==========================================START OF PAGE 1====== SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 17 CFR Parts 230, 239, 270, and 274 [Release Nos. 33-7398; 34-38346; IC-22528; S7-10-97] RIN 3235-AE46 Registration Form Used by Open-End Management Investment Companies AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission. ACTION: Proposed rule. SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission is proposing amendments to Form N-1A, the form used by open-end investment companies to register under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and to offer their shares under the Securities Act of 1933. The proposed amendments would revise disclosure requirements for fund prospectuses. Among other things, the proposed amendments seek to minimize prospectus disclosure about technical, legal, and operational matters that generally are common to all funds and, in keeping with the purpose of Form N-1A, to focus prospectus disclosure on essential information about a particular fund that would assist an investor in deciding whether to invest in that fund. The proposed amendments are intended to improve fund prospectuses and to promote more effective communication of information about funds. DATES: Comments must be received on or before [insert date 90 days after publication in Federal Register]. ADDRESSES: Submit comments in triplicate to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 5th Street, ==========================================START OF PAGE 2====== N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549-6009. Comments can be submitted electronically at the following E-mail address: rule-comments@sec.gov. All comment letters should refer to File No. S7-10-97; this file number should be included on the subject line if E-mail is used. All comments received will be available for public inspection and copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 450 5th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549-6009. Electronically submitted comment letters will be posted on the Commission's Internet Web site (http://www.sec.gov). FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jonathan F. Cayne, Attorney, John M. Ganley, Senior Counsel, Markian M.W. Melnyk, Senior Counsel, David U. Thomas, Senior Counsel, Kathleen K. Clarke, Special Counsel, or Elizabeth R. Krentzman, Assistant Director, (202) 942-0721, Office of Disclosure and Investment Adviser Regulation, Division of Investment Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 5th Street, N.W., Mail Stop 10-2, Washington, D.C. 20549-6009. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") is proposing for comment amendments to Form N-1A [17 CFR 274.11A], the registration form used by open-end management investment companies ("funds") to register under the Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.] ("Investment Company Act") and to offer their shares under the Securities Act of 1933 [15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.] ("Securities ==========================================START OF PAGE 3====== Act"). The Commission also is proposing technical amendments to rules 481 and 497 under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.481, .497]. In a companion release, the Commission is proposing new rule 498 under the Securities Act and the Investment Company Act, which would permit an investor to buy a fund's shares based on a short-form document, or "profile," that contains a summary of key information about the fund; each investor purchasing fund shares based on a profile would receive a copy of the fund's prospectus with the purchase confirmation.-[1]- In another companion release, the Commission is proposing new rule 35d-1 under the Investment Company Act, which would require a fund with a name suggesting that it focuses on a particular type of investment (e.g., a fund that calls itself the ABC Stock Fund, the XYZ Bond Fund, or the QRS U.S. Government Fund) to invest at least 80% of its assets in the type of investment suggested by its name.-[2]- TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION AND EXECUTIVE SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . II. DISCUSSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A. Part A -- Information in the Prospectus . . . . . 1. Item 1 -- Front and Back Cover Pages . . . . -[1]- Investment Company Act Release No. 22529 (Feb. 27, 1997) ("Profile Release"). -[2]- Investment Company Act Release No. 22530 (Feb. 27, 1997) ("Fund Names Release"). Proposed rule 35d-1 would apply to all registered investment companies, including funds, closed-end investment companies, and unit investment trusts. ==========================================START OF PAGE 4====== 2. Item 2 -- Risk/Return Summary: Investments, Risks, and Performance . . . . a. Investment Objectives and Principal Strategies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . b. Risks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3. Item 3 -- Risk/Return Summary: Fee Table . a. Fee Table Example . . . . . . . . . . . b. Shareholder Account Fees . . . . . . . c. Improving and Simplifying Fee Table Presentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4. Item 4 -- Investment Strategies and Risk Disclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . a. Investment Objectives and Implementation of Investment Objectives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . b. Risk Disclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . 5. Item 5 -- Management's Discussion of Fund Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6. Item 6 -- Management, Organization, and Capital Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . a. Management and Organization . . . . . . b. Capital Structure . . . . . . . . . . . 7. Item 7 -- Shareholder Information . . . . . a. Purchase and Redemption . . . . . . . . b. Tax Consequences . . . . . . . . . . . 8. Item 8 -- Distribution Arrangements . . . . a. Placement of Prospectus Disclosure . . b. Rule 12b-1 Plans . . . . . . . . . . . c. Sales Loads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . d. Multiple Class and Master-Feeder Funds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9. Item 9 -- Financial Highlights Information . B. Part B -- Statement of Additional Information . . C. Part C -- Other Information . . . . . . . . . . . D. General Instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Reorganizing and Simplifying the Instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2. Form N-1A Guidelines and Related Staff Positions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E. Technical Rule Amendments . . . . . . . . . . . . F. Transition Period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . III. GENERAL REQUEST FOR COMMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . IV. PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . V. SUMMARY OF INITIAL REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ANALYSIS . . VI. STATUTORY AUTHORITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VII. TEXT OF PROPOSED AMENDMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . ==========================================START OF PAGE 5====== I. INTRODUCTION AND EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Over the last decade, the fund industry has experienced enormous growth both in total assets and in the number of funds.-[3]- Today, fund assets exceed the deposits of commercial banks.-[4]- Coincident with the explosive growth of fund investments, the business operations of many funds have become increasingly complex as funds seek to offer investors new investment options and a wider variety of shareholder services. These factors, combined with new and more sophisticated fund investments, have resulted in fund prospectuses that often include long and complicated disclosure, as funds explain their operations, investments, and services to investors. Many have criticized fund prospectuses, finding them unintelligible, tedious, and legalistic.-[5]- Although -[3]- INVESTMENT COMPANY INSTITUTE ("ICI"), MUTUAL FUND FACT BOOK 29-37 (36th ed. 1996) ("ICI FACT BOOK") (between 1987 and 1996, assets increased from $769.9 billion to $3.5 trillion and the number of funds increased from 2,317 to 6,243). -[4]- Compare ICI, Trends in Mutual Fