869

                                           III. Economic Analysis                                   data and investors have not yet received                Second, the amendments require funds
                                                                                                    aggregate portfolio classification                      and other registrants to report to the
                                           A. Introduction
                                                                                                    disclosures from funds. Accordingly,                    Commission, on a non-public basis, the
                                              The Commission is sensitive to the                    the baseline does not include                           amount of cash and cash equivalents in
                                           potential economic effects of the                        experience on the part of the                           their portfolio on Form N–PORT on a
                                           amendments to Form N–PORT and                            Commission or investors with                            monthly basis and to publicly disclose
                                           Form N–1A that we are adopting. These                    interpreting or analyzing the                           this amount on a quarterly basis with a
                                           effects include the benefits and costs to                quantitative data that will be reported                 60-day delay through EDGAR. Finally,
                                           funds, their investors and investment                    on Form N–PORT.                                         the amendments require a fund to
                                           advisers, issuers of the portfolio                          The primary SEC-regulated entities                   provide a narrative description of the
                                           securities in which funds invest, and                    affected by these amendments are                        fund’s liquidity risk management
                                           other market participants potentially                    mutual funds and ETFs. As of the end                    program’s operation and effectiveness in
                                           affected by fund and investor behavior                   of 2017, there were 9,154 mutual funds                  an unstructured format in the fund’s
                                           as well as any effects on efficiency,                    managing assets of approximately $19                    shareholder report.144 Most commenters
                                           competition, and capital formation.                      trillion,141 and there were 1,832 ETFs                  generally supported rescinding the
                                                                                                    managing assets of approximately $3.4                   requirement for quarterly public
                                           B. Economic Baseline                                     trillion.142 Other potentially affected                 disclosure of aggregate liquidity
                                              The costs and benefits of the                         parties include investors, investment                   classification information on Form N–
                                           amendments as well as any impact on                      advisers that advise funds, issuers of the              PORT, adopting the requirement for
                                           efficiency, competition, and capital                     securities in which these funds invest,                 funds to disclose their cash and cash
                                           formation are considered relative to an                  and other market participants that could                equivalents on Form N–PORT, and
                                           economic baseline. For the purposes of                   be affected by fund and investor                        requiring funds to provide a narrative
                                           this economic analysis, the baseline is                  behavior.                                               discussion in the shareholder report.145
                                           the regulatory framework and liquidity                                                                              Funds and other registrants will
                                                                                                    C. Economic Impacts
                                           risk management practices currently in                                                                           experience benefits and costs associated
                                           effect, and any expected changes to                         We are mindful of the costs and                      with the amendments to public
                                           liquidity risk management practices,                     benefits of the amendments to Form N–                   disclosure requirements on Form N–
                                           including any systems and processes                      PORT and Form N–1A we are adopting.                     PORT. Funds will no longer incur the
                                           that funds have already implemented in                   The Commission, where possible, has                     one-time and ongoing costs associated
                                           order to comply with the liquidity rule                  sought to quantify the benefits and                     with preparing the portion of Form N–
                                           and related requirements as anticipated                  costs, and effects on efficiency,                       PORT associated with the aggregate
                                           in the Liquidity Adopting Release and                    competition and capital formation                       liquidity profile. These costs likely
                                           the Liquidity Extension Release.138                      expected to result from these                           would have constituted a small portion
                                              The economic baseline’s regulatory                    amendments. However, as discussed                       of the aggregate one-time costs of $158
                                           framework consists of the rule                           below, the Commission is unable to                      million and the ongoing costs of $3.9
                                           requirements adopted by the                              quantify certain of the economic effects                million for Form N–PORT that we
                                           Commission on October 13, 2016 in the                    because it lacks information necessary                  estimated in the Liquidity Adopting
                                           Liquidity Adopting Release. Under the                    to provide reasonable estimates. The
                                                                                                                                                            Release.146 At the same time, funds and
                                           baseline, larger entities must comply                    economic effects of the amendments fall
                                                                                                                                                            other registrants will also incur
                                           with some of the liquidity rule’s                        into two categories: (1) Effects stemming
                                                                                                                                                            additional costs, relative to the baseline,
                                           requirements, such as the establishment                  from changes to public disclosure on
                                                                                                                                                            associated with the adoption of the
                                           of a liquidity risk management program,                  Form N–PORT and Form N–1A; (2)
                                                                                                                                                            requirement that they report their
                                           by December 1, 2018 and must comply                      effects stemming from changes to non-
                                                                                                                                                            holdings of cash and cash equivalents
                                           with other requirements, such as the                     public disclosure on Form N–PORT.
                                                                                                                                                            on Form N–PORT. Because funds and
                                           classification of portfolio holdings, by                 Changes to Public Disclosure                            other registrants are already preparing
                                           June 1, 2019.139 Smaller entities must                                                                           Form N–PORT and already need to keep
                                                                                                       The amendments to Form N–PORT
                                           comply with some of the liquidity rule’s                                                                         track of their cash and cash equivalents
                                                                                                    and Form N–1A we are adopting alter
                                           requirements by June 1, 2019 and other
                                                                                                    the public disclosure of information
                                           requirements by December 1, 2019.140                                                                                144 The Commission will continue to receive non-
                                                                                                    about fund liquidity in three ways. First,
                                           Because these compliance dates have                      the amendments rescind the
                                                                                                                                                            public position level liquidity information on Form
                                           not yet occurred, the Commission has                                                                             N–PORT.
                                                                                                    requirement that funds publicly disclose                   145 See Fidelity Comment Letter; J.P. Morgan
                                           not yet received portfolio classification                their aggregate liquidity profile on a                  Comment Letter; State Street Comment Letter; ICI
                                                                                                    quarterly basis with a 60-day delay in                  Comment Letter; SIFMA Comment Letter; Vanguard
                                             138 See   supra footnotes 2 and 8.                                                                             Comment Letter. One commenter recommended a
                                             139 See   supra footnote 136 for a detailed
                                                                                                    structured format on Form N–PORT.143                    delay in compliance to any changes to Form N–
                                           description of larger and smaller entities. The                                                                  PORT or the reporting requirement of cash and cash
                                                                                                       141 See ICI, 2018 ICI Fact Book (58th ed., 2018)
                                           compliance date for some of the requirements                                                                     equivalents. See State Street Comment Letter. The
                                           related to portfolio holding classification was          (‘‘2018 ICI Fact Book’’), available at https://         Commission changed the compliance dates for the
                                           delayed. See the Liquidity Extension Release, supra      www.ici.org/pdf/2018_factbook.pdf, at nn.52, 208,       Form N–1A requirements from what it proposed, as
                                           footnote 8, for a more detailed discussion of the        212. The number of mutual funds includes funds          discussed above in section II.D above.
                                           requirements that were delayed.                          that primarily invest in other mutual funds but            146 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra
                                              140 In a change from the proposal, we are not         excludes 382 money-market funds.                        footnote 2, at nn.1188–1191. We estimated the total
                                                                                                       142 See 2018 ICI Fact Book, supra footnote 145, at
                                           aligning the compliance dates for the amendments                                                                 one-time costs associated with the rule’s disclosure
                                           to Form N–1A with those for Form N–PORT, as              nn.218, 219.                                            and reporting requirements on Form N–PORT as
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                                           discussed above in section II.D. As a result, funds         143 See supra footnote 1 for a definition of         being approximately $55 million for funds that will
                                           would not need to comply with the new Form N–            ‘‘funds.’’ The requirement to publicly disclose         file reports on Form N–PORT in house and
                                           1A amendments until they have had their liquidity        aggregate liquidity profiles does not apply to funds    approximately $103 million for funds that will use
                                           risk management program in effect for a full year.       that are In-Kind ETFs under the baseline, so it is      a third-party service provider. Similarly, we
                                           Moving the compliance date could provide benefits        only rescinded for funds that are not In-Kind ETFs.     estimated the total ongoing annual costs as being
                                           to funds relative to the proposal as they should be      In-Kind ETFs are included as funds that provide a       approximately $1.6 million for funds filing reports
                                           able to implement changes to shareholder reports         narrative description of their liquidity risk           in house and $2.3 million for funds that will use
                                           with less difficulty.                                    management program pursuant to Form N–1A.               a third-party service provider.



