[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 203 (Tuesday, October 20, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66592-66607]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-23141]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-90176; File No. SR-FINRA-2020-032]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of a
Proposed Rule Change To Adjust FINRA Fees To Provide Sustainable
Funding for FINRA's Regulatory Mission
October 14, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on October 2, 2020, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(``FINRA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC''
or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I,
II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by FINRA. FINRA has
designated the proposed rule change as ``establishing or changing a
due, fee or other charge'' under Section 19(b)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act \3\
and Rule 19b-4(f)(2) thereunder,\4\ which renders the proposal
effective upon receipt of this filing by the Commission. The Commission
is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
\4\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(2).
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to adjust FINRA fees to provide sustainable
funding for FINRA's regulatory mission.
The text of the proposed rule change is available on FINRA's
website at http://www.finra.org, at the principal office of FINRA and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
[[Page 66593]]
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, FINRA included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. FINRA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A,
B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Overview
FINRA is submitting this proposed rule change to increase the
revenues that FINRA, as a not-for-profit self-regulatory organization
(``SRO''), relies upon to fund its regulatory mission. The proposed fee
increases are designed to better align FINRA's revenues with its costs
while preserving the existing equitable allocation of fees among FINRA
members. FINRA has not raised its core member regulatory fees since
2013, even though the overall costs of FINRA's operations have exceeded
its total revenues for most of the last decade.
Although the proposed fee increases will not begin to take effect
until 2022, FINRA is submitting this proposed rule change now so that
it can: (1) Provide significant advance notice of the proposed fee
increases to member firms; (2) permit the proposed fee increases to be
phased in over multiple years; and (3) continue to strategically
``spend down'' financial reserves over the next several years, to allow
the proposed increases to be gradually phased in as much as possible.
The proposed fee increases are intended to provide responsible and
sustainable longer-term funding to enable FINRA to accomplish its
regulatory mission in a manner consistent with FINRA's public Financial
Guiding Principles (``Guiding Principles'').\5\
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\5\ See FINRA's Financial Guiding Principles, available at
https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/finra_financial_guiding_principles_0.pdf.
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Background
Over the last decade, FINRA's regulatory responsibilities have
grown significantly, driven by the proliferation of new investment
products and services, the increase in the number of trading venues and
trading volumes, the adoption by the SEC of important new rules that
FINRA is charged with overseeing, and other regulatory mandates and
market developments.
For example, FINRA must supervise an increasingly complex array of
broker-dealer services provided by member firms in the context of a
constantly evolving securities market structure. New financial
products, such as digital assets and increasingly intricate exchange-
traded products, and new trading venues, coupled with pronounced growth
in trading volume, require increased examination and surveillance by
FINRA staff. In addition, FINRA has made substantial investments in
technology and staff to supervise or comply with significant new rules
adopted by the SEC, such as the Consolidated Audit Trail, Regulation
Best Interest, the Market Access Rule, Regulation Systems Compliance
and Integrity, Regulation Crowdfunding, rules concerning the oversight
of municipal advisors and security-based swap activities, and
amendments to Regulation ATS, Regulation SHO, and Rule 606 of
Regulation NMS, among others.
During this time, FINRA has also committed significant resources to
support the SEC's increasing reliance on, and oversight of, FINRA as a
first-line supervisor of broker-dealers.\6\ For example, in 2019, the
SEC's Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations conducted more
than 160 examinations of FINRA, including examinations of critical
FINRA program areas as well as oversight reviews of FINRA
examinations.\7\
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\6\ See Inside the National Exam Program in 2016, Marc Wyatt,
Director, Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations,
available at https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/inside-the-national-exam-program-in-2016.html.
\7\ See 2020 Examination Priorities, SEC Office of Compliance
Inspections and Examinations, available at https://www.sec.gov/about/offices/ocie/national-examination-program-priorities-2020.pdf,
at 2.
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Despite these increasing responsibilities, FINRA has not increased
its core regulatory fees materially since 2010 and has not raised these
fees at all since 2013. As described more fully below, FINRA has been
able to defer fee increases for so long by (1) strategically spending
down its financial reserves, and (2) carefully managing its expenses.
As discussed in the Guiding Principles, FINRA has relied on its
financial reserves, which originally derived from the sale of Nasdaq,
to help support its regulatory mission. From 2010 through 2019, FINRA
used over $600 million of its financial reserves to fund operating
losses and defer fee increases. On average, this support from FINRA's
financial reserves amounted to 6.6% of FINRA's operating budget per
year. Information about FINRA's financial reserves is provided each
year in FINRA's published annual financial reports.\8\
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\8\ See infra note 45 and accompanying discussion of the reports
FINRA publishes and maintains on its website.
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Careful expense management is another key element of the Guiding
Principles. Over the last decade, FINRA has managed its expenses
responsibly, controlling costs through various initiatives to enhance
efficiency and effectiveness. One critical component of FINRA's success
in meeting its expanding regulatory responsibilities while exercising
careful expense management is the FINRA360 initiative, which launched
in 2017 as a comprehensive self-evaluation to identify opportunities
for improvement in FINRA's effectiveness and efficiency.\9\ FINRA has
also made significant investments in technology, including cloud
computing and data science, to enhance regulatory effectiveness with
cost-effective tools.
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\9\ Detailed information about the FINRA360 initiative is
available at https://www.finra.org/about/finra-360.
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As a result of these efforts, FINRA's expense growth rate from 2010
through 2019 was less than the rate of inflation and significantly
lower than expense growth at member firms.\10\ Specifically, FINRA's
costs increased by 16% cumulatively during the period compared with 42%
for the industry, while U.S. core inflation grew by 19%. FINRA's
restrained expense growth is the result of careful management of both
compensation costs, the largest driver of FINRA's budget, and non-
compensation costs. FINRA has been able to maintain relatively flat
staffing levels over the last decade and low cumulative compensation
growth when compared with average U.S. employee wage growth over the
period. FINRA has further been successful in reducing its non-
compensation related expenses in recent years, with significant
reductions in the last five years across operating expenses (excluding
technology) and non-recurring expenses.\11\
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\10\ FINRA recognizes that firms' expense growth, like that of
FINRA, has been driven in part by their increased compliance
responsibilities.
\11\ See infra notes 48 through 50 and 53 through 54 and
associated discussion for more detailed analysis of the figures
discussed in this paragraph and supporting sources. In this
paragraph and where noted below, FINRA's discussion of its expenses
and revenues over the past decade draw from the figures that FINRA
publishes each year in its Annual Financial Report. Because FINRA's
Annual Financial Reports present audited financials on a
consolidated basis, these figures include the expenses and revenues
for FINRA subsidiaries. Over the last decade, there have been three
primary subsidiaries in addition to FINRA Regulation, FINRA's
regulatory subsidiary: FINRA Dispute Resolution, the FINRA Investor
Education Foundation, and FINRA CAT, LLC. FINRA Dispute Resolution
was merged into FINRA Regulation at the end of 2015; the FINRA
Investor Education Foundation has existed throughout the last
decade, and FINRA CAT, LLC was formed in 2019. While the costs and
revenues for these subsidiaries are included where historic expense
and revenue figures are drawn from FINRA's consolidated Annual
Financial Reports, the FINRA Investor Education Foundation and FINRA
CAT, LLC subsidiaries are budgeted for separately and not included
in FINRA's public budget summaries; accordingly, where budget
projections are discussed in this filing, they do not include the
expenses or revenues of FINRA subsidiaries other than FINRA
Regulation.
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[[Page 66594]]
FINRA will continue to carefully manage costs and strategically
spend down reserves in the years ahead, but these steps alone are not a
sustainable financial strategy in the long term, particularly in the
context of FINRA's increasing regulatory responsibilities and finite
reserves. Accordingly, consistent with the Guiding Principles, FINRA
proposes at this time to adopt a schedule of future fee increases to
address the structural deficit in FINRA's budget and provide
sustainable funding to carry out its regulatory mission. This proposal
is designed around several core elements: (1) Significant advance
notice to members before increases take effect, with continued
reasonable reliance on FINRA's financial reserves to allow the proposed
fee increases to be deferred and gradually phased-in as much as
possible; \12\ (2) proportional fee increases that largely preserve the
existing allocation of fees among members; and (3) FINRA's ongoing
commitment to reasonable cost management and rebates to members where
revenues exceed costs. These elements are discussed in detail below.
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\12\ As discussed further below, consistent with the Guiding
Principles, FINRA strives to maintain an appropriate level of
reserves, which the FINRA Board of Governors has determined to be at
least one year of expenditures.
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FINRA's Current Fee Structure
As a not-for-profit self-regulatory organization, FINRA relies on a
mix of fees that are intended to cover the overall costs of FINRA's
operations. The most significant sources of FINRA's funding are three
core regulatory fees: The Gross Income Assessment (``GIA''); the
Trading Activity Fee (``TAF''); and the Personnel Assessment (``PA'').
These fees are used to substantially fund FINRA's regulatory
activities, including examinations, financial monitoring, and FINRA's
policymaking, rulemaking, and enforcement activities.\13\ Where
appropriate, FINRA also employs use-based fees for some of the specific
services and data it provides to members and the public in support of
its regulatory mission.\14\
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\13\ See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 61042
(November 20, 2009), 74 FR 62616 (November 30, 2009) (Order
Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2009-057).
\14\ The services covered by these fees currently include
initial and annual member registrations, qualification examinations,
reviews of corporate filings, review of advertisements and
disclosures, and transparency and dispute resolution services. While
each of these services has unique attributes, fees for these
services generally are based on the use of a particular service.
When applying use-based fees, FINRA takes into account three
associated types of costs: Direct costs for the program associated
with the use-based fee, such as program building and operating
expenses, and reinvestments and enhancements; indirect costs for the
program, including supporting services necessary for the program's
associated regulatory activity; and a contribution to FINRA's
overall regulatory operations. See, e.g., Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 67247 (June 25, 2012), 77 FR 38866 (June 29, 2012)
(Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of File No. SR-FINRA-
2012-030) (discussing how registration fees contribute to FINRA's
overall regulatory funding).
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As FINRA has explained in connection with prior filings to the
Commission, because FINRA is a not-for-profit entity it employs this
mix of fees to seek recovery of its overall costs in a manner that is
fair, reasonable, and equitably allocated among FINRA's member firms.
Broadly speaking, each of FINRA's core regulatory fees reflects one of
the critical components driving FINRA's regulatory costs with respect
to a particular member firm: The size of the firm (measured by
revenue), the firm's trading activity; and the number and role of
persons registered with the firm.\15\
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\15\ The number and role of registered persons also correlates
with FINRA's registration, and qualification examination fees, so
increases in these fees are also used to equitably allocate the fees
across these components of FINRA's costs.
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However, FINRA has addressed in prior filings how, in light of its
diverse membership of firms that vary greatly in size and business
model, it is impossible to develop a comprehensive pricing scheme that
precisely accounts for the particulars of each member.\16\ Because it
is not feasible to associate a direct affiliated revenue stream for
each of FINRA's programs--for example, examinations of member firms do
not have an associated revenue stream--FINRA has explained that
numerous operations and services must be funded by general revenue
sources, which include both regulatory assessments and use-based
fees.\17\ Similarly, there is no one consistent driver of costs of a
particular regulatory program. Even where one cost driver may, at
times, align with a particular revenue stream (e.g., as trading
activity increases, certain Market Regulation costs may increase), the
relationship is not uniform or linear. For instance, novel trading
patterns in single or multiple securities may not be associated with
significant volume but may require disproportionately large regulatory
investment. Likewise, periods of intense market volatility may
influence regulatory costs independent of the change in trading volume.
As such, FINRA must ensure sufficient funding to meet all of its
regulatory obligations notwithstanding the fluctuations in different
revenue streams and cost drivers that are naturally expected to occur.
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\16\ See Letter to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary, SEC, from
Brant Brown, Associate General Counsel, FINRA, dated June 19, 2012
(FINRA Response to Comments on File No. SR-FINRA-2012-023).
\17\ See Letter to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary, SEC, from
Philip Shaikun, Associate Vice President and Associate General
Counsel, FINRA, dated August 3, 2012 (FINRA Response to Comments on
File Nos. SR-FINRA-2012-028; SR-FINRA-2012-029; SR-FINRA-2012-030;
and SR-FINRA-2012-031).
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Consistent with this framework, FINRA uses an overall cost-based
pricing structure designed to be reasonable, achieve general equity
across its membership, and correlate fees with regulatory costs to the
extent feasible. Notably, the Commission has approved FINRA's approach
to this overall pricing structure and agreed that it ``is reasonable in
that it achieves a generally equitable impact across FINRA's membership
and correlates the fees assessed to the regulatory services provided by
FINRA.'' \18\ FINRA continues to believe that this approved approach to
overall pricing is the most feasible and equitable way to provide
sufficient funding to meet its regulatory obligations given its role as
a not-for-profit national securities association and its broad, diverse
membership.
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\18\ See Order Approving SR-FINRA-2009-057, supra note 13, 74 FR
at 62620.
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FINRA has long used rebates to support its commitment to
reasonable, cost-based fee assessments in instances where revenues
significantly exceed expenditures. For example, FINRA distributed
rebates to members each year from 2000 to 2014. In these years, FINRA
generally first distributed to all active members in good standing an
initial amount intended to offset their minimum GIA fee,\19\ and
additional rebates were then provided based on these members' prorated
share of
[[Page 66595]]
regulatory fees paid into FINRA.\20\ To maintain equivalence between
revenues and costs, FINRA will be guided by its historical approach to
rebates if its revenue in future years exceeds its costs by a material
amount.\21\ FINRA's commitment to reasonable cost-based fee levels is
further reinforced by its financial transparency, including the revenue
and cost information FINRA makes public each year.
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\19\ As discussed below, the minimum GIA fee is $1,200 per year
and would remain unchanged by this proposal.
\20\ See, e.g., FINRA 2014 Annual Financial Report, available at
https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/2014_YIR_AFR.pdf, at 9.
\21\ These rebates are approved by the FINRA Board of Governors.
A number of factors must be considered when determining whether to
provide rebates, including the amount of excess revenue for the
year, whether budget projections anticipate near-term revenue
shortfalls, and the number of firms that would be eligible to
receive rebates. As discussed throughout the filing, FINRA makes
information about these factors transparent to the public each year.
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Proposal
FINRA is proposing a proportional increase to fees it relies on to
substantially fund its regulatory mission in a manner that preserves
equitable fee allocation among FINRA members. Specifically, FINRA is
proposing increases to its GIA, TAF, PA, member registration, and
qualification examination fees, phased in over a three-year period
beginning in 2022, as described in detail below for each specific fee
change.
In sum, FINRA is targeting the proposed fee increases to generate
an additional $225 million annually once fully implemented in 2024.
This targeted revenue amount is calculated to bring FINRA's revenues in
line with its anticipated costs, based on FINRA's projected revenue and
costs.\22\ As FINRA noted recently in its 2020 Annual Budget Summary,
based on the current fee structure FINRA projected that its overall
costs will exceed revenues by $210.2 million in 2020.\23\ FINRA
projects it will need $225 million in additional annual revenue from
the fee increases proposed in this filing by 2024 to achieve
sustainable funding for its current regulatory mission, in line with
its Guiding Principles.\24\
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\22\ Anticipated costs would not include potential costs
associated with new services that may be initiated or approved in
the future. FINRA may submit separate fee filings to cover program
costs for new services. Similarly, FINRA notes that program costs
associated with the reporting of transactions in U.S. Treasury
Securities (``Treasuries'') are not included in the targeted amount
sought by this proposal; currently, Treasuries transactions are
exempted from both TRACE transaction reporting fees and from the
TAF. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 79116 (October 18,
2016), 81 FR 73167, 73176 (October 24, 2016) (Order Approving File
No. SR-FINRA-2016-027).
\23\ See FINRA 2020 Annual Budget Summary, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/2020_annual_budget_summary.pdf, at 2. Budget projections discussed
in this filing are based on the figures used for the 2020 Annual
Budget Summary. Budget projections are evaluated throughout the
year, and the steps FINRA would take in the event of materially
changed projections are discussed infra note 27 and its associated
text. FINRA has provided a detailed program-level summary of its
recent budgeting trends from 2018 through 2020 in Chart 1 of Exhibit
3 to this filing. As noted in the chart, while certain program-level
budget figures incorporate the costs of contract services, these
costs are funded in full by contract fees. Therefore, FINRA's
contract services are not funded with any of the regulatory revenues
discussed in this filing, and contract service costs do not cause
any of the projected revenue shortfalls that this filing is designed
to correct. For example, to the extent the direct costs of services
provided under Regulatory Services Agreements (``RSAs'') are
included in the budget shown for Market Regulation, those direct
costs are accounted for and fully offset by the revenues derived
from the agreements. This includes the costs of shared resources
used to provide services under the RSAs, as such costs are tracked
and allocated under the agreements. In the event there is an
expansion, modification, or termination of such agreements, FINRA
would make corresponding adjustments to its budget projections.
\24\ For purposes of its projections, FINRA assumed a
conservative amount of fine money for future years based on historic
fine money receipt. FINRA's projections further assumed investment
gains of 4.5% annualized, consistent with historical results and
FINRA's investment policy.
Like other SROs, FINRA routinely imposes fines on its members or
their registered representatives for violations of applicable SEC or
SRO rules. Although SROs are not generally restricted by applicable
law or regulation in terms of how they may use fine monies, FINRA
has determined pursuant to its Guiding Principles to adopt several
policies designed to ensure that the collection and use of fine
monies are consistent with FINRA's public-interest mission. In
particular, the imposition and amount of fines are not based on
revenue considerations; FINRA does not establish any minimum amount
of fines to be collected for purposes of the FINRA annual budget;
fines are not considered in determining employee compensation; FINRA
accounts for fine monies separately; fine monies may only be used
upon approval by the Board of Governors for certain designated
purposes, including for example capital initiatives or non-recurring
strategic expenditures that promote effective and efficient
regulatory oversight by FINRA; and FINRA publishes an annual report
detailing how fine monies have been used. (For example, see FINRA's
Report on Use of 2019 Fine Monies, available at https://www.finra.org/about/annual-reports/report-use-2019-fine-monies.)
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Overall, the total fee increase represents just under a 5%
compounded annual growth rate (``CAGR'') across all FINRA fees between
this year and when the proposal is fully implemented in 2024.\25\ When
measured more specifically against the groups of fees impacted by this
proposal (FINRA's regulatory fees, along with qualification examination
and registration fees), the proposal represents a 6.5% CAGR over the
same time frame. However, as explained above, because FINRA has been
able to defer raising fees for a number of years because of careful
expense management and reliance on its financial reserves, FINRA also
believes it is appropriate to measure the rate of fee increases since
2011, the year following the last material regulatory fee increase.
When measured over this period (2011 through 2024), the proposal
represents a 2.4% CAGR across all FINRA fees and a 3.1% CAGR across the
groups of fees impacted by this proposal. While this increase is
material, FINRA's fees will continue to represent a very small dollar
amount relative to industry revenues as reported in FOCUS reports--
specifically, when the proposal is implemented in 2024, FINRA estimates
that the FINRA fees impacted by the proposal would represent
approximately 0.22% (22 basis points) of recent industry revenues.\26\
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\25\ Compound average growth rate provides a geometric average
of the change in fees over the implementation period. It is
particularly useful for comparing growth rates from various sets of
data over the same multi-year period.
\26\ As discussed below, this estimate measures the amount of
FINRA's regulatory and use-based fees expected in 2024 as a
percentage of 2019 industry revenues, assuming no FOCUS revenue
growth for member firms over that time period.
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In essence, the proposal is designed to preserve the same SEC-
approved, equitable fee allocation across members that FINRA has
maintained for years. By pursuing a proportional aggregate increase,
FINRA designed the proposal to change the distribution of fees across
members as little as possible. In other words, FINRA designed the
proposal to achieve the targeted revenue amount needed to correct
FINRA's structural deficit--expected to be $225 million by 2024--with a
package of specific fee increases that best yielded an equitable
overall fee increase across member firm size and type. The five fees
included in this proposal--the GIA, TAF, PA, registration, and
qualification examination fees--were selected to achieve an overall
proportional increase, with minimal distributional impact, because they
are the most broadly assessed fees that FINRA relies on to fund its
regulatory mission, and they match the main member firm components of
FINRA's regulatory costs. By using a combination of fees that apply to
different components of a firm's activities, the increase in fees
maintains the equitable distribution of fees across varying types of
member firms.
When these five fees are grouped according to the three main
components of FINRA's regulatory costs--the size of the member firm
(GIA), the firm's trading activity (TAF), and the number and role of
registered persons with the firm (PA, registration, and qualification
examination fees)--they have each
[[Page 66596]]
contributed roughly the same total revenue by group for the last five
years, and collectively they account for roughly 60% of FINRA's total
revenues. The proposal is therefore designed as a proportional fee
increase, splitting the proposed aggregate fee increase amount of $225
million evenly across these three categories--$75 million from the GIA,
$75 million from the TAF, and $75 million collectively from the
representative-based fees (PA, registration, and qualification
examination fees). FINRA believes this proportional approach to fee
increases will provide member firms a greater degree of certainty and
predictability, as it seeks to maintain consistency with FINRA's
existing equitable fee distribution. FINRA further believes its
proportional approach reduces the potential for unintended impacts on
the services provided by member firms, and the business models they
adopt, that could arise from significant changes to fee distribution.
To further promote predictability for member firms, FINRA designed
the proposal to reach the total targeted revenue amount in 2024 as part
of a gradual, multi-year phase-in beginning in 2022. As noted above,
during this time, FINRA will continue to draw an estimated $400 million
from its financial reserves to support the phased implementation. FINRA
currently projects it can continue to fund its annual budget deficits
from its reserves during the implementation period, at the end of which
FINRA projects that its remaining reserves will align with the Board-
approved level of appropriate reserves, noted in the Guiding
Principles, equal to one year of operating costs. Discussions with
members to date confirm that providing notice to member firms now of a
future fee increase--with a phase-in beginning in 2022--will provide
members with greater certainty regarding their future fee expenses that
will be very valuable in their annual budgeting and financial planning
processes. If FINRA's actual structural financial deficit is materially
reduced during this period relative to current projections--for
example, because key assumptions used in those projections are overly
conservative-- FINRA would submit a new filing to further defer the
proposed fee increases or consider other modifications as
appropriate.\27\
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\27\ Details of the assumptions FINRA used to project costs
between 2020 and 2024 are discussed supra note 24 and infra note 60.
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Gross Income Assessment
The GIA is a core regulatory fee designed to correlate to one of
the three critical components of FINRA's regulatory costs, the size of
a firm. Accordingly, the GIA is based on a firm's annual gross
revenue,\28\ employing a seven-tier rate structure that has applied
since 2008.\29\ The current rates are as follows:
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\28\ Schedule A to the FINRA By-Laws defines gross revenue for
assessment purposes as total income as reported on FOCUS form Part
II or IIA, excluding commodities income.
\29\ While the GIA rate structure has not changed since 2008,
FINRA made modifications to the method of GIA calculation under the
structure in 2009 and 2014. In 2009, the Commission approved a GIA
calculation modification designed to mitigate year-to-year revenue
volatility by assessing member firms the greater of a GIA calculated
based on the firm's annual gross revenue from the preceding calendar
year, or a GIA averaged over the prior three years. See Order
Approving SR-FINRA-2009-057, supra note 13, 74 FR at 62617. In 2014,
FINRA refined the GIA calculation method to provide limited relief
for smaller member firms from unintended effects of the 2009
calculation change; as a result of the 2014 change, firms that have
annual gross revenue of $25 million or less pay the GIA based on
preceding year revenue without looking to a three-year average. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 73632 (November 18, 2014), 79 FR
69937 (November 24, 2014) (Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of File No. SR-FINRA-2014-046).
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(1) $1,200 on annual gross revenue up to $1 million;
(2) 0.1215% of annual gross revenue greater than $1 million up to
$25 million;
(3) 0.2599% of annual gross revenue greater than $25 million up to
$50 million;
(4) 0.0518% of annual gross revenue greater than $50 million up to
$100 million;
(5) 0.0365% of annual gross revenue greater than $100 million up to
$5 billion;
(6) 0.0397% of annual gross revenue greater than $5 billion up to
$25 billion; and
(7) 0.0855% of annual gross revenue greater than $25 billion.
FINRA is proposing the following changes to its GIA tier rates
between 2022 and 2024: \30\
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\30\ FINRA notes the Exhibit 5 to this proposed rule change is
marked to show the changes as they are proposed to take effect each
year, as described in this filing. Specifically, Exhibit 5A shows
the proposed changes that would take effect in 2022, Exhibit 5B
shows the proposed changes that would take effect in 2023, and
Exhibit 5C shows the proposed changes that would take effect in
2024.
GIA--Proposed Implementation
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2021 (no
Tier (revenue) 2020 (current) change) 2022 2023 2024
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$0 to $1 million................ $1,200 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200
Greater than $1 million up to 0.1215% 0.1215% 0.1346% 0.1511% 0.1732%
$25 million....................
Greater than $25 million up to 0.2599% 0.2599% 0.2880% 0.3232% 0.3705%
$50 million....................
Greater than $50 million up to 0.0518% 0.0518% 0.0574% 0.0644% 0.0738%
$100 million...................
Greater than $100 million up to 0.0365% 0.0365% 0.0404% 0.0454% 0.0520%
$5 billion.....................
Greater than $5 billion up to 0.0397% 0.0397% 0.0440% 0.0494% 0.0566%
$25 billion....................
Greater than $25 billion........ 0.0855% 0.0855% 0.0948% 0.1063% 0.1219%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated previously, when the new GIA rates are fully implemented
in 2024, they are designed to generate an additional $75 million
annually. The proposed GIA increase preserves the existing seven-tier
structure and calculation method. With these proposed increases, the
GIA structure would continue to reflect the costs associated with
performing regulatory responsibilities across FINRA's diverse
population of member firms. The proposal would not increase the flat
$1,200 fee for member firms with revenues of $1 million or less.
Maintaining this fee level for the smallest member firms preserves
FINRA's existing approach to cost distribution between member firms of
varying sizes, which, as discussed in further detail below, seeks to
prevent regulatory costs from creating an inappropriate barrier to
entry. For rates applicable in tiers two through seven, the proposed
changes represent progressive yearly increases through the
implementation period, beginning with a 10.8% increase across tiers in
2022, a 12.2% increase in 2023, and a 14.7% increase in 2024.
[[Page 66597]]
Trading Activity Fee
The TAF is a core regulatory fee designed to correlate to the
second critical component of FINRA's regulatory costs, the trading
activity of a firm. FINRA initially adopted the TAF in 2002, modeled on
the Commission's transaction-based Section 31 fee.\31\ The TAF is
generally assessed on the sale of all exchange-listed securities
wherever executed (except debt securities that are not TRACE-Eligible
Securities), over-the-counter equity securities, security futures,
TRACE-Eligible Securities (provided that the transaction is a
Reportable TRACE Transaction), and all municipal securities subject to
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board reporting requirements.\32\ The
current TAF rates, which have not increased since 2012, are:
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\31\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 46416 (August 23,
2002), 67 FR 55901 (August 30, 2002) (Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of File No. SR-NASD-2002-98).
\32\ Certain types of transactions are excluded from the TAF--
for example, primary market transactions, proprietary transactions
executed by a member on a national securities exchange in the
member's capacity as an exchange specialist or market maker, and
transactions in U.S. Treasury Securities. See FINRA By-Laws,
Schedule A, Section 1(b)(2) (providing full list of transactions
exempt from the TAF). This proposal would not change the scope of
any current TAF exemptions, and as discussed supra note 22, the
proposed TAF rates shown in the chart below for TRACE-Eligible
Securities do not apply to Treasuries transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) $0.000119 per share for each sale of a covered equity security,
with a maximum charge of $5.95 per trade;
(2) $0.002 per contract for each sale of an option;
(3) $0.00008 per contract for each round turn transaction of a
security future, provided there is a minimum charge of $0.01 per round
turn transaction;
(4) $0.00075 per bond for each sale of a covered TRACE-Eligible
Security (other than an Asset-Backed Security) and/or municipal
security, with a maximum charge of $0.75 per trade; and
(5) $0.00000075 times the value, as reported to TRACE, of a sale of
an Asset-Backed Security, with a maximum charge of $0.75 per trade.
FINRA is proposing the following changes to its TAF rates between
2022 and 2024:
TAF--Proposed Implementation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Security type 2020 (current) 2021 (no change) 2022 2023 2024
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Covered Equity Security............ $0.000119 per share $0.000119 per share $0.000130 per share $0.000145 per share $0.000166 per share
(up to $5.95 max per (up to $5.95 max per (up to $6.49 max per (up to $7.27 max per (up to $8.30 max per
trade). trade). trade). trade). trade).
Options............................ $0.002 per contract... $0.002 per contract... $0.00218 per contract $0.00244 per contract $0.00279 per
contract.
Security Future.................... $0.00008 per contract $0.00008 per contract $0.00009 per contract $0.00010 per contract $0.00011 per contract
(with $0.01 minimum (with $0.01 minimum (with $0.011 minimum (with $0.012 minimum (with $0.014 minimum
per round trip per round trip per round trip per round trip per round trip
transaction). transaction). transaction). transaction). transaction).
TRACE-Eligible Security (Other than $0.00075 per bond (up $0.00075 per bond (up $0.00082 per bond (up $0.00092 per bond (up $0.00105 per bond (up
Asset-Backed Security) or to $0.75 max per to $0.75 max per to $0.82 max per to $0.92 max per to $1.05 max per
municipal security. trade). trade). trade). trade). trade).
TRACE-Eligible Asset-Backed $0.00000075 times $0.00000075 times $0.00000082 times $0.00000092 times $0.00000105 times
Security. reported value (up to reported value (up to reported value (up reported value (up reported value (up
$0.75 max per trade). $0.75 max per trade). to $0.82 max per to $0.92 max per to $1.05 max per
trade). trade). trade).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the new TAF rates are fully implemented in 2024, they are
designed to generate an additional $75 million annually. The proposed
TAF changes reflect proportional increases in the amount raised for
each security type--meaning there is no anticipated change in the
percentage of overall TAF revenue collected from transactions in each
security type--phased in incrementally over the three-year
implementation period. Accordingly, while TAF revenues are largely
derived from transactions in equity securities, like the SEC's Section
31 fee, this proposal is intended to preserve the existing distribution
of TAF fees among security types.
Personnel Assessment
The PA is a core regulatory fee designed to correlate to the third
critical component of FINRA's regulatory costs, the number and role of
registered persons at a firm. The PA currently is assessed on a three-
tiered rate structure: Members with one to five registered
representatives and principals are assessed $150 for each such
registered person (``Reps'' in the chart below); there is a $140 charge
for each of the next 20 registered persons (between 6 and 25); and a
$130 charge for each additional registered person beyond 25. These
rates have not increased since 2010.\33\ FINRA is proposing the
following increases to its PA tier rates between 2022 and 2024:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See Regulatory Notice 09-68 (November 2009).
PA--Proposed Implementation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2021 (no
Tier (Number of Reps) 2020 (current) change) 2022 2023 2024
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reps 0-5........................ $150 $150 $160 $180 $210
Reps 6-25....................... 140 140 150 170 200
Reps 26 and greater............. 130 130 140 160 190
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 66598]]
When the new PA rates are fully implemented in 2024, they are
designed to generate an additional $38 million annually.
Registration Fees
Registration fees are representative-level fees that, while use-
based, also correlate to the third critical component of FINRA's
regulatory costs, the number and role of registered persons at a firm.
Section 4 of Schedule A to the FINRA By-Laws establishes fees connected
to FINRA's operation of the Central Registration Depository (``Web
CRD[supreg]'' or ``CRD system''), the central licensing and
registration system for the U.S. securities industry. The CRD system
contains the registration records of broker-dealer firms and their
associated individuals including their qualification, employment, and
disclosure histories; it also facilitates the processing of, among
other things, form filings and fingerprint submissions.\34\ The CRD
system enables individuals and firms seeking registration with multiple
states and SROs to do so by submitting a single form, fingerprint card,
and a combined payment of fees to FINRA.
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\34\ Certain information reported to the CRD system is displayed
in BrokerCheck[supreg], an electronic system that provides the
public with information on the professional background, business
practices, and conduct of FINRA members and their associated
persons. Investors use BrokerCheck to help make informed choices
about the individuals and firms with which they currently conduct or
are considering conducting business.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While FINRA continually makes investments to improve the CRD
system, it has not increased associated registration fees since 2012.
FINRA has explained that these fees are important to fund activities
that help ensure the integrity of information in the CRD system--
information critical to FINRA and other regulators, as well as to
investors through BrokerCheck--and to support FINRA's overall
regulatory mission.\35\ FINRA is proposing to increase certain
registration fees between 2022 and 2024 as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67247 (June 25,
2012), 77 FR 38866 (June 29, 2012) (Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of File No. SR-FINRA-2012-030).
Registration Fees--Proposed Implementation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fee 2020 (current) 2021 (no change) 2022 2023 2024
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial/Transfer Registration Form $100.................. $100.................. $125................. $125................. $125.
U4 filing \36\.
Termination U5 filing.............. $40 (plus $80 if late $40 (plus $80 if late $40 (plus $80 if late $50 (plus $100 if $50 (plus $100 if
filed). filed). filed). late filed). late filed).
System Processing Fee (for each of $45................... $45................... $45.................. $45.................. $70.
the member's registered
representatives and principals).
Branch Office Processing Fee $20................... $20................... $75.................. $75.................. $75.
(initial and annual).
Disclosure review \37\............. $110.................. $110.................. $110................. $155................. $155.
Fingerprinting \38\................ $15................... $15................... $15.................. $20.................. $20.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\36\ This fee applies for each initial or transfer Uniform
Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (``Form
U4'') filed by a member in the CRD system to register an individual.
Section 4(b)(1) of Schedule A includes a discount in cases where a
member is transferring the registrations of individuals in
connection with the acquisition of all or part of another member's
business. The discount ranges from 10% to 50%, based on the number
of registered personnel being transferred. While FINRA is proposing
to increase the registration fee, it is not proposing to make any
changes to the discount schedule.
\37\ This fee applies for the additional processing of each
initial or amended Form U4, Form U5, or Form BD that includes the
initial reporting, amendment, or certification of one or more
disclosure events or proceedings.
\38\ This fee applies for processing and posting to the CRD
system each set of fingerprints submitted electronically by a member
to FINRA, plus any other charge that may be imposed by the United
States Department of Justice for processing each set of
fingerprints.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA distributed these fee adjustments for registration-related
events in a diverse and staggered manner over the implementation period
to moderate impact. When all of these proposed registration fee changes
are fully implemented in 2024, they are designed to generate an
additional $24 million annually.
Qualification Examination Fees
Like registration fees, qualification examination fees are
representative-level fees that, while use-based, also correlate to the
third critical component of FINRA's regulatory costs, the number and
role of registered persons at a firm. Section 4(c) of Schedule A to the
FINRA By-Laws sets forth the fees associated with the qualification
examinations that FINRA administers. Persons engaged in the investment
banking or securities business of a FINRA member who function as
principals or representatives are required to register with FINRA in
each category of registration appropriate to their functions. Such
individuals must pass an appropriate qualification examination or
obtain a waiver before their registration can become effective. These
mandatory qualification examinations cover a broad range of subjects
regarding financial markets and products, individual responsibilities,
securities industry rules, and regulatory structure.
FINRA develops, maintains, and delivers all qualification
examinations for individuals who are registered or seeking registration
with FINRA.\39\ FINRA is proposing to increase its examination fees
between 2022 and 2024 as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ FINRA also administers and delivers examinations sponsored
(i.e., developed) by the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board
(``MSRB'') and other SROs, the North American Securities
Administrators Association, the National Futures Association, and
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The fees charged for
these examinations are set according to contracts with the
examination sponsors, and FINRA is not proposing any changes to fees
associated with those examinations as part of this proposal. FINRA
believes this approach to raising fees only for examinations
developed by FINRA is reasonable because this proposal is designed
to raise revenues to align with FINRA's core regulatory costs, and
the examinations developed by FINRA cover activity most closely
associated with FINRA's core regulatory efforts. In addition, the
relative number of FINRA-developed examinations, and the relative
frequency of their administration, supports the broad distribution
of the proposed fee increases in the equitable manner discussed
throughout this filing. FINRA notes that because qualification
examinations are tied fundamentally to the business an individual
engages in, FINRA does not anticipate that the relatively modest
proposed fee increases for FINRA's qualification examinations would
create material direct competitive impacts. Where FINRA has
identified potential competitive impacts of the proposal overall on
firms' decision to maintain FINRA registration, it has included
discussion infra note 66 and associated text. FINRA believes a
similar analysis applies for both firms and individuals.
[[Page 66599]]
Qualification Examination Fees--Proposed Implementation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2021 (no
Examination No. and name 2020 (current) change) 2022 2023 2024
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Securities Industry Essentials $60 $60 $80 $80 $80
(SIE) Examination..............
Series 4: Registered Options 105 105 155 155 155
Principal Examination..........
Series 6: Investment Company 40 40 75 75 75
Products and Variable Contracts
Representative Examination.....
Series 7: General Securities 245 245 300 300 300
Representative Examination.....
Series 9: General Securities 80 80 130 130 130
Sales Supervisor Examination--
Options Module.................
Series 10: General Securities 125 125 175 175 175
Sales Supervisor Examination--
General Module.................
Series 16: Supervisory Analyst 240 240 245 245 245
Examination....................
Series 22: Direct Participation 40 40 60 60 60
Programs Representative
Examination....................
Series 23: General Securities 100 100 105 105 105
Principal Examination--Sales
Supervisor Module..............
Series 24: General Securities 120 120 175 175 175
Principal Examination..........
Series 26: Investment Company 100 100 150 150 150
Products and Variable Contracts
Principal Examination..........
Series 27: Financial and 120 120 175 175 175
Operations Principal
Examination....................
Series 28: Introducing Broker- 100 100 150 150 150
Dealer Financial and Operations
Principal Examination..........
Series 39: Direct Participation 95 95 100 100 100
Programs Principal Examination.
Series 57: Securities Trader 60 60 80 80 80
Examination....................
Series 79: Investment Banking 245 245 300 300 300
Representative Examination.....
Series 82: Private Securities 40 40 60 60 60
Offering Representative
Examination....................
Series 86: Research Analyst 185 185 225 225 225
Examination--Analysis..........
Series 87: Research Analyst 130 130 150 150 150
Examination--Regulatory........
Series 99: Operations 40 40 60 60 60
Professional Examination.......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the new examination fee rates are fully implemented, they are
designed to generate an additional $13 million annually. FINRA is
proposing a single fee raise across examinations in 2022; due to the
administrative burden placed on member firms to maintain and distribute
comprehensive examination fee schedules continuously throughout the
year to the large pool of examination enrollees, FINRA believes that
this approach will avoid unnecessary confusion and operational burdens.
However, the proposed single-year examination fee increase interacts
with the overall package of proposed fee increases in a manner that
supports the goal of a gradual three-year phased implementation period.
In addition, FINRA has determined the amount of each examination fee
increase based on the frequency with which the examination is
administered, as well as the average fee per hour of examination
length. Examinations that are administered more frequently or are
longer in duration typically require more effort and cost to develop,
maintain, and update, and FINRA is generally proposing greater
increases for these examinations as a result, while the proposed
examination fee schedule overall is designed to support the broad and
equitable distribution of proposed fee increases, as discussed
throughout this filing.
While FINRA has filed the proposed rule change for immediate
effectiveness, implementation of the proposed rule change will not
begin until January 1, 2022. Beginning in 2022, the fee increases that
are the subject of this proposed rule change will be phased in
gradually over a three-year period, with full implementation in 2024,
to allow FINRA members as much advance notice as possible to plan for
these fee increases.
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
provisions of Section 15A(b)(5) of the Act,\40\ which requires, among
other things, that FINRA rules provide for the equitable allocation of
reasonable dues, fees and other charges among members and issuers and
other persons using any facility or system that FINRA operates or
controls. FINRA further believes that the proposed rule change is
consistent with the provisions of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act, which
requires, among other things, that FINRA rules are not designed to
permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers or
dealers.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(5).
\41\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reasonableness of the Proposed Fees
As discussed above, FINRA's longstanding approach to funding
employs a mix of fees designed to meet FINRA's overall costs. As a not-
for-profit SRO with a diverse membership, FINRA designs its mix of fees
to seek recovery of its overall regulatory costs in a manner that is
fair, reasonable, and equitably allocated among FINRA's member firms
and users of FINRA's services. As FINRA has explained in the past, it
is not feasible to associate a direct affiliated revenue stream for
each of its programs (for example, FINRA collects no revenues in
connection with its examinations of member firms), and thus numerous
operations and services must be funded by other revenue sources, which
include both general regulatory assessments and use-based fees. FINRA
continues to believe that its overall Commission-approved cost-based
pricing structure is reasonable, achieves general equity across its
membership, and correlates fees with those firm components that drive
FINRA's regulatory costs to the extent feasible.
[[Page 66600]]
The reasonableness of this proposal, designed to generate an
additional $225 million annually once fully implemented in 2024, is
reinforced by three key cost discipline mechanisms: Oversight,
transparency, and rebates.