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                                           31870               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           for valuation purposes, we expect that                   effectiveness of a fund’s liquidity                     interpreted differently by different
                                           these additional costs will not be                       management programs be part of the                      funds, aggregate liquidity profiles may
                                           significant.                                             fund’s shareholder report (annual or                    not have been comparable across funds.
                                              In aggregate, we expect any additional                semi-annual) in the section following                   Therefore, rescinding the aggregate
                                           costs associated with the requirement                    the discussion of board approval of                     liquidity profile requirement may
                                           that funds and other registrants disclose                advisory contracts.152 Moving the                       reduce the likelihood that investors
                                           their holdings of cash and cash                          narrative disclosure from the MDFP to                   make investment choices based on any
                                           equivalents to be offset by the savings                  this section of the shareholder report                  confusion about how the fund’s
                                           associated with funds no longer having                   will allow funds to align the production                liquidity risk profile should be
                                           to report an aggregate liquidity profile.                of the narrative disclosure with the                    interpreted.156 Further, the narrative
                                           Therefore, we expect that funds and                      review of the liquidity risk management                 discussion in shareholder reports may
                                           other registrants will not experience a                  practices by the fund’s board of                        mitigate any reduction in investors’
                                           significant net economic effect                          directors, which may reduce costs to                    ability to make more informed
                                           associated with the direct costs of filing               funds relative to the proposal by                       investment choices, though this
                                           Form N–PORT.147 Additionally, to the                     allowing funds to avail themselves of                   disclosure will be less frequent than the
                                           extent that any risk of herding or                       any efficiencies from the overlap                       quarterly public disclosure of aggregate
                                           correlated trading would exist if funds                  between these requirements.153                          liquidity profiles that was previously
                                           executed trades in order to make their                      Investors will also experience costs                 adopted and will provide information
                                           aggregate liquidity profiles appear more                 and benefits as a result of the changes                 about a fund’s liquidity risk
                                           liquid to investors, rescinding the                      to public disclosure requirements on                    management rather than the aggregate
                                           requirement that funds publicly disclose                 Form N–PORT and Form N–1A that we                       liquidity profile of the fund’s
                                           an aggregate liquidity profile will                      are adopting.154 To the extent that                     investments.157
                                           mitigate such risk.148                                   aggregate liquidity profiles within the                    As discussed above, the compliance
                                              Relative to the baseline, funds will                  structured format of Form N–PORT                        date for rule 22e–4 and related reporting
                                           incur costs associated with preparing an                 could have helped certain investors                     on Form N–PORT has not yet occurred
                                           annual narrative discussion of their                     make more informed investment choices                   and the Commission has not yet
                                           liquidity risk management programs in                    that match their liquidity risk                         received portfolio classification data
                                           the fund’s shareholder report. We                        preferences, rescinding the aggregate                   from funds, nor is aggregated liquidity
                                           estimate that funds will incur aggregate                 liquidity profile requirement will                      classification information currently
                                           one-time costs of approximately $18                      reduce those investors’ ability to make                 being made public. As a result, the
                                           million and aggregate ongoing costs of                   more informed investment choices.155                    Commission’s assessment of the costs
                                           approximately $9 million in preparing                    However, to the extent that portfolio                   and benefits of these changes is,
                                           this narrative discussion.149 Several                    holding classifications incorporate                     necessarily, informed by qualitative
                                           commenters suggested excluding funds                     subjective factors that may be                          concerns, together with what we know
                                           that primarily hold highly liquid                                                                                about the subjectivity of inputs,
                                           investments from providing the                              152 However, as discussed in section II.A.2 above,   assumptions, and methods that funds
                                                                                                    funds should include in the MDFP a discussion of        are likely to utilize in classifying
                                           narrative discussion,150 and that the                    any events relating to a fund’s liquidity that
                                           benefits of the narrative disclosure to                  materially affected the fund’s performance during       portfolio assets and the nature of the
                                           investors that hold these funds would                    the most recently completed fiscal year. One            information to be reported. The
                                           be outweighed by the costs of including                  commenter stated that although such a disclosure        liquidity classifications that funds
                                                                                                    would increase ‘‘administrative and compliance          would have used to construct an
                                           the narrative in the shareholder                         burden on funds that face material liquidity risks,
                                           report.151 We disagree because, even for                 it may be eased by relevant disclosure that may         aggregate liquidity profile are based on
                                           funds that predominantly hold highly                     already be included in the management discussion        several factors that are subjective and
                                           liquid investments, such discussion can                  as a material factor that impacts fund performance.     fund specific. Such factors include a
                                                                                                    In order to ensure that investors receive               fund’s determination of the reasonably
                                           benefit investors to the extent that such                proportionate liquidity risk disclosure relative to
                                           disclosures may enhance their                            the risks within a particular fund, we believe the      anticipated trade size for a given
                                           understanding of liquidity risk                          modest additional expense would be warranted.’’         holding and its determination of what
                                           management for individual funds and                      See Vanguard Comment Letter. Because we                 constitutes significant market impact.158
                                                                                                    understand that funds often already discuss such        As a result of these subjective factors,
                                           when comparing funds.                                    events in their MDFP today, we agree with the
                                              As discussed above, and in response                   commenter that increases in costs would be limited      aggregate liquidity profiles are likely to
                                           to comments, the Commission is not                       and that the disclosure would benefit investors in      vary across otherwise similar funds,
                                           adopting the requirement that the                        promoting informed decision-making.                     diminishing their comparability.159
                                                                                                       153 See ICI Comment Letter. See also Capital
                                           narrative disclosure be part of the MDFP                                                                         However, without yet receiving and
                                                                                                    Group Comment Letter. Further, another
                                           and instead is requiring that the                        commenter suggested that moving the narrative
                                                                                                                                                            evaluating liquidity classification data,
                                           narrative disclosure of the operation and                disclosure from the MDFP would also benefit
                                                                                                    investors by reducing confusion for investors. See        156 Even if aggregate liquidity profiles are not

                                             147 See
                                                                                                    Blackrock Comment Letter.                               comparable across funds, they might be comparable
                                                      infra paragraph following footnote 190.          154 See ICE Comment Letter (discussing the           across time for a given fund, which might provide
                                              148 See supra footnote 43.
                                                                                                    benefits to the ‘‘investing public’’ by ‘‘injecting     useful information to investors. This would be the
                                              149 We estimate funds will incur an additional
                                                                                                    additional rigor and discipline into funds’ liquidity   case if a fund maintains a consistent position
                                           aggregate one-time burden of 54,890 hours and an         assessment procedures.’’).                              classification process over time. Funds, however,
                                           additional aggregate annual burden of 27,445 hours.         155 See Better Markets Comment Letter (stating       may change their classification processes over time.
                                           See infra footnotes 194 and 197. Assuming a              that the aggregated public reports in N–PORT
                                                                                                                                                              157 See Comment Letter of Mutual Fund Directors
                                           blended hourly rate of $329 for a compliance             would have benefited investors by empowering            Forum (May 18, 2018) (‘‘MFDF Comment Letter’’)
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                                           attorney ($345) and a senior officer ($313), that        them to make more informed investment decisions         (discussing that the narrative disclosure will benefit
                                           translates to an additional aggregate one-time           through the analysis provided by third-party            investors by providing ‘‘information on a fund’s
                                           burden of $18,058,810 = 54,890 × $329 and an             analysts). Another commenter stated that the            management of liquidity risk . . . in a format that
                                           additional aggregate annual burden of $9,029,405 =       removal of the aggregate liquidity profiles will        will allow those investors to assess the importance
                                           27,445 × $329.                                           reduce the information offered to the public and        of the information’’).
                                              150 See ICI Comment Letter; Capital Group                                                                       158 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra
                                                                                                    opposed the elimination of the public disclosure of
                                           Comment Letter.                                          funds’ aggregate liquidity profiles. AFR Comment        footnote 2, at section III.C.3.
                                              151 See Capital Group Comment Letter.                 Letter.                                                   159 See supra footnotes 41 and 42.




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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                     31871

                                           we cannot anticipate with any                            comparison across filings and filers.161                the extent that providing the option to
                                           quantitative precision the extent to                     While for some retail investors, an                     choose the position classification
                                           which they will vary across otherwise                    unstructured narrative disclosure will                  method most suitable to a given fund
                                           similar funds as a result of the above                   be useful and accessible, standardized,                 results in disclosures on Form N–PORT
                                           factors.160 As a result, the adopted                     structured, machine-readable                            that more accurately reflect the fund’s
                                           approach will enable the Commission to                   disclosures facilitate timely access and                liquidity profile, the amendments may
                                           evaluate and consider how the                            accurate identification and parsing of                  improve the Commission’s ability to
                                           quantitative data from funds’ N–PORT                     information for other investors and                     monitor liquidity risks in markets and
                                           filings might be fashioned into common                   market participants relative to                         protect investors from liquidity-related
                                           quantitative metrics. This approach will                 unstructured disclosures. As discussed                  developments. However, we
                                           also enable the Commission to assess                     in the Proposing Release, while we                      acknowledge that providing funds with
                                           the potential costs and benefits of future               acknowledge that there are costs to our                 this option does add an additional
                                           public dissemination of quantitative                     amendments for investors, filers, and                   subjective decision to the portfolio
                                           metrics derived from data contained in                   third party platforms that prefer to                    holding classification process. Thus, the
                                           N–PORT filings and whether such                          access and use financial information in                 amendments could result in
                                           metrics would be comparable across                       a structured format, we believe there are               classifications that are less comparable
                                           funds.                                                   also benefits to investors that prefer the              across funds relative to the baseline.166
                                              The overall impact of the                             narrative discussion of a fund’s liquidity                 Several commenters supported the
                                           amendments on an investor’s use of data                  risk management program accessible to                   amendments to Form N–PORT that will
                                           for informing investment choices will                    them in an unstructured shareholder                     give funds the option to split a given
                                           likely depend on how the investor                        report.162 We are currently soliciting                  holding into portions that may have
                                           accesses and processes information                       feedback on the use of structured data                  different liquidity classifications on
                                           about fund liquidity. If certain investors               in fund investor disclosure generally.163               their non-public reports on Form N–
                                           prefer to base their investment decisions                   Finally, the amendment to Form N–                    PORT, noting that this option will allow
                                           on information that is accessible to them                PORT that requires funds and other                      funds increased flexibility and higher
                                           in an unstructured document, those                       registrants to publicly disclose their                  precision when classifying the liquidity
                                           investors will be more likely to use the                 holdings of cash and cash equivalents                   of an investment.167 One commenter,
                                           narrative discussion of a fund’s liquidity               that are not reported in Parts C and D                  however, stated that this option is
                                           risk management program in                               of the Form on a quarterly basis with a                 unlikely to reduce burdens or costs to
                                           shareholder reports than they would                      60-day delay will give investors some                   funds, and is likely to be incompatible
                                           have been to use the aggregate liquidity                 potentially useful information about the                with the 15% illiquid asset
                                           profile within the structured format of                  most liquid assets that a fund previously               restriction.168 We note that this
                                           Form N–PORT to inform their                              had available to, for example, meet its                 approach is optional, and therefore
                                           investment decisions. However, certain                   redemption obligations.164                              funds could choose not to use it if it had
                                           other investors may prefer to access,                                                                            negative consequences, such as inflating
                                                                                                    Changes to Non-Public Disclosure
                                           reuse, and compare the information                                                                               the fund’s illiquid investment bucket.
                                           about a fund’s liquidity risk if included                   In addition to the amendments to                     Several commenters recommended that
                                           within a structured format on Form N–                    public disclosures of liquidity                         the proportionality option be revised to
                                           PORT. These investors will have a                        information discussed above, the                        include categories based on reasonably
                                           reduced ability to make as timely and                    amendments to Form N–PORT give                          anticipated trade size, which would
                                           accurate an analysis within an entity’s                  funds the option to split a given holding               allow increased flexibility and potential
                                           filings, perform text analysis of an                     into portions that may have different                   increased efficiency for funds that
                                           entity’s narrative disclosures, and                      liquidity classifications on their non-                 choose to implement this classification
                                           potentially combine narrative and                        public reports on Form N–PORT. Funds                    option.169 We note that, while in some
                                           numeric information when the narrative                   may benefit from the amendment                          circumstances classifying liquidity
                                           disclosures related to their liquidity risk              because it gives them the option to                     based on reasonably anticipated trade
                                           management programs are provided to                      either include an entire holding within                 size may be a simpler analytic approach
                                           them in the unstructured format of an                    a classification bucket or to allocate
                                           annual report. Further, there may be an                  portions of the holding across                          might have had to establish more complex systems
                                           increased burden on these third-party                    classification buckets. This could                      and processes for combining the classifications of
                                           providers to search, parse, and assess                   benefit a fund and the fund’s investors                 individual sub-advisers into a single classification
                                                                                                    if a more granular approach to                          for the portfolio’s aggregate holding of a given
                                           the quality of the unstructured                                                                                  security under the rule as originally adopted. The
                                           information in funds’ annual reports. To                 classification that assigns portions of a               ability to split a portfolio holding across multiple
                                           the extent that certain investors rely on                portfolio holding to separate                           classification buckets provides funds with a
                                           third parties to provide them with                       classification buckets is more consistent               straightforward way of combining the
                                                                                                    with the fund’s preferred approach to                   classifications of different sub-advisers.
                                           information for analysis, this increased                                                                            166 Portfolio classifications on Form N–PORT will
                                           burden may be partially or fully passed                  liquidity risk management. This
                                                                                                                                                            include CUSIPs or other identifiers that allow
                                           on to these investors in the form of                     approach also reduces the need for                      Commission staff to identify when different funds
                                           higher costs.                                            funds to develop systems and processes                  classify the same investment using different
                                              One commenter recommended that                        to allocate each holding to exactly one                 classification methods. However, comparing such
                                                                                                    classification bucket for the purposes of               classifications will require some method of
                                           narrative disclosures, as well as all                                                                            adjustment between classifications based on, for
                                           financial data, be reported in a                         regulatory compliance.165 In addition, to               example, reasonably anticipated trade size and
                                           consistent, structured format to promote
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                                                                                                                                                            those based on splitting a position into proportions
                                                                                                         161 See
                                                                                                              XBRL US Comment Letter.                       that are assigned to different classification buckets.
                                             160 A                                                       162 See
                                                                                                              Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at         167 See Fidelity Comment Letter; IAA Comment
                                                   few commenters objected to the proposed
                                           changes, arguing that the Commission should err on       section III.C.                                          Letter; State Street Comment Letter; ICE Comment
                                           the side of providing more information and that            163 See supra footnote 52.                            Letter; and J.P. Morgan Comment Letter.
                                                                                                      164 See supra section II.B.2.                            168 See J.P. Morgan Comment Letter.
                                           investors would understand and use the aggregated
                                           liquidity information. See supra footnote 33 and           165 For example, funds that use multiple sub-            169 See SIFMA Comment Letter and ICI Comment

                                           accompanying text.                                       advisers to manage different sleeves of a portfolio     Letter.