First, FINRA's funding and operations are subject to several layers
of oversight, including by the FINRA Board of Governors \42\ and the
Commission. As discussed in FINRA's 2020 annual budget summary, FINRA's
efforts to manage its expenses responsibly while appropriately funding
its mission includes Board oversight of its annual budget, compensation
and capital initiatives. This oversight is spearheaded by the Board's
key committees (such as its Finance, Operations and Technology
Committee), and includes requirements for Board or relevant Committee
approval with respect to various financial matters, such as the annual
budget, the allocation and use of fine monies, the incurring of any
expenses above certain pre-established thresholds, the amount of any
annual merit or incentive compensation pools, and the compensation of
certain key employees. The Board also relies on expert external
consultants where appropriate (e.g., the independent compensation
consultant engaged by the Management Compensation Committee). Notably,
this Board oversight complements various staff-level controls over
routine costs, including expense policies that are enforced with
systemic checks and escalating management approval requirements for
expense requests, with the effectiveness of these policies further
subject to review by FINRA's Internal Audit Department. These controls
and the Board's supervision of FINRA's costs has resulted in tightly-
controlled expenses that have risen at a rate below that of inflation
since 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ The FINRA Board of Governors is composed of a mix of public
and industry representatives and uses its diverse expertise to
oversee management in the administration of FINRA's affairs and the
promotion of FINRA's welfare, objectives, and its public service
mission to protect investors and uphold the integrity of markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINRA is also extensively supervised by the Commission throughout
the year. The SEC's Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations
(``OCIE'') maintains dedicated staff as part of its FINRA and
Securities Industry Oversight (``FSIO'') program who are devoted
exclusively to overseeing FINRA and the MSRB--the two not-for-profit
regulatory SROs--including with respect to FINRA's overall financial
management and the adequacy of the resources devoted to its regulatory
programs. FSIO and other groups within OCIE conducted over 160
examinations of FINRA in 2019 alone.\43\ In addition, rules or fees
adopted by FINRA are subject to review by the Commission's Division of
Trading and Markets. The Commission's oversight of FINRA, in turn, is
itself subject to Congressional oversight and evaluation by the United
States Government Accountability Office (``GAO'') every three years. By
statute, the GAO evaluates ten specific aspects of the Commission's
oversight of FINRA, including FINRA governance, executive compensation,
and the use of funding to support FINRA's mission, including the
methods and sufficiency of funding, how FINRA invests funds pending
use, and the impact of these aspects on FINRA's regulatory enforcement.
The GAO reports the results of its evaluation to Congress.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See supra note 7.
\44\ See GAO Report to Congressional Committees (July 2018),
available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/700/693217.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, FINRA's commitment to reasonable funding in support of its
mission is further reinforced by the transparency it has committed to
provide on an ongoing basis--pursuant to its Guiding Principles--
regarding its financial performance. Each year, FINRA publishes an
extensive Annual Financial Report regarding its operations, prepared in
accordance with GAAP. In addition, FINRA publishes annual reports on
its budget and its use of fine monies. FINRA's Board also reviews and
affirms its Financial Guiding Principles each year and re-publishes
these as well. FINRA also files with the IRS the Form 990 mandated for
all not-for-profit organizations. Collectively, these reports provide
extensive and comprehensive information regarding FINRA's policies and
operations with respect to its budgets, revenues, costs, financial
reserves, use of fine monies, capital and strategic initiatives, and
compensation of senior executives, among other information. FINRA
maintains a dedicated web page that consolidates its annual reports in
a readily accessible place.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See FINRA Financial Reports and Policies, available at
https://www.finra.org/about/annual-reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, FINRA's commitment as a not-for-profit organization to
aligning its revenues with its costs, including by providing rebates
when revenues exceed costs, ensures that the revenues from these
proposed fee changes will remain in line with FINRA's reasonable
regulatory costs. As discussed above and below, FINRA distributed
rebates to members each year from 2000 to 2014, and FINRA will continue
to be guided by its historical approach to rebates if its revenue in
future years exceeds its costs by a material amount.
Together, these mechanisms help ensure the ongoing reasonableness
of FINRA's costs and the level of fees assessed to support those costs.
The effectiveness of these mechanisms is demonstrated by FINRA's
experience over the last decade, during which, as discussed above and
below, FINRA was able to undertake expanding regulatory
responsibilities while limiting cumulative cost growth to a rate that
was lower than inflation and cost growth at member firms.
The Proposed Fees Are Equitable and Not Unfairly Discriminatory
As discussed throughout this filing, this proposal is designed to
increase the fees FINRA relies on to fund its regulatory mission in a
manner that preserves equitable and not unfairly discriminatory fee
allocation among FINRA members and users of FINRA services. Notably,
through this proposal FINRA is preserving the carefully calibrated mix
of general assessment and use-based fees to fund its regulatory mission
that the Commission previously approved as equitably allocated among
its large and diverse membership.
The five fees included in this proposal--the GIA, TAF, PA, member
registration, and qualification examination fees--were selected to meet
the necessary funding deficit by raising fees proportionately across
member firms with minimal distributional impact, because these five
fees are the most broadly assessed fees that FINRA relies on to fund
its regulatory mission. When these five fees are grouped according to
the three key drivers of FINRA's regulatory costs--the size of the firm
(GIA), the firm's trading activity (TAF), and the number and role of
registered persons with the firm (PA, registration, and qualification
examination fees)--they have contributed roughly the same total revenue
by group for the last five years.
The proposal is therefore designed as a proportional fee increase,
splitting the proposed aggregate fee increase amount of $225 million
evenly across these three cost drivers--$75 million from the GIA, $75
million from the TAF, and $75 million collectively from the
representative-based PA, registration, and qualification examination
fees. The Commission previously has found aligning fees with these key
drivers to be a reasonable basis for the equitable allocation of
FINRA's fee assessments.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 47106 (December 30,
2002), 68 FR 819, 821 (January 7, 2003) (Order Approving File No.
SR-NASD-2002-99) (``The Commission is satisfied that the NASD's
proposed GIA is reasonably tailored to apportion fees based on the
regulatory services the NASD provides''); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 67242 (June 22, 2012), 77 FR 38690, 38692 (June 28,
2012) (Order Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2012-023) (finding that
``trading in equity markets drives a significant portion of
[FINRA's] regulatory costs, and therefore it is equitable to recover
some of those costs from fees generated from trading activity'');
and Order Approving SR-FINRA-2009-057, supra note 13, 74 FR at 62618
(``[T]he number of registered representatives is a significant
factor that impacts FINRA's oversight responsibilities and thus is
an equitable criterion for assessing PA fees'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 66601]]
As a result of the proposed proportional increase across the three
key drivers of FINRA's regulatory costs, FINRA projects a dispersion
level for the rate of increase realized by member firms to be 1.7% once
the proposal is fully implemented. In other words, FINRA projects that
the proposal imposes one of the narrowest distributions of fee rate
changes across members among the alternatives considered, as measured
by the standard deviation of the rate of fee increase across members.
Given this limited distributional impact, FINRA believes the proposal
will preserve the same equitable and not unfairly discriminatory fee
allocation that has long served as the foundation for FINRA's funding
model and has been approved by the Commission.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Economic Impact Assessment
FINRA has undertaken an economic impact assessment, as set forth
below, to analyze the regulatory need for the proposed rule change, its
potential economic impacts, including anticipated costs, benefits, and
distributional and competitive effects, relative to the current
baseline, and the alternatives FINRA considered in assessing how best
to meet FINRA's regulatory objectives.
Regulatory Need
Based on an analysis of its funding sources, anticipated costs, and
an assessment of future market activity, FINRA has determined that it
will require additional revenues in order to meet its regulatory
obligations in the future. FINRA anticipates that the absence of stable
funding at the levels proposed here may have material negative impacts
on its regulatory program and weaken investor protections. As it
continues to rely on and deplete its reserves, FINRA may be unable to
maintain its current capabilities at their current standards. In the
absence of a fee increase, eventually FINRA will not be able to hire
and retain staff with the appropriate expertise to conduct core
regulatory activities (including market examination and surveillance,
enforcement, regulation and rulemaking, examinations and credentialing,
and providing transparency for markets, member firms and registered
persons), or make the necessary investments over time in the technology
needed to support these activities.
Economic Baseline
The baseline for this proposed rule includes FINRA's historical
costs and revenues, the current schedule of fees assessed by FINRA, and
the direct and indirect allocation of those fees across member firms,
associated persons, third parties, and investors. The baseline also
encompasses the scope of activities conducted by FINRA today to meet
its mission, and FINRA's current ability to meet changing market
activities and conditions through investment in staff, physical
infrastructure and technology.
As discussed previously, as a not-for-profit organization, FINRA's
operating principle is to target reasonable cost-based funding that
allows it to appropriately fund its regulatory mission.\47\ Between
2010 and 2019, FINRA's costs grew by a compound annualized growth rate
(CAGR) of 1.7%, or 16% over the entire period.\48\ Over the same
period, reported costs increased by 42% for the industry,\49\ while
U.S. core inflation grew by 19%.\50\
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\47\ In addition to the services FINRA provides in furtherance
of its regulatory mission, FINRA also provides certain services on a
contract basis to third parties. These contract service fees
represent approximately 11% of FINRA's total revenues. Importantly,
these revenues pay in full for the services rendered under the
contracts, and FINRA's contract services are not funded with any of
the regulatory revenue discussed in this filing.
\48\ Based on figures drawn from FINRA's public Annual Financial
Reports, which include FINRA subsidiaries. As noted above, supra
note 11, FINRA Dispute Resolution was merged into FINRA Regulation
at the end of 2015; if costs for the two remaining subsidiaries
besides FINRA Regulation (the FINRA Investor Education Foundation
and FINRA CAT, LLC) are excluded, FINRA's expense CAGR over the
period would have been 1.5%.
\49\ Based on FOCUS reporting.
\50\ See CPI Inflation Calculator, Bureau of Labor Statistics,
available at https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl.
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At the same time, FINRA has seen capital markets grow in size and
complexity, and an increase in its own regulatory responsibilities.
Substantial increases in trading volume in listed equities, options and
OTC equities (over 75% increase since 2015) and complexity of the
securities markets (the number of registered securities exchanges
significantly increased since 2011, from 13 to 25) have led to a more
complex trading environment. This, in turn, has required new approaches
to enhance surveillance and investigations by FINRA staff. New SEC
regulations (an estimated 15 significant new rules in the broker-dealer
space since 2010 based on a FINRA analysis), FINRA rulemaking designed
to support federal initiatives (e.g., crowdfunding, fixed income mark-
up disclosure), and MSRB rules that require FINRA implementation have
all increased FINRA's regulatory responsibilities substantially.
During this period, the SEC has increased reliance on FINRA as the
``first line supervisor'' for broker-dealers.\51\ In response, FINRA
continued to invest in its surveillance and examination programs. The
SEC also created an updated oversight framework with substantially more
inspections and reviews of FINRA, which in turn has required FINRA to
commit significant new resources to support those inspections and
reviews.
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\51\ See supra notes 6 and 7.
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Over the last decade, FINRA has observed changes in the number of
registered persons and member firms. Between 2009 and 2018, the number
of registered member firms decreased from 4,720 to 3,607 (a change of
approximately 26.3%) while the number of registered representatives
decreased from 633,280 to 629,847 (a change of 0.5%).\52\ Between 2009
and 2018, approximately 97% of the decrease in registered member firms
came from small firms. Over the same period, the percentage of
registered persons affiliated with small member firms dropped by a much
smaller amount, from 12% to 10%. Despite the consolidation in the
number of member firms, aggregate supervision costs fell minimally.
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\52\ As FINRA notes when it publishes industry snapshots, FINRA
regularly updates historical data series due to data revisions by
reporting firms.