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                                           31872               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           and avoids certain issues related to full                more accurately evaluate fund liquidity                 disclosure of this profile on Form N–
                                           liquidation, as discussed above in                       risk and make more informed                             PORT and added a requirement that
                                           section II.B.1, it also is an imperfect                  investment decisions, the amendments                    funds publicly disclose on Form N–
                                           proxy for the actual liquidity                           could reduce allocative efficiency. The                 PORT additional information providing
                                           characteristics of fund investments,                     annual discussion of a fund’s liquidity                 context and clarification regarding how
                                           potentially skewing classifications to                   risk management program in                              their aggregate liquidity profiles were
                                           more liquid ‘‘buckets.’’ 170                             shareholder reports and the requirement                 generated and should be interpreted.
                                              Other commenters suggested that we                    that funds and other registrants publicly               This alternative would have provided
                                           should not allow funds to classify                       disclose their holdings of cash and cash                investors with some of the benefits of
                                           portions of a portfolio holding                          equivalents on Form N–PORT could                        the additional context provided by the
                                           separately because it would reduce the                   mitigate this reduction in allocative                   narrative discussion on Form N–1A that
                                           value of the information and would                       efficiency if these requirements provide                we are adopting, and, to the extent that
                                           ‘‘reduce the utility of the entire                       information that helps investors                        it increased investors’ understanding of
                                           bucketing exercise.’’ 171 However, the                   evaluate fund liquidity risk.                           a fund’s aggregate liquidity profile,
                                           Commission does not consider allowing                    Furthermore, to the extent that aggregate               could have allowed them to make more
                                           portfolio splitting to affect its ability to             liquidity profiles on Form N–PORT                       informed investment choices relative to
                                           monitor liquidity risks, an ability that                 would have increased the likelihood of                  the baseline. However, some investors
                                           ultimately benefits investors. The                       investors making investment choices                     may believe that they can more easily
                                           Commission is adopting amendments to                     based on any confusion about a fund’s                   obtain information in a fund’s annual
                                           Form N–PORT to allow funds the option                    liquidity risk profile, which would have                report compared to information in the
                                           of splitting a fund’s holding into more                  harmed the efficient allocation of                      fund’s Form N–PORT filings if they are
                                           than one classification category in                      capital, the amendments could increase                  not as interested in being able to access,
                                           certain specified circumstances as                       allocative efficiency.                                  reuse, and compare the information if
                                           proposed.                                                   Lastly, to the extent that the                       included in a structured format on Form
                                                                                                    information provided by aggregate                       N–PORT. This alternative would have
                                           Efficiency, Competition, and Capital                     liquidity profiles would have promoted                  required these investors to seek out this
                                           Formation                                                increased investment in certain funds,                  additional information on EDGAR.
                                              The amendments we are adopting                        and the assets those funds invest in,                      Second, instead of requiring a fund to
                                           have several potential effects on                        rescinding the aggregate liquidity profile              briefly discuss the operation and
                                           efficiency, competition, and capital                     requirement could reduce capital                        effectiveness of its liquidity risk
                                           formation. First, if publicly disclosed                  formation. At the same time, we note                    management program in a shareholder
                                           aggregate liquidity profiles may have                    that the new public disclosure                          report, we could have required a more
                                           created an incentive for a fund to                       requirements we are adopting could                      specific discussion of the fund’s
                                           classify its holdings in a manner that led               offset any reduction in capital                         exposure to liquidity risk over the
                                           to a relatively more liquid aggregate                    formation.                                              preceding year, how the fund managed
                                           liquidity profile in order to attract                       In summary, we note that all of the                  that risk, and how the fund’s returns
                                           investors, the amendments remove any                     effects described above are conditioned                 were affected over the preceding year.
                                           such incentive and potentially reduce                    upon the usefulness to investors of                     This alternative could have helped
                                           the likelihood that funds compete based                  information that we will no longer                      investors understand both a fund’s
                                           on their aggregate liquidity profiles. To                require relative to the usefulness of                   liquidity risk and the fund’s approach to
                                           the extent that a fund or other                          additional disclosure requirements we                   managing that risk, which might lead to
                                           registrant’s cash and cash equivalent                    are adopting. We cannot estimate the                    more informed investment decisions
                                           holdings are interpreted by investors as                 aggregate effect on efficiency,                         than a discussion of the fund’s liquidity
                                           being associated with lower liquidity                    competition, or capital formation that                  risk management program. However,
                                           risk, funds and other registrants may                    will result from the new amendments                     this alternative could have been more
                                           still have some incentive to compete                     because we do not know the extent to                    costly for some funds to implement than
                                           based on their holdings of cash and cash                 which aggregate liquidity risk profiles,                the proposed narrative discussion in the
                                           equivalents as a result of the                           narrative discussion of a fund’s liquidity              shareholder report, and funds still have
                                           amendments.172 We do not expect the                      risk management program, or the                         the flexibility to provide this
                                           proposed amendments to require                           amount of cash and cash equivalents                     information in the course of complying
                                           narrative discussions in shareholder                     held by a fund and other registrants are                with the final rule if they think it will
                                           reports to have a significant competitive                useful to investors in making more                      benefit their investors.175 Further, as
                                           effect.                                                  informed investment choices.173                         discussed above, a fund should discuss,
                                              Second, to the extent that those                                                                              with specificity, as part of its MDFP,
                                                                                                    D. Reasonable Alternatives
                                           publicly disclosed aggregate liquidity                                                                           any factor such as liquidity events that
                                           profiles would have helped investors                        The Commission considered several                    the fund experienced that materially
                                                                                                    alternatives to the amendments to funds                 affected the fund’s performance during
                                             170 See supra footnote 95.
                                                                                                    public and non-public disclosure                        the past fiscal year.176
                                             171 See MSCI Comment Letter. Several                   requirements that we are adopting.174                      Third, we could have required funds
                                           commenters stated that allowing funds to classify           First, in order to address any potential             to disclose an aggregate liquidity profile
                                           portions of a portfolio holding for some of their        issues with the interpretation of a fund’s              in their annual report along with
                                           holdings could lead to inconsistent interpretations      aggregate liquidity profile by investors,
                                           of the funds classifications, and that we should                                                                 additional information providing
                                                                                                    we could have maintained the public                     context and clarification regarding how
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                                           instead require a fund to apply a uniform approach
                                           across all of its holdings. See State Street Comment                                                             its aggregate liquidity profile was
                                           Letter and MSCI Comment Letter.                               173 See
                                                                                                              supra paragraph following footnote 157.       generated and should be interpreted. If
                                             172 However, because cash and cash equivalent               174 Several
                                                                                                                  commenters also addressed potential
                                           holdings do not generate significant returns relative    costs associated with modifying the bucketing
                                                                                                                                                            such disclosure increased investors’
                                           to other holdings, funds and other registrants may       requirements of rule 22e–4. As discussed above, in
                                                                                                                                                              175 See   supra paragraph following footnote 65.
                                           have an incentive to shift to non-cash or cash           section II.C, we are not adopting modifications to
                                           equivalent holdings that generate higher returns.        the rule 22e–4 bucketing requirements today.              176 See   supra section II.A.2.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                         31873

                                           understanding of a fund’s aggregate                      Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995                            portfolio on Form N–PORT on a
                                           liquidity profile, this would have                       (‘‘PRA’’).177                                              monthly basis and to publicly disclose
                                           allowed them to make more informed                          The title for the existing collections of               this amount on a quarterly basis with a
                                           investment choices relative to the                       information are: ‘‘Rule 30b1–9 and Form                    60 day delay.181 Finally, the
                                           baseline, though they would have                         N–PORT’’ (OMB Control No. 3235–                            Commission is amending Form N–PORT
                                           received this information at an annual                   0730); and ‘‘Form N–1A under the                           to allow funds the option of splitting a
                                           rather than quarterly frequency.                         Securities Act of 1933 and under the                       fund’s holding into more than one
                                           However, such disclosures still may not                  Investment Company Act of 1940,                            liquidity classification category in
                                           be able to fully explain how the                         Registration Statement of Open-End                         certain specified circumstances.182 As of
                                           subjective factors inherent in the                       Management Investment Companies’’                          the end of 2017, there were 9,154
                                           classification process affect aggregate                  (OMB Control No. 3235–0307). The                           mutual funds managing assets of
                                           fund liquidity profiles, so they still may               Commission is submitting these                             approximately $19 trillion, and there
                                           not be comparable across funds.                          collections of information to the Office                   were 1,832 ETFs managing assets of
                                           Therefore, investors’ ability to make                    of Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for                     approximately $3.4 trillion.183 Preparing
                                           more informed investment choices                         review in accordance with 44 U.S.C.                        a report on Form N–PORT is mandatory
                                           based on the inclusion of this                           3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11. An agency                       and is a collection of information under
                                           information may be limited.                              may not conduct or sponsor, and a                          the PRA, and the information required
                                                                                                    person is not required to respond to, a                    by Form N–PORT will be data-tagged in
                                              Fourth, we could have amended both                    collection of information unless it                        XML format. Except for certain
                                           Form N–PORT and rule 22e–4 to                            displays a currently valid control                         reporting items specified in the form,184
                                           prescribe an objective approach to                       number. The Commission is amending                         responses to the reporting requirements
                                           classification in which the Commission                   Form N–PORT and Form N–1A. The                             will be kept confidential for reports
                                           would specify more precise criteria and                  amendments are designed to improve                         filed with respect to the first two
                                           guidance regarding how funds should                      the reporting and disclosure of liquidity                  months of each quarter; the third month
                                           classify different categories of                         information by funds. We discuss below                     of the quarter will not be kept
                                           investments. Such an approach could                      the collection of information burdens                      confidential, but made public sixty days
                                           permit consistent comparisons of                         associated with these amendments. In                       after the quarter end.
                                           different funds’ aggregate liquidity                     the Proposing Release, the Commission                         In the Liquidity Adopting Release, we
                                           profiles, allowing investors to make                     solicited comment on the collection of                     estimate that, for the 35% of funds that
                                           more informed investment decisions                       information requirements and the                           would file reports on Form N–PORT in
                                           without requiring funds to provide                       accuracy of the Commission’s                               house, the per fund average aggregate
                                           additional contextual discussion of their                statements in the Proposing Release.                       annual hour burden will be 144 hours
                                           liquidity risk management programs.                                                                                 per fund, and the average cost to license
                                           However, as discussed in the Liquidity                   B. Form N–PORT                                             a third-party software solution will be
                                           Adopting Release, the Commission may                       As discussed above, on October 13,                       $4,805 per fund per year.185 For the
                                           not be able to respond as quickly as                     2016, the Commission adopted new                           remaining 65% of funds that would
                                           market participants to dynamic market                    Form N–PORT, which requires mutual                         retain the services of a third party to
                                           conditions that might necessitate                        funds and ETFs 178 to report monthly                       prepare and file reports on Form N–
                                           changes to such criteria and guidance.                   portfolio investment information to the                    PORT on the fund’s behalf, we estimate
                                                                                                    Commission in a structured data                            that the average aggregate annual hour
                                              Fifth, we could have required that if
                                                                                                    format.179 The Commission also                             burden will be 125 hours per fund, and
                                           funds chose to split the classification of
                                                                                                    adopted amendments to Form N–PORT                          each fund will pay an average fee of
                                           any of their portfolio holdings across
                                                                                                    requiring a fund to publicly report on                     $11,440 per fund per year for the
                                           liquidity buckets when reporting them
                                                                                                    Form N–PORT the aggregate percentage                       services of third-party service provider.
                                           on the non-public portion of Form N–
                                                                                                    of its portfolio investments that falls                    In sum, we estimate that filing liquidity-
                                           PORT, they do so for all of their                                                                                   related information on Form N–PORT
                                                                                                    into each of the four liquidity
                                           portfolio holdings. This would have                                                                                 will impose an average total annual
                                                                                                    classification categories noted above.180
                                           ensured that all of the portfolio holdings                                                                          hour burden of 144 hours on applicable
                                                                                                    Today, the Commission is rescinding
                                           within a given fund could be interpreted
                                                                                                    the requirement that funds publicly
                                           more consistently for any monitoring
                                                                                                    disclose their aggregate liquidity profile                    181 See supra footnote 21 (noting that the term
                                           purposes by the Commission. However,                                                                                ‘‘registrant’’ refers to entities required to file Form
                                                                                                    on a quarterly basis with a 60-day delay.
                                           to the extent that being able to choose                  The Commission also is amending Form
                                                                                                                                                               N–PORT, including all registered management
                                           the classification approach appropriate                                                                             investment companies, other than money market
                                                                                                    N–PORT to require funds and other                          funds and small business investment companies,
                                           to each portfolio holding more                           registrants to report to the Commission                    and all ETFs (regardless of whether they operate as
                                           accurately reflects a manager’s judgment                 on a non-public basis the amount of                        UITs or management investment companies)).
                                           of that portfolio holding’s liquidity, any               cash and cash equivalents in their
                                                                                                                                                                  182 See new Item C.7.b of Form N–PORT and