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There are at least two drivers for this result. First, the exiting
firms tended to require fewer supervisory resources because they were
generally assessed as posing lower risks to investors and markets;
higher-risk firms typically require more oversight. Relatedly, exiting
firms generally conducted a smaller, simpler set of activities; larger,
more complex firms typically require more oversight. And second, the
number of registered persons remained fairly constant as persons from
exiting
[[Page 66602]]
firms migrated to other firms, requiring FINRA regulatory resources to
shift accordingly.
Despite the increased responsibilities and changes in its own
oversight by the SEC, FINRA achieved the relatively low growth in its
costs through a variety of mechanisms. Staffing generates the majority
of FINRA's expenses and has been held relatively flat over the last
decade. In that period, total compensation costs for FINRA employees
engaged in carrying out its core business operations rose by 15% on a
cumulative basis, compared to 24% for the average U.S. employee.\53\
Further, FINRA has been successful in reducing non-compensation related
expenses in recent years, with a 12% cumulative reduction across
operating expenses (excluding technology) over the last 5 years, and a
25% decrease in non-recurring expenses.\54\ FINRA's expenses have grown
less rapidly than those of member firms. In addition, FINRA's
proportional share of aggregate regulatory fees reported by member
firms in total has fallen meaningfully.\55\ Charts 2 and 3, attached in
Exhibit 3, present these findings.\56\
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\53\ Average U.S. employee wage growth represents non-farm
employee wage growth supplied by the Economic Policy Institute.
FINRA employee compensation costs includes all FINRA staff exclusive
of Technology staff.
\54\ Technology costs are considered separately because they are
often driven by special projects or capital expenditures, including
initiatives designed to help control staffing costs in FINRA's core
regulatory programs. FINRA notes that technology costs have risen at
a greater rate over the period. Non-recurring expenses include
capital initiatives and extraordinary initiatives. Technology costs,
however, have risen by 22% cumulatively over the period--which is
largely due to cloud hosting costs following FINRA's migration to
the cloud, an increase in Technology maintenance support costs for
newly developed applications and platforms, and expansion of FINRA's
cybersecurity program. Cloud hosting costs are largely offset
through the avoidance of large, periodic capital expenditures that
would have been necessary without the migration.
\55\ The number and amount of regulatory fees paid by FINRA
member firms to other regulators depend upon other registrations and
financial services provided.
\56\ As with Chart 1, all of the charts discussed below are
attached in Exhibit 3.
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Over the same period between 2010 and 2019, FINRA's regulatory and
use-based revenues remained effectively flat, influenced by few fee
increases and a relatively steady number of registered persons. FINRA's
total revenues grew at a compound annual growth rate of 1.1% per year,
or 10% between 2010 and 2019.\57\ Between 2010 and 2013, FINRA
increased regulatory fees by an aggregate amount of less than $22
million.\58\ The period between 2013 and 2020 represents one of the
longest windows in which FINRA has not raised regulatory fees. As a
comparison, as illustrated in Chart 4, member firm revenues grew at a
compound annual growth rate of 4.8% per year, or 52% between 2010 and
2019.
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\57\ Based on figures drawn from FINRA's public Annual Financial
Reports, which include FINRA subsidiaries. As noted above, supra
note 11, FINRA Dispute Resolution was merged into FINRA Regulation
at the end of 2015; if revenues for the two remaining subsidiaries
besides FINRA Regulation (the FINRA Investor Education Foundation
and FINRA CAT, LLC) are excluded, FINRA's revenue CAGR over the
period would have been 0.8%.
\58\ Based on estimates made at the time the fee change
occurred, and actual results incurred in that year or subsequent
years may vary.
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As a not-for-profit regulator, FINRA has also maintained a policy
of returning revenues in excess of its operating costs through rebates.
Over the same review period that is the focus of this analysis, 2010
through 2019, FINRA rebated regulatory fees to member firms five
consecutive years between 2010 and 2014. The aggregate amount rebated
was approximately $57 million.
Chart 5 provides a view of actual revenues and expenses between
2010 through 2019 and anticipated revenue and expenses for 2020-2024 if
no changes to our fee structure are made.\59\ Chart 5 also includes
historical and projected ``excess reserves,'' meaning reserves above
what the FINRA Board of Governors has determined to be an appropriate
minimum level of at least one year of operating expenditures. As
discussed above, FINRA has strategically relied on its reserves to help
fund budget deficits in the past. From 2010 through 2019, FINRA used
over $600 million of its reserves to fund operating losses, which on
average amounted to 6.6% of FINRA's operating budget per year. While
FINRA will continue to strategically draw on its reserves to support
the phased implementation of this proposal, Chart 5 illustrates the
projection that, without taking corrective action, FINRA will deplete
its excess reserves in the coming years.
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\59\ The revenues and expenses presented in Chart 5--both
historic and projected--do not include subsidiaries other than FINRA
Regulation and FINRA Dispute Resolution, which was merged into FINRA
Regulation at the end of 2015.
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FINRA anticipates that revenues will remain at current levels
without any changes in the fee structure. At the same time, FINRA
assumes that future expenses will continue to grow at a reasonable pace
of approximately 4% per year based on annual wage inflation and future
capital initiatives.\60\ In this scenario, revenues would increasingly
fall behind anticipated costs. FINRA's reserves will continue to be
used to cover the shortfall in the near-term, but the reserves will
reach their minimum prudent level of one year of operating costs within
three to four years based on current projections if no corrective
action is taken.
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\60\ This estimate is based on the following assumptions for
FINRA and excludes the independent budgeting of all of FINRA's
active subsidiaries other than FINRA Regulation--specifically, FINRA
CAT, LLC and the FINRA Investor Education Foundation: (i) Wage
inflation at an annual rate between 3% and 4%, consistent with the
financial industry over the last five years; (ii) technology expense
growth continues at recent levels due to: Capital investments
seeking long-term efficiency gains for both FINRA and the industry,
rising cloud hosting costs, maintaining technology labor
competitiveness, and ongoing disaster recovery and cybersecurity
requirements; and (iii) no material drop in regulatory efforts and
associated costs for FINRA's regulatory programs. Taken together,
these assumptions lead to an estimated growth rate consistent with
the prior decade of expense growth realized by the industry.
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FINRA notes that the anticipated retirement of its Order Audit
Trail System (``OATS''), which is expected ultimately to be replaced by
the Consolidated Audit Trail (``CAT''), does not result in an overall
reduction in future expenses, but rather results in higher projected
expenses for FINRA. Currently, FINRA incurs approximately $9 million
per year in costs associated with its OATS program, including the costs
to maintain the OATS system, host OATS data, and regulate compliance
with OATS reporting rules. While FINRA's costs related to CAT
implementation remain uncertain in several respects, FINRA reasonably
projects such costs will exceed its current yearly OATS costs, due in
large part to its need to develop a CAT reporting compliance program
and integrate CAT data into its regulatory systems.
Specifically, because CAT reporting requirements are new, different
from, and more granular than OATS reporting requirements, FINRA has
made and will continue to make significant investments in its enhanced
regulatory program to oversee CAT reporting compliance, including the
technology (e.g., surveillance patterns) and staff required to monitor
for and enforce timely and accurate CAT data reporting. In contrast,
OATS rules, infrastructure, and members' experience with compliance is
mature, and only equities are reported to OATS, while equities and
options are reported to CAT. These differences explain why FINRA's
costs to regulate OATS reporting compliance are substantially less.
In addition to costs associated with its CAT reporting compliance
program, FINRA must account for significant costs to integrate CAT data
into its
[[Page 66603]]
regulatory systems. These include one-time costs to migrate regulatory
systems into an environment that can interact with CAT data, with the
potential for greater migration costs as a result of any future
regulatory changes, such as under the Commission's recently proposed
amendments to the CAT NMS Plan.\61\ FINRA also is making significant
investments in enhanced surveillance technology to account for and use
CAT data in FINRA's oversight of various market integrity rules, as CAT
includes expanded audit trail data for options and equities.
Importantly, these costs are separate from and in addition to FINRA's
obligation to contribute funding for the development, maintenance, and
operation of the CAT system incurred by the CAT Plan Processor.\62\
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\61\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 89632 (August 21,
2020) (Proposed Amendments to the National Market System Plan
Governing the Consolidated Audit Trail to Enhance Data Security).
\62\ Upon selection by the CAT NMS Plan Participants, FINRA
created FINRA CAT, LLC as a distinct corporate subsidiary to serve
as the CAT Plan Processor. In its capacity as the CAT Plan
Processor, FINRA CAT, LLC is responsible for the development and
operation of the CAT in accordance with the terms of the CAT NMS
Plan, pursuant to an agreement between the CAT NMS Plan Participants
and FINRA CAT, LLC. FINRA CAT, LLC is organized as a not-for-profit
that operates on a cost basis and is not a source of revenue for
FINRA. Pursuant to intercompany agreements, FINRA provides certain
staff and resources to FINRA CAT, LLC so that FINRA CAT, LLC can
carry out its obligations as the CAT Plan Processor. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 85764 (May 2, 2019), 84 FR 20173 (May 8,
2019) (Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of SR-FINRA-
2019-015). FINRA provides these staff and resources to FINRA CAT,
LLC at cost, with FINRA CAT, LLC's portion of the cost of shared
resources tracked and allocated completely back to FINRA CAT, LLC.
As noted in FINRA's 2020 Annual Budget Summary and above, supra note
60, the FINRA CAT, LLC is accounted for separately from FINRA and
the costs and revenues of FINRA CAT, LLC are not included in FINRA's
budget.
Separately, FINRA and the other CAT NMS Plan Participants are
collectively funding the costs to create, implement, and maintain
the CAT in accordance with the CAT NMS Plan, and FINRA has relied on
its balance sheet to pay its share of those costs to date. However,
because the allocation of such CAT NMS Plan costs is the subject of
ongoing discussion, FINRA has not included those CAT NMS Plan
support costs in its budget projections. As a result, if the CAT NMS
Plan Participants file a separate proposal to recover some portion
of CAT NMS Plan costs through a direct CAT fee assessment on
industry members, the effectiveness of such a filing would not
reduce the amount that FINRA projects it needs to raise with this
proposal to correct its structural deficit.
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As a result, while FINRA projects that OATS costs will be reduced
and ultimately eliminated over the next several years, those cost
reductions will be more than offset by FINRA's costs associated with
ongoing efforts to implement and maintain a CAT reporting compliance
program and integrate CAT data. In addition, although FINRA must incur
costs to support both programs over the next several years until OATS
retirement, FINRA believes it can manage these program budgets
consistent with its assumption of approximately 4% overall future
expense growth per year over the period.\63\
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\63\ To the extent any other FINRA systems are subject to
retirement, FINRA will separately consider the projected budget
impact of retirement for those systems.
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As described above, FINRA funds its regulatory and other related
activities through a combination of regulatory and use-based fees. In
aggregate, regulatory fees represent approximately 63% of these
revenues and use-based fees represent approximately 37% of revenues.
The specific fees that would be increased under this proposal
represented 75% of these revenues in 2019.
All regulatory and use-based fees identified here are assessed
directly to member firms, but FINRA understands that many firms shift
at least some of the fees to others. For instance, it is regular
practice among some clearing and trading firms to ``pass through'' the
TAF to the underlying firm executing the trade. Further, FINRA
understands that the executing firms commonly pass the TAF directly on
to their customers. Typically, TAF fees are reflected on the
confirmation statement received by customers. FINRA researched a sample
of member firms, collectively representing 25% of total TAF revenues,
and found confirmation disclosures for roughly two thirds of the sample
reviewed that suggested that TAF is being passed through at either the
clearing or executing firm level.
Similarly, FINRA understands that many firms regularly pass through
to registered persons assessments such as the PA, registration fees,
and examination fees. Registered persons also may seek to pass through
these same fees to their customers indirectly as a part of their
charges. FINRA understands that there may be differences in this
practice across firms depending on each firms' business model.
Competitive markets for the provision of brokerage and related
financial intermediation services can limit the extent to which these
fees can be passed through.
Regulatory fees are calibrated so that larger, more active and more
dispersed member firms have higher fees, reflecting regulatory resource
allocation. Use-based fees are designed to capture some of the costs
associated with these core regulatory activities in addition to the
direct and indirect costs of the service. For example, FINRA believes
it is appropriate that registration and examination fees help defray
the costs of regulating registered persons because member firms
employing more persons require additional regulatory effort on FINRA's
part. This approach is consistent with a structure where the fees paid
are increasing with the size of the firm's revenues (GIA) and the
amount of trading activity it conducts (TAF). In this manner,
regulatory and use-based fees are designed in a cohesive way such that
they should be evaluated in aggregate and not on a fee-by-fee or
service-by-service basis.
The fee structure is also designed, purposefully, to account for
diversity in firm size. Compliance and regulatory oversight naturally
represent a larger relative cost to small firms. Because FINRA wants to
prevent regulatory costs from creating a barrier to entry for smaller
well-run, compliant firms, there is a level of cross-subsidization by
larger firms of regulatory costs embedded in the fee structure
currently in place.
This practice is appropriate for at least two significant reasons.
First, it is important that retail investors have access to financial
services provided in a way that serves them best. Some investors may
prefer to engage registered persons associated with smaller firms.
Second, larger firms obtain more benefits from well-regulated markets,
relative to firm size. Under well-regulated markets, investors are more
willing to trust financial intermediaries because they are confident
that they are treated fairly in their access to securities markets and
products. Greater participation in the financial markets by investors
allow firms to grow larger and become more diversified, leading to cost
savings and reduced risk through economies of scale and scope. The
concentration in both retail and institutional investor activity at
larger firms suggests that larger firms reap substantial benefits from
strong regulation and should therefore contribute a substantial portion
of the fee revenue to support this regulation. At the same time, the
impact of misconduct at large firms impairs investor confidence more
broadly than similar misconduct at smaller firms.
Chart 6 describes the estimated distribution of revenues from the
fees covered in this proposal and the associated allocation of
regulatory efforts by FINRA by the size of the firm, as defined in the
FINRA By-Laws. Small member firms (firms with 150 or fewer registered
reps) account for 90% of the firms in the industry, 10% of total
registered persons, 50% of FINRA's total firm exam time, and 19% of
FINRA's
[[Page 66604]]
revenues. Large firms, conversely, represent less than 5% of firms,
over 80% of registered persons, 37% of FINRA's firm exam effort and
approximately two thirds of regulatory revenues. The remaining portions
of firm exam time and revenues are attributable to medium firms.
Chart 7 describes the estimated distribution of revenues from the
fees covered in this proposal and the associated allocation of
regulatory efforts by FINRA by the firm's business model. Here,
business model captures the primary type of services provided the firm.
The categories of capital markets and retail member firms account for
80% of the firms in the industry, 72% of total registered persons, 64%
of FINRA's total examination time, and 36% of FINRA's regulatory
revenues. The category of diversified firms, including most of the
largest firms, accounts for approximately 5% of firms in the industry,
almost 24% of total registered persons, over 27% of FINRA's total
examination time, and 45% of FINRA's revenues.
Economic Impact
FINRA's fee proposal is intended to ensure that FINRA can continue
to meet its mission of investor protection and facilitating well-
functioning markets. This proposal preserves FINRA's ability to be a
robust and effective regulator, protecting investors from manipulation,
exploitation and other harm. Adequate funding allows FINRA to develop
regulatory approaches that are more effective and efficient, and to
revise its regulations through, among other ways, its robust
retrospective reviews. Through appropriate funding, FINRA can continue
to invest in technology, data, and analytics in support of its mission.
FINRA will be better situated to adapt to changing markets, market
behaviors, and any new responsibilities it may accrue. A stable and
reliable funding program also permits member firms to better anticipate
and plan for FINRA's fees. These benefits accrue to current and
prospective investors, firms, issuers, and others participating in
financial intermediation.
FINRA notes that academic literature has provided evidence of the
linkage between strong regulation in securities markets and improved
outcomes, including more trading, lower transaction costs, and greater
investor participation in the markets.\64\ Bruggeman, et al. [2018]
study the impact of differences in State regulation on OTC stocks. They
find that firms issuing in the OTC market subject to stricter
regulation are more liquid and are subject to lower ``crash risk.''
Silvers [2016] studies the impact of SEC enforcement action against
foreign cross-listed issuers. He shows evidence that other cross-listed
issuers (not cited by the SEC) experienced positive returns, suggesting
that increased regulatory attention increases valuation. Finally,
Christensen et al. [2019] study the impact of the introduction of the
European Union's Market Abuse Directive and MiFID. The study concluded
that these initiatives designed to enhance investor protections have
led to higher household ownership of equities.
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\64\ See, e.g., U. Bruggeman, A. Kaul, C. Leuz, C. and I.
Werner, The Twilight Zone: OTC Regulatory Regimes and Market
Quality, The Review of Financial Studies, 31, no. 3 (2018), 898-942;
Roger Silvers, The Valuation Impact of SEC Enforcement Actions on
Nontarget Foreign Firms, Journal of Accounting Research, 54, no. 1
(2016), 187-234; and H. Christensen, M. Maffet, and L. Vollon,
Securities Regulation, Household Equity Ownership, and Trust in the
Stock Market, Review of Accounting Studies, 24, no. 3 (2019), 824-
859.
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The proposal would implement fee changes that would be assessed
directly to member firms. The fee increases are designed to maintain
the current distribution of fees allocated across member firms. FINRA
based the proposed fee distribution across member firms on the
assumption that the activities of the firms remained constant. Under
this assumption, approximately 74% of the fee increase would be borne
by large firms, 13% by medium firms, 12% by small firms (excluding
firms of 10 or fewer registered persons), and the remaining 1% by micro
firms (firms of 10 or fewer registered persons).
Chart 8 shows the aggregate anticipated increase in fees for the
average firm across the period 2020-2024 and the breakdown across the
fee categories covered by the proposed rule. Charts 9 through 11
describe the year-over-year fee increase for 2022, 2023 and 2024
respectively by fee type and firm size category (note that there is no
proposed fee increase in 2020 or 2021). These charts demonstrate that
the increase in fees remains consistently allocated across similarly
sized firms in each calendar year, with the bulk of the fee increase
occurring in the later years of the proposal. Taken together, these
charts demonstrate that the fee increases in the GIA, TAF, PA,
registration, and qualification examination fees are designed to
allocate the growth in fees in an equitable manner both overall and
within each calendar year of their phase-in, all else held equal, by
maintaining a consistent fee growth impact across firm group sizes.
Similarly, Chart 12 shows the total fee increase and breakdown
across fee category by member firm business model, holding constant the
activities of the firm for the aggregate increase over the period 2020-
2024. Approximately 76% of the fee increase is anticipated to be borne
by diversified and retail firms, with the remaining 24% distributed
relatively evenly across trading, capital markets and clearing firms.
As with our analysis of the proposed fee increases by firm size, Charts
13 through 15 show the annual fee increases by fee category and
business model for the years 2022, 2023 and 2024 respectively. Here, as
well, the charts demonstrate that the anticipated fee increases by
category are designed such that the increase in fees remains similar
among firms with similar business models year-by-year, all else held
equal.
While material, the FINRA fees subject to this proposal represent a
very small dollar amount relative to industry activity. Holding
industry revenues at 2019 levels, FINRA's regulatory, registration, and
qualification examination fees in that year represented approximately
0.16% (16 basis points) of industry revenues as reported in FOCUS
reports. When the proposed fee changes are fully adopted, FINRA
estimates that these fees would represent approximately 0.22% (22 basis
points) of 2019 industry revenues, assuming no FOCUS revenue growth for
member firms over that time period. Further, the amount of the fee
increase borne by member firms depends on the extent to which they can
and do shift the burden to their associated persons and customers.
To better understand the impact of the proposed fee increases
across member firms within each firm size category, FINRA analyzed the
expected distribution of fee increases for all existing firms under the
proposed fee structure, based on the expected rate of dispersion.
Dispersion is a way to compare the anticipated growth rate in fees
across a range of firms. Lower dispersion is associated with a higher
degree of consistency in terms of the impact of the proposed fee
increases, and can be interpreted as more firms in a given group
experiencing similar rates of growth. By seeking to limit dispersion,
the proposal is effectively limiting the potential for inequitable
treatment across member firms. This approach reduces the potential for
the proposed fee increase to create unintended impacts on the provision
of financial services by member firms and the business models adopted
by them.
[[Page 66605]]
FINRA's analysis examines the level of dispersion based on the CAGR
of the expected fee increase. CAGR is measured in this analysis
relative to the fee categories impacted by this proposal. CAGR provides
a standard metric to compare the relative impact of the fee increases
within and across subgroups. Because the number of registered persons,
trading activity and resulting aggregate fee dollar amounts vary
significantly across firms and firm sizes, benchmarking to CAGR permits
FINRA to identify a fee schedule that most closely compares the
magnitude of the distribution across firms.
Charts 16 through 19 provide a view on the distribution of fee
increases within each member firm size group. These charts also report
the median increase in regulatory fees, along with registration and
qualification examination fees, that are the subject of this proposal
over the full period 2020 through 2024 by firm size. Within the charts,
each of the four central bars represents one standard deviation from
the median, so that the two most central dark blue bars together would
theoretically represent approximately 67% of all firms evaluated (plus
or minus one standard deviation) and approximately 95% of firms
evaluated should be represented under the four most central dark blue
and mid-blue bars (plus or minus two standard deviations) presented in
the charts.