                                           reduction in the consistency of portfolio                                                                           Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT.
                                                                                                                                                                  183 See supra footnote 142 and accompanying
                                           classifications under the amendments                          177 44
                                                                                                              U.S.C. 3501 through 3521.                        text.
                                           we are adopting could be offset by a                          178 Registeredmoney market funds and small               184 These items include information reported with
                                           more accurate description of the                         business investment companies are exempt from              respect to a fund’s Highly Liquid Investment
                                           manager’s assessment of fund liquidity                   Form N–PORT reporting requirements.                        Minimum (Item B.7), derivatives transactions (Item
                                                                                                       179 Reporting Modernization Adopting Release,           B.8), country of risk and economic exposure (Item
                                           risk.
                                                                                                    supra footnote 2.                                          C.5.b), delta (Items C.9.f.v, C.11.c.vii, or C.11.g.iv),
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                                           IV. Paperwork Reduction Act                                 180 Item B.8.a of Form N–PORT. Form N–PORT              liquidity classification for portfolio investments
                                                                                                    also requires public reporting of the percentage of        (Item C.7), or miscellaneous securities (Part D), or
                                           A. Introduction                                          a fund’s highly liquid investments that it has             explanatory notes related to any of those topics
                                                                                                    segregated to cover, or pledged to satisfy margin          (Part E) that is identifiable to any particular fund
                                             The amendments to Form N–PORT                          requirements in connection with, derivatives               or adviser. See new General Instruction F of Form
                                                                                                    transactions that are classified as moderately liquid,     N–PORT.
                                           and Form N–1A contain ‘‘collections of                   less liquid, or illiquid investments. Item B.8.b of           185 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra
                                           information’’ within the meaning of the                  Form N–PORT.                                               footnote 2, at n.1237 and accompanying text.



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                                           31874               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           funds, and all applicable funds will                     Commenters did not provide comment                    finalize the required disclosure. In
                                           incur on average, in the aggregate,                      on our estimated reduction in burden                  aggregate, we estimate that funds will
                                           external annual costs of $103,787,680,                   hours and costs associated with Form                  incur a one–time burden of an
                                           or $9,118 per fund.186                                   N–PORT. As a result, the Commission                   additional 54,890 hours,194 to comply
                                              We are adopting, substantially as                     believes that the current PRA burden                  with the new Form N–1A disclosure
                                           proposed, amendments to Form N–                          estimates for the existing collection of              requirements. Amortizing the one–time
                                           PORT to rescind the requirement that a                   information requirements remain                       burden over a three–year period results
                                           fund report the aggregate percentage of                  appropriate.                                          in an average annual burden of an
                                           the fund’s portfolio representing each of                                                                      additional 18,296.7 hours.195
                                                                                                    C. Form N–1A
                                           the four liquidity categories. As
                                           discussed above, we are rescinding this                     Form N–1A is the registration form                    Based on Commission staff expertise
                                           requirement because we believe, and                      used by open-end investment                           and experience, we estimate that each
                                           commenters generally agree,187 that                      companies. The respondents to the                     fund will incur an ongoing burden of an
                                           Form N–PORT may not be the most                          amendments to Form N–1A adopted                       additional 2.5 hours each year to review
                                           accessible and useful way to convey to                   today are open-end management                         and update the required disclosure.196
                                           the public information about a fund’s                    investment companies registered or                    In aggregate, we estimate that funds will
                                           liquidity risks and the fund’s approach                  registering with the Commission.                      incur an annual burden of an additional
                                           to liquidity risk management. Because                    Compliance with the disclosure                        27,445 hours,197 to comply with the
                                           there would no longer be public                          requirements of Form N–1A is                          new shareholder report disclosure
                                           disclosure of a fund’s aggregate liquidity               mandatory, and the responses to the                   requirements in Form N–1A.198
                                           classification information, we also will                 disclosure requirements are not                       Amortizing these one–time and ongoing
                                           re-designate reporting about the amount                  confidential. In our most recent                      hour and cost burdens over three years
                                           of a fund’s highly liquid investments                    Paperwork Reduction Act submission                    results in an average annual increased
                                           that are segregated or pledged to cover                  for Form N–1A, we estimated for Form                  burden of approximately 3.3 hours per
                                           less liquid derivatives transactions to                  N–1A a total hour burden of 1,602,751
                                                                                                                                                          fund, as in the proposal.199 In total, we
                                           the non-public portion of the form.                      hours, and the total annual external cost
                                                                                                                                                          estimate that funds will incur an
                                           Finally, we are adopting amendments to                   burden is $131,139,208.191
                                                                                                       We are adopting, largely as proposed,              average annual increased burden of
                                           Form N–PORT to add an additional                                                                               approximately 45,741.7 hours,200 to
                                           disclosure requirement relating to a                     amendments to Form N–1A to require
                                                                                                    funds disclose information about the                  comply with the shareholder report
                                           fund’s or other registrant’s holdings of                                                                       disclosure requirements.
                                                                                                    operation and effectiveness of their
                                           cash and cash equivalents not reported
                                                                                                    liquidity risk management program in
                                           in Parts C and D of the Form 188 and to                                                                        attorney to consult with the liquidity risk
                                                                                                    their reports to shareholders.
                                           allow funds the option of splitting a                                                                          management program administrator and other
                                                                                                    Specifically, in response to commenters,
                                           fund’s holding into more than one                                                                              investment personnel in order to produce an initial
                                                                                                    we are moving the discussion of the                   draft of the shareholder report disclosure + 2 hours
                                           classification category in three specified
                                                                                                    operation and effectiveness of a fund’s               for senior officers to familiarize themselves with the
                                           circumstances.189 We believe these                                                                             new disclosure and review the report). These
                                                                                                    liquidity risk management program to
                                           additional amendments enhance the                                                                              calculations stem from the Commission’s
                                                                                                    the section of the shareholder report
                                           liquidity data reported to the                                                                                 understanding of the time it takes to draft and
                                                                                                    (annual or semi-annual) following the                 review shareholder report disclosure.
                                           Commission.190 In addition, for some
                                                                                                    discussion of board approval of advisory                 194 This estimate is based on the following
                                           funds, these changes may also reduce                     contracts.192 As proposed, this                       calculations: 5 hours × 10,978 open-end funds
                                           cost burdens as they comply with the                     subsection will require funds to discuss              (excluding money market funds and ETFs organized
                                           rule.                                                    the operation and effectiveness of their              as UITs, and including ETFs that are management
                                              Based on Commission staff                                                                                   investment companies) = 54,890 hours. We estimate
                                                                                                    liquidity risk management program over                that there are 8 ETFs organized as UITs as of
                                           experience, we believe that rescinding
                                                                                                    the period covered. However, funds will               December 31, 2017.
                                           the requirement that funds publicly
                                                                                                    have flexibility to cover either the most                195 This estimate is based on the following
                                           report the aggregate classification                                                                            calculation: 54,890 hours ÷ 3 = 18,296.7 average
                                                                                                    recently completed fiscal year or the
                                           information on Form N–PORT will                          most recently completed calendar year.                annual burden hours.
                                           reduce the estimated burden hours and                       Form N–1A generally imposes two
                                                                                                                                                             196 This estimate is based on the following

                                           costs associated with Form N–PORT by                                                                           calculation: 2.5 hours (2 hours for the compliance
                                                                                                    types of reporting burdens on                         attorney to consult with the liquidity risk
                                           approximately one hour. We believe,                      investment companies: (i) The burden of               management program administrator and other
                                           however, that this reduction in cost will                preparing and filing the initial                      investment personnel in order to produce an initial
                                           be offset by the increase in cost                        registration statement; and (ii) the                  draft of the shareholder report disclosure + .5 hours
                                           associated with the other amendments                                                                           for senior officers to review the shareholder report).
                                                                                                    burden of preparing and filing post-                     197 This estimate is based on the following
                                           to Form N–PORT, which we also                            effective amendments to a previously                  calculation: 2.5 hours × 10,978 open-end funds
                                           estimate to be one hour. Therefore, we                   effective registration statement                      (excluding money market funds and ETFs organized
                                           believe that there will be no substantive                (including post-effective amendments                  as UITs, and including ETFs that are management
                                           modification to the existing collection of                                                                     investment companies) = 27,445 hours.
                                                                                                    filed pursuant to 17 CFR 230.485(a) or                   198 The calculations included in this PRA have
                                           information for Form N–PORT.                             (b) (‘‘rule 230.485(a) or (b)’’) under the            been modified from the Proposing Release to reflect
                                                                                                    Securities Act, as applicable). As in the             updated estimates for the number of entities that
                                             186 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra
                                                                                                    proposal, we estimate that each fund                  the Commission believes will be required to comply
                                           footnote 2, at n.1238 and accompanying text.                                                                   with the new shareholder report amendments on
                                             187 See, e.g., IDC Comment Letter; BlackRock           will incur a one–time burden of an
                                                                                                                                                          Form N–1A. The estimated cost burdens per fund
                                                                                                    additional five hours 193 to draft and
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                                           Comment Letter; SIFMA AMG Comment Letter.                                                                      remain the same.
                                             188 See new Item B.2.f. of Form N–PORT.                                                                         199 This estimate is based on the following
                                             189 See new Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–          191 This estimate is based on the last time the
                                                                                                                                                          calculation: (5 burden hours (year 1) + 2.5 burden
                                           PORT.                                                    rule’s information collection was submitted for PRA   hours (year 2) + 2.5 burden hours (year 3)) ÷ 3 =
                                             190 See Liquidity Adopting Release, supra              renewal in 2018.                                      3.3
                                                                                                      192 New Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A.
                                           footnote 2, at n.293 and accompanying text                                                                        200 This estimate is based on the following

                                           (discussing the Commission’s need for the                  193 This estimate is based on the following         calculation: 18,296.7 hours + 27,445 hours =
                                           information reported on Form N–PORT).                    calculation: 5 Hours (3 hours for the compliance      45,741.7 hours.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                  31875

                                           V. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis                 effects on small entities subject to the              with the disclosure and reporting
                                              The Commission has prepared the                       proposed amendments to Form N–1A                      requirements. As discussed above, we
                                           following Final Regulatory Flexibility                   and Form N–PORT and provide                           do not believe that our amendments will
                                           Analysis in accordance with section 3(a)                 empirical data to support the nature and              change Form N–PORT’s estimated
                                           of the Regulatory Flexibility Act                        extent of such effects. We also requested             burden hours and costs.211 We estimate
                                           (‘‘RFA’’).201 It relates to new                          comment on the estimated compliance                   that each fund will incur a one-time
                                           amendments to Form N–PORT and new                        burdens of the proposed amendments to                 burden of an additional five hours,212 at
                                           amendments to Form N–1A. We                              Form N–1A and Form N–PORT and                         a time cost of $1,645 213 each year to
                                           prepared an Initial Regulatory                           how they would affect small entities.                 draft and finalize the required
                                           Flexibility Analysis (‘‘IRFA’’) in                       We did not receive comments regarding                 shareholder report disclosure required
                                           conjunction with the Proposing Release                   the impact of our proposal on small                   in Form N–1A. For purposes of this
                                           in March 2018.202 The Proposing                          entities.                                             analysis, Commission staff estimates,
                                           Release included, and solicited                          C. Small Entities Subject to the                      based on outreach conducted with a
                                           comment, on the IRFA.                                    Amendments                                            variety of funds, that small fund groups
                                                                                                                                                          will incur approximately the same
                                           A. Need for the Amendments                                  An investment company is a small                   initial and ongoing costs as large fund
                                              The Commission adopted rule 22e–4                     entity if, together with other investment             groups. Therefore, in the aggregate, we
                                           and related rule and form amendments                     companies in the same group of related                estimate that funds that are small
                                           to enhance the regulatory framework for                  investment companies, it has net assets               entities will incur a one-time burden of
                                           liquidity risk management of funds.203                   of $50 million or less as of the end of               an additional 270 hours,214 at a time
                                           In connection with rule 22e–4, a fund is                 its most recent fiscal year.205                       cost of $88,830,215 to comply with the
                                           required to publicly report on Form N–                   Commission staff estimates that, as of                new Form N–1A disclosure
                                           PORT the aggregate percentage of its                     December 31, 2017, there were 54 open-                requirements. Amortizing the one-time
                                           portfolio investments that falls into each               end investment companies that would                   burden over a three-year period results
                                           of the liquidity categories enumerated in                be considered small entities. This                    in an average annual burden of an
                                           rule 22e–4. This requirement was                         number includes open-end ETFs.206                     additional 90 hours,216 at a time cost of
                                           designed to enhance public disclosure                    D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,                $29,610.217 We estimate that each fund
                                           regarding fund liquidity and redemption                  and Other Compliance Requirements                     will incur an ongoing burden of an
                                           practices. However, since we adopted                                                                           additional 2.5 hours,218 at a time cost of
                                           these requirements, we have received                        We are adopting amendments to Form                 $822.50,219 each year to review and
                                           letters raising concerns that the public                 N–1A and Form N–PORT to enhance                       update the required Form N–1A
                                           disclosure of a fund’s aggregate liquidity               fund disclosure regarding a fund’s                    disclosure. Therefore, we estimate that
                                           classification information on Form N–                    liquidity risk management practices.                  funds that are small entities will incur
                                           PORT may not achieve our intended                        Specifically, the amendments to Form                  an ongoing burden of an additional 135
                                           purpose and may confuse and mislead                      N–PORT 207 will rescind the
                                           investors. As we discuss further in                      requirement that funds publicly disclose                211 See  supra text accompanying footnote 152.
                                           section II.A above, these letters have led               aggregate liquidity classification                      212 See  supra footnote 197 (noting that this
                                           us to believe that the approach of                       information about their portfolios and                estimate is based on the Commission staff’s
                                           disclosing liquidity information to the                  amendments to Form N–1A will require                  understanding of the time it takes it takes to draft
                                                                                                    funds to discuss certain aspects of their             and review shareholder report disclosure, including
                                           public through Form N–PORT may not                                                                             the time it takes for the compliance attorney to
                                           be the most accessible and useful way                    liquidity risk management program as                  consult with the liquidity risk management program
                                           to convey fund liquidity information to                  part of their reports to shareholders.208             administrator and other investment personnel in
                                           the public, given that only the                          In addition, we are adopting                          order to produce an initial draft of the shareholder
                                                                                                    amendments to Form N–PORT to allow                    report disclosure as well as the time it takes for
                                           Commission, and not the public, would                                                                          senior officers to familiarize themselves with the
                                           have access to the more granular                         funds to report multiple classification               new disclosure and review the report).
                                           information and can request information                  categories for a single position in certain              213 This estimate is based on the following

                                           regarding the fund’s methodologies and                   cases 209 and require funds and other                 calculations: 5 hours × $329 (blended rate for a
                                                                                                    registrants to report their holdings of               compliance attorney ($345) and a senior officer
                                           assumptions that would provide needed                                                                          ($313)) = $1,645.
                                           context to understand this reporting.204                 cash and cash equivalents.210                            214 This estimate is based on the following
                                                                                                       All funds will be subject to the new               calculations: 5 hours × 54 = 270 hours.
                                           B. Significant Issues Raised by Public                   disclosure and reporting requirements,                   215 This estimate is based on the following
                                           Comment                                                  including funds that are small entities.              calculations: $1,645 × 54 = $88,830.
                                             In the Proposing Release, we                           We estimate that 54 funds are small                      216 This estimate is based on the following

                                                                                                    entities that will be required to comply              calculations: 270 hours ÷ 3 = 90 average annual
                                           requested comment on the IRFA,                                                                                 burden hours.
                                           requesting in particular comment on the                                                                           217 This estimate is based on the following
                                                                                                      205 See 17 CFR 270.0–10(a) (‘‘rule 270.0–10(a)’’)
                                           number of small entities that would be                                                                         calculations: $88,830 ÷ 3 = $29,610.
                                                                                                    under the Investment Company Act.
                                           subject to the proposed amendments to                      206 This estimate is derived from an analysis of
                                                                                                                                                             218 See supra footnote 194 and accompanying text