While it is not feasible to eliminate the possibility that member
firms will experience a rate of fee growth that is outside of the two
standard deviation range, FINRA sought to limit the number of firms
falling into this category when structuring this fee increase. These
charts demonstrate that the proposal significantly limits the number of
firms that fall beyond two standard deviations from the median
increase. In particular, the proposal limits those firms that would be
expected to experience a materially higher fee increase than the median
(as defined by two standard deviations). For the entire population of
member firms, FINRA estimates that no firm would experience a fee
increase greater than two standard deviations from the median increase.
In other words, no firm would be expected to bear an unduly high fee
increase relative to the entire population of all firms (as defined by
greater than two standard deviations).\65\
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\65\ Only 13 firms would be anticipated to experience an
increase of more than two standard deviations relative to their peer
group by size. The bulk of these firms have ten or fewer registered
persons and are compared to other firms within the micro firm size
category, which is the size grouping with the widest rate of
dispersion given more significant variability in micro firm business
models. The highest expected CAGR resulting from the fee increase
for these firms would be 8.4%.
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Based on this analysis, FINRA concludes the following:
For micro firms, the median firm would anticipate an
annual increase in fees of 3.9%, translating to a dollar increase of
$642. Approximately two-thirds of these firms would experience an
annual increase between 2.4% and 5.5% between 2020 and 2024. Holding
revenues constant at 2019 levels, regulatory fees would increase from
0.21% to 0.27% of FOCUS reported revenues on average. This group
includes 1,671 firms and represents 47.7% of all FINRA members.
For other small firms, the median firm would anticipate an
annual increase in fees of 6.2%, translating to a dollar increase of
$6,200. More than 80% of these firms would experience an annual
increase in fees between 5.3% and 7.1% between 2020 and 2024. Holding
revenues constant at 2019 levels, regulatory fees would increase from
0.22% to 0.30% of FOCUS reported revenues on average. This group
includes 1,470 firms and represents 42.0% of all FINRA members.
For medium firms, the median firm would anticipate a 6.6%
annual increase in fees, translating to a dollar increase of $73,000.
More than 80% of these firms would experience an annual increase
between 5.6% and 7.6% between 2020 and 2024. Holding revenues constant
at 2019 levels, regulatory fees would increase from 0.18% to 0.25% of
FOCUS reported revenues on average. This group includes 193 firms and
represents 5.5% of all FINRA members.
For large firms, the median firm would anticipate a 6.4%
annual increase in fees, translating to a dollar increase of $293,000.
Approximately 90% of these firms would experience an annual increase
between 5.5% and 7.4% between 2020 and 2024. Holding revenues constant
at 2019 levels, regulatory fees would increase from 0.15% to 0.20% of
FOCUS reported revenues on average. This group includes 167 firms and
represents 4.8% of all FINRA members.
To better understand the anticipated year-over-year impacts
associated with the proposal, Charts 20 through 22 describe the
dispersion in the annual growth rate for each year in which fees will
be raised, segregated by firm size category. These charts demonstrate
that dispersion remains fairly constant across calendar years covered
by the proposal. Although there is some variation across the firm size
groupings, a simple average of the four groupings leads to an estimate
that: 78% of member firms would be expected to experience a fee
increase within one standard deviation from the median increase in
2022, 76% of member firms would be expected to experience a fee
increase within one standard deviation of the median fee increase in
2023, and 73% of member firms would be expected to experience a fee
increase within one standard deviation of the median fee increase in
2024. FINRA believes that these charts demonstrate a high rate of
consistency around the median expected fee increase and illustrate how
the proposal will preserve the existing equitable and fair distribution
of fees across FINRA's member firms.
FINRA notes that Charts 16 through 22 illustrate a wider relative
range of dispersion amongst micro firms. Chart 16 also denotes a lower
expected median fee increase for micro firms relative to other, larger
firm types. This is due to the minimum GIA fee being held constant,
rather than increasing along with the general GIA tiered fee schedule.
Because more than half of micro firms were only subject to the minimum
GIA fee in 2019, the median fee increase for micro firms will be lower
relative to other firm sizes, and the range of outcomes within this
grouping contains greater variance as select micro firms will be
subject to the increase in GIA while others will not. FINRA believes
that the resulting fee structure remains fair and equitable; moreover,
maintaining the minimum GIA at current levels fosters investor choice
and limits the impact of fees on the dimension of competition, as
discussed above.
As part of its analysis, FINRA also considered the broad potential
impacts on competition under this proposal. The analysis considers the
impact across all FINRA member firms, across FINRA member firms based
on size or business model, and between FINRA member firms and other
financial service providers.
FINRA does not anticipate that the proposal will materially impact
competition among member firms. The proposal is designed to maintain
the current funding model and the relative allocation of fees across
its core regulatory and use-based categories. In other words, each of
the affected fees would increase in a commensurate manner relative to
the fees charged under the existing framework; no individual fee would
be raised such that it may create unintended hardships for
[[Page 66606]]
some firms and benefit others. Implementation of the proposal would not
require significant system or process changes by firms.
Similarly, FINRA does not anticipate that the proposal will
materially impact competition across member firms of different sizes or
business models. The analysis of distributions within firm size does
indicate that firms may anticipate some differences in fee increases
based on the services they provide and the way they provide those
services. But, as designed, the proposal maintains the relative
allocation of fees across firm size and business model, meaning the
proposal is designed to preserve a consistent rate of growth in fee
increases across firm size and business model. As noted above, this
approach is intended to limit the unintended impact that any specific
fee change may create hardships for some firms and benefit others.
Further, the approach maintains the current approach for cross-
subsidization of regulatory fees between member firms of different size
and between regulatory and use-based fees.
FINRA can identify two potential impacts of this proposal on the
competition between its member firms and other providers of financial
services. Although FINRA anticipates that these increases are
calibrated to limit their impact on individual member firms, at the
margin some member firms may find these increases material to their
business. Further, where firms may have the ability to provide similar
services, or a subset of services, without registration with FINRA,
increased costs may increase the likelihood that these firms drop their
FINRA registration in favor of the alternative business model. Based on
the information available to it today, FINRA does not have an accurate
measure of the number of member firms that may choose to deregister as
a result of this proposal.\66\
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\66\ FINRA notes that because of the time lapse between
proposal, adoption and implementation of fee increases, combined
with changing business environments over time, it is difficult to
reliably estimate the number of firms that might have exited
historically because of previous fee increases.
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The proposal may have an additional impact on competition in this
dimension. As discussed above, strong and effective supervision and
regulation of securities markets has been shown to increase investor
confidence in the fairness of the market. This has been measured by an
increase in household participation in the securities markets, more
available liquidity, and higher securities valuations. Given the
presence of close substitutes to broker-dealers for retail clients--
e.g., investment advisory services, issuers selling directly to the
public, or certain market-linked insurance products--it may be
reasonable to expect that effective supervision by FINRA may create a
positive externality to those competitors. That is, increased
confidence by retail investors due to FINRA's activities may increase
business opportunities, lower transactional costs, or otherwise benefit
non-FINRA member competitors, including instances where investors do
not recognize these competitors are not supervised by FINRA.
Alternatives Considered
In developing this proposal, FINRA considered several options.
First, FINRA considered making the fee changes effective immediately
and not deferring the initial implementation to 2022. FINRA rejected
this alternative because it believed it would be important to provide
member firms adequate time to plan for the proposed fee increase while
implementing other significant regulatory changes, including Regulation
BI. Further, FINRA is cognizant that there is significant uncertainty
in markets and the general economy during the global pandemic related
to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Thus, increasing fees at this
time may impose a greater burden.
Similarly, FINRA considered waiting to submit this proposed rule
change until closer to when the proposed fee increases are scheduled to
take effect in 2022, or pursuing separate filings for each year of the
proposed fee increases between 2022 and 2024. Based on feedback from
members of FINRA's advisory committees and other industry consultations
that additional time and clarity would permit member firms to better
plan for the proposed package of fee increases over multiple budget
cycles, FINRA determined to move forward now with its current
projections. As noted above, FINRA will continue to evaluate its
financial condition during this period and make its financial
information transparent to the public through its regular published
reports. If FINRA's structural financial deficit is materially reduced
during this period, or if key assumptions change, FINRA would submit a
new filing to further defer the proposed fee increases or consider
other modifications as appropriate.
FINRA also considered delaying the implementation of the fee
increase beyond 2022. As noted above, FINRA is cognizant of the current
uncertainty in markets. But the same market conditions that may create
challenges for member firms also impact FINRA. Market volatility has
negatively affected FINRA's reserves portfolio, similar to many
investors. This limits FINRA's flexibility in relying on its reserves
to cover funding gaps and indicates the need for stable funding as soon
as practicable. Further, FINRA notes that investor protections are of
vital importance, particularly in times of market turmoil where FINRA
has seen an increase in customer complaints, regulatory actions against
fraud, and increased resources for surveillance.\67\ Impairing FINRA's
ability to meet its mandate at this time may have material negative
implications for investors and the financial markets. Taking these
concerns into account, FINRA believes that the most prudent course of
action is to delay implementation until 2022, but no further.
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\67\ In the first quarter of 2020, FINRA saw an increase in
alerts generated through its market surveillance of over 250%
compared to the same quarter in 2019.
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Finally, FINRA considered altering the mix of fees as part of this
proposal. Some examples of approaches considered included placing
greater weight on fees associated with registered persons, placing
greater weight on trading-related fees, and reducing the level of
cross-subsidization between large and small member firms. In each of
these scenarios, the total amount raised in the proposal would have
remained constant, but how the increases would be distributed across
member firms would differ. Each scenario had associated with it a shift
in the burdens based on firm size or business model. FINRA believes
that these alternatives did not yield a more equitable fee mix. As a
result, FINRA rejected these alternative formulations because the
proposed approach maintains the current equitable structure, provides
member firms with greater consistency and predictability in expected
fees and the potential for complex impacts on competition inherent in
the alternatives. FINRA believes that an overall proportional fee
increase that maintains the current distribution of fees imposes the
least aggregate impact on market participants and on the competition
between them.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
Written comments were neither solicited nor received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)
[[Page 66607]]
of the Act \68\ and paragraph (f)(2) of Rule 19b-4 thereunder.\69\ At
any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed rule change, the
Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule change if it
appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise
in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. If the Commission takes such
action, the Commission shall institute proceedings to determine whether
the proposed rule should be approved or disapproved.
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\68\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\69\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(2).
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-FINRA-2020-032 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2020-032. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549, on official business days between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of FINRA. All comments received
will be posted without change. Persons submitting comments are
cautioned that we do not redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2020-032 and should be submitted
on or before November 10, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\70\
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\70\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-23141 Filed 10-19-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P