                                           Form N–1A and Form N–PORT and                                                                                  (noting that this estimate is based on the
                                                                                                    data obtained from Morningstar Direct as well as      Commission staff’s understanding of the time it
                                           whether these proposed amendments                        data reported on Form N–SAR filed with the            takes it takes to review shareholder report
                                           would have any effects that have not                     Commission for the period ending December 31,         disclosure, including the time it takes for the
                                                                                                    2017. This estimate has been modified from the
                                           been discussed. We requested that                        Proposing Release to reflect updated estimates for
                                                                                                                                                          compliance attorney to consult with the liquidity
                                           commenters describe the nature of any                                                                          risk management program administrator and other
                                                                                                    the number of small entities that the Commission
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                                                                                                                                                          investment personnel in order to produce an initial
                                                                                                    believes will be required to comply with the new      draft of the shareholder report disclosure as well as
                                             201 5U.S.C. 603(a).                                    shareholder report amendments on Form N–1A.           the time it takes for senior officers to review the
                                             202 See                                                  207 See revised Item B.8 of Form N–PORT.
                                                     Proposing Release, supra footnote 10, at                                                             report).
                                           section V.                                                 208 See new Item 27(d)(7)(b) of Form N–1A.             219 This estimate is based on the following
                                             203 See supra section I.                                 209 See new Item C.7.b of Form N–PORT and
                                                                                                                                                          calculations: 2.5 hours × $329 (blended rate for a
                                             204 See supra section II.A.1 at text accompanying      Instructions to Item C.7 of Form N–PORT.              compliance attorney ($345) and a senior officer
                                           footnote 27.                                               210 See new Item B.2.f. of Form N–PORT.             ($313)) = $822.50.



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                                           31876               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                           hours,220 at a time cost of $44,415,221 to               investments.225 The changes we are                          The addition reads as follows:
                                           comply with the new Form N–1A                            making will allow funds of all sizes to                   Note: The text of Form N–1A does not, and
                                           disclosure requirements.                                 more accurately reflect their                           this amendment will not, appear in the Code
                                             Amortizing these one-time and                          liquidity.226 The current disclosure                    of Federal Regulations.
                                           ongoing hour and cost burdens over                       requirements for reports on Forms N–1A
                                           three years results in an average annual                 and N–PORT do not distinguish                           Form N–1A
                                           increased burden of approximately 4.2                    between small entities and other funds.                 *       *    *    *      *
                                           hours,222 at a time cost of $1,370.83,223                Finally, we determined to use
                                           per fund. In total, we estimate that                     performance rather than design                          Item 27. Financial Statements
                                           funds that are small entities will incur                 standards for all funds, regardless of                     (a) * * *
                                           an average annual increased burden of                    size, because we believe that providing                    (d) Annual and Semi-Annual Reports.
                                           approximately 226.8 hours, at a time                     funds with the flexibility to determine
                                           cost of $74,617.20,224 to comply with                                                                            *      *    *     *    *
                                                                                                    how to design their shareholder report                     7. Board Approvals and Liquidity
                                           the new Form N–1A disclosure                             disclosures allows them the opportunity
                                           requirements.                                                                                                    Reviews.
                                                                                                    to tailor their disclosure to their specific               (a) Statement Regarding Basis for
                                           E. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on                   risk profile. By contrast, we determined                Approval of Investment Advisory
                                           Small Entities                                           to use design standards for our                         Contract.
                                                                                                    amendments to Form N–PORT because
                                              The RFA directs the Commission to                     we believe information reported to the                  *      *    *     *    *
                                           consider significant alternatives that                   Commission on the Form must be                             (b) Statement Regarding Liquidity
                                           would accomplish our stated objectives,                  uniform to the extent practicable in                    Risk Management Program. If the board
                                           while minimizing any significant                         order for the Commission to carry out its               of directors reviewed the Fund’s
                                           economic impact on small entities.                                                                               liquidity risk management program
                                                                                                    oversight and monitoring
                                           Alternatives in this category include: (i)                                                                       pursuant to rule 22e–4(b)(2)(iii) of the
                                                                                                    responsibilities.
                                           Exempting funds that are small entities                                                                          Act [17 CFR 270.22e–4(b)(2)(iii)] during
                                           from the disclosure requirements on                      VI. Statutory Authority                                 the Fund’s most recent fiscal half-year,
                                           Form N–1A, or establishing different                       The Commission is adopting                            briefly discuss the operation and
                                           disclosure or reporting requirements, or                 amendments to Form N–1A and Form                        effectiveness of the Fund’s liquidity risk
                                           different disclosure frequency, to                       N–PORT under the authority set forth in                 management program over the past year.
                                           account for resources available to small                 the Securities Act, particularly section
                                           entities; (ii) clarifying, consolidating, or                                                                     Instruction
                                                                                                    19 thereof [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.], the
                                           simplifying the compliance                               Exchange Act, particularly sections 10,                   If the board reviews the liquidity risk
                                           requirements under the amendments for                    13, 15, and 23, and 35A thereof [15                     management program more frequently
                                           small entities; (iii) using performance                  U.S.C. 78a et seq.], and the Investment                 than annually, a fund may choose to
                                           rather than design standards; and (iv)                   Company Act, particularly, sections 8,                  include the discussion of the program’s
                                           exempting funds that are small entities                  30 and 38 thereof [15 U.S.C. 80a et seq.].              operation and effectiveness over the
                                           from other amendments to Form N–                                                                                 past year in one of either the fund’s
                                           PORT.                                                    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 274                     annual or semi-annual reports, but does
                                              The Commission does not believe that                    Investment companies, Reporting and                   not need to include it in both reports.
                                           exempting any subset of funds,                           recordkeeping requirements, Securities.                 *     *      *     *     *
                                           including funds that are small entities,                                                                         ■ 3. Amend Form N–PORT (referenced
                                           from the amendments would permit us                      Text of Rules and Forms                                 in § 274.150) by:
                                           to achieve our stated objectives. Nor do                   For the reasons set out in the                        ■ a. In the General Instructions, revising
                                           we believe that clarifying, consolidating,               preamble, title 17, chapter II of the Code              the second paragraph of F. Public
                                           or simplifying the amendments for                        of Federal Regulations is amended as                    Availability;
                                           small entities would satisfy those                       follows:                                                ■ b. In Part B, amending Item B.2 by
                                           objectives. In particular, we do not                                                                             adding Item B.2.f;
                                           believe that the interest of investors                   PART 274—FORMS PRESCRIBED                               ■ c. In Part B, revising Item B.8;
                                           would be served by these alternatives.                   UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY                            ■ d. In Part C, revising Item C.7; and
                                           We believe that all fund investors,                      ACT OF 1940                                             ■ e. Revising Part F.
                                           including investors in funds that are                                                                              The revisions read as follows:
                                           small entities, would benefit from                       ■ 1. The authority citation for part 274
                                                                                                    continues to read, in part, as follows:                   Note: The text of Form N–PORT does not,
                                           accessible and useful disclosure about                                                                           and this amendment will not, appear in the
                                           liquidity risk, with appropriate context,                  Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j,              Code of Federal Regulations.
                                           so that investors may understand its                     77s, 78c(b), 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 80a–8,
                                           nature and relevance to their                            80a–24, 80a–26, 80a–29, and Pub. L. 111–                FORM N–PORT
                                                                                                    203, sec 939A, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010), unless
                                             220 This estimate is based on the following            otherwise noted.                                        MONTHLY PORTFOLIO
                                           calculations: 2.5 hours × 54 = 135 hours.                                                                        INVESTMENTS REPORT
                                                                                                    *     *      *     *     *
                                             221 This estimate is based on the following
                                                                                                    ■ 2. Amend Form N–1A (referenced in                     *       *    *    *      *
                                           calculations: $822.50 × 54 = $44,415.
                                             222 This estimate is based on the following            274.11A) by:                                            F. Public Availability
                                           calculations: (135 hours + 90 hours) ÷ 54 funds =        ■ a. In Item 27, renumbering paragraph
                                                                                                                                                            *     *     *     *      *
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                                           4.2 hours.                                               (d)(7) to (d)(7)(a); and
                                             223 This estimate is based on the following
                                                                                                    ■ b. In Item 27, adding new paragraph                     The SEC does not intend to make
                                           calculations: ($44,415 + $29,610) ÷ 54 funds =                                                                   public the information reported on
                                           $1,370.83.                                               (d)(7)(b).
                                             224 This estimate is based on the following
                                                                                                                                                            Form N–PORT for the first and second
                                           calculations: 226.8 hours × $329 (blended rate for            225 See
                                                                                                              supra text accompanying footnote 192.         months of each Fund’s fiscal quarter
                                           a compliance attorney ($345) and a senior officer             226 See
                                                                                                              supra section IV.B at text accompanying       that is identifiable to any particular
                                           ($313)) = $74,617.20.                                    footnote 188.                                           fund or adviser, or any information


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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 132 / Tuesday, July 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                 31877

                                           reported with respect to a Fund’s Highly                 portions of the position have differing               BUTINACA; 4-CN-CUMYL BINACA;
                                           Liquid Investment Minimum (Item B.7),                    liquidity features that justify treating the          CUMYL-4CN-BINACA; SGT-78); methyl
                                           derivatives transactions (Item B.8),                     portions separately; (2) if a fund has                2-(1-(cyclohexylmethyl)-1H-indole-3-
                                           country of risk and economic exposure                    multiple sub-advisers with differing                  carboxamido)-3-methylbutanoate (trivial
                                           (Item C.5.b), delta (Items C.9.f.v,                      liquidity views; or (3) if the fund                   names: MMB-CHMICA, AMB-CHMICA);
                                           C.11.c.vii, or C.11.g.iv), liquidity                     chooses to classify the position through              and 1-(5-fluoropentyl)-N-(2-
                                           classification for portfolio investments                 evaluation of how long it would take to               phenylpropan-2-yl)-1H-pyrrolo[2,3-
                                           (Item C.7), or miscellaneous securities                  liquidate the entire position (rather than            b]pyridine-3-carboxamide (trivial name:
                                           (Part D), or explanatory notes related to                basing it on the sizes it would                       5F-CUMYL-P7AICA), and their optical,
                                           any of those topics (Part E) that is                     reasonably anticipated trading). In (1)               positional, and geometric isomers, salts,
                                           identifiable to any particular fund or                   and (2), a fund would classify using the              and salts of isomers in schedule I. This
                                           adviser. However, the SEC may use                        reasonably anticipated trade size for                 action is based on a finding by the
                                           information reported on this Form in its                 each portion of the position.                         Acting Administrator that the placement
                                           regulatory programs, including                           *     *     *     *     *                             of these synthetic cannabinoids in
                                           examinations, investigations, and                                                                              schedule I of the Controlled Substances
                                           enforcement actions.                                     Part F: Exhibits                                      Act is necessary to avoid an imminent
                                           *     *     *     *     *                                   For reports filed for the end of the               hazard to the public safety. As a result
                                                                                                    first and third quarters of the Fund’s                of this order, the regulatory controls and
                                           Part B: Information About the Fund                       fiscal year, attach no later than 60 days             administrative, civil, and criminal
                                           *     *     *     *    *                                 after the end of the reporting period the             sanctions applicable to schedule I
                                             Item B.2.f. Cash and cash equivalents                  Fund’s complete portfolio holdings as of              controlled substances will be imposed
                                           not reported in Parts C and D.                           the close of the period covered by the                on persons who handle (manufacture,
                                           *     *     *     *    *                                 report. These portfolio holdings must be              distribute, reverse distribute, import,
                                             Item B.8 Derivatives Transactions. For                 presented in accordance with the                      export, engage in research, conduct
                                           portfolio investments of open-end                        schedules set forth in §§ 210.12–12—                  instructional activities or chemical
                                           management investment companies,                         210.12–14 of Regulation S–X [17 CFR                   analysis, or possess), or propose to
                                           provide the percentage of the Fund’s                     210.12–12—210.12–14].                                 handle, NM2201, 5F-AB-PINACA, 4-CN-
                                           Highly Liquid Investments that it has                    *      *    *      *     *                            CUMYL-BUTINACA, MMB-CHMICA
                                           segregated to cover or pledged to satisfy                  By the Commission.
                                                                                                                                                          and 5F-CUMYL-P7AICA.
                                           margin requirements in connection with                     Dated: June 28, 2018.                               DATES: This temporary scheduling order
                                           derivatives transactions that are                                                                              is effective July 10, 2018, until July 10,
                                                                                                    Brent J. Fields,
                                           classified among the following                                                                                 2020. If this order is extended or made
                                                                                                    Secretary.
                                           categories as specified in rule 22e–4 [17                                                                      permanent, the DEA will publish a
                                                                                                    [FR Doc. 2018–14366 Filed 7–9–18; 8:45 am]
                                           CFR 270.22e–4]:                                                                                                document in the Federal Register.
                                                                                                    BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
                                             1. Moderately Liquid Investments                                                                             FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                             2. Less Liquid Investments                                                                                   Michael J. Lewis, Diversion Control
                                             3. Illiquid Investments                                                                                      Division, Drug Enforcement
                                                                                                    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE                                 Administration; Mailing Address: 8701
                                           *     *     *     *    *
                                                                                                    Drug Enforcement Administration                       Morrissette Drive, Springfield, Virginia
                                           Part C: Schedule of Portfolio                                                                                  22152; Telephone: (202) 598–6812.
                                           Investments
                                                                                                    21 CFR Part 1308                                      SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                           *      *    *     *     *
                                             Item C.7.a Liquidity classification                    [Docket No. DEA–479]                                  Legal Authority
                                           information.                                                                                                      Section 201 of the Controlled
                                             For portfolio investments of open-end                  Schedules of Controlled Substances:                   Substances Act (CSA), 21 U.S.C. 811,
                                           management investment companies,                         Temporary Placement of NM2201, 5F-                    provides the Attorney General with the
                                           provide the liquidity classification(s) for              AB-PINACA, 4-CN-CUMYL-BUTINACA,                       authority to temporarily place a
                                           each portfolio investment among the                      MMB-CHMICA and 5F-CUMYL-P7AICA                        substance in schedule I of the CSA for
                                           following categories as specified in rule                Into Schedule I                                       two years without regard to the
                                           22e–4 [17 CFR 270.22e–4]. For portfolio                  AGENCY:  Drug Enforcement                             requirements of 21 U.S.C. 811(b) if he
                                           investments with multiple liquidity                      Administration, Department of Justice.                finds that such action is necessary to
                                           classifications, indicate the percentage                 ACTION: Temporary amendment;                          avoid an imminent hazard to the public
                                           amount attributable to each                              temporary scheduling order.                           safety. 21 U.S.C. 811(h)(1). In addition,
                                           classification.                                                                                                if proceedings to control a substance are
                                             i. Highly Liquid Investments                           SUMMARY:   The Acting Administrator of                initiated under 21 U.S.C. 811(a)(1), the
                                             ii. Moderately Liquid Investments                      the Drug Enforcement Administration is                Attorney General may extend the
                                             iii. Less Liquid Investments                           issuing this temporary scheduling order               temporary scheduling 1 for up to one
                                             iv. Illiquid Investments                               to schedule the synthetic cannabinoids,               year. 21 U.S.C. 811(h)(2).
                                             Item C.7.b. If attributing multiple                    Naphthalen-1-yl 1-(5-fluoropentyl)-1H-                   Where the necessary findings are
                                           classification categories to the holding,                indole-3-carboxylate (trivial name:                   made, a substance may be temporarily
                                           indicate which of the three                              NM2201; CBL2201); N-(1-amino-3-                       scheduled if it is not listed in any other
                                           circumstances listed in the Instructions                 methyl-1-oxobutan-2-yl)-1-(5-                         schedule under section 202 of the CSA,
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                                           to Item C.7 is applicable.                               fluoropentyl)-1H-indazole-3-
                                             Instructions to Item C. 7 Funds may                    carboxamide (trivial name: 5F-AB-                        1 Though DEA has used the term ‘‘final order’’

                                           choose to indicate the percentage                        PINACA); 1-(4-cyanobutyl)-N-(2-                       with respect to temporary scheduling orders in the
                                                                                                                                                          past, this document adheres to the statutory
                                           amount of a holding attributable to                      phenylpropan-2-yl)-1H-indazole-3-                     language of 21 U.S.C. 811(h), which refers to a
                                           multiple classification categories only in               carboxamide (trivial name: 4-CN-                      ‘‘temporary scheduling order.’’ No substantive
                                           the following circumstances: (1) If                      CUMYL-BUTINACA; 4-cyano-CUMYL-                        change is intended.



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Document Created: 2018-11-06 10:18:31
Document Modified: 2018-11-06 10:18:31
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective Date: This rule is effective September 10, 2018.
ContactZeena Abdul-Rahman, Senior Counsel, or Thoreau Bartmann, Senior Special Counsel, at (202) 551-6792, Division of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-8549.
FR Citation83 FR 31859 
RIN Number3235-AM30
CFR AssociatedInvestment Companies; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Securities

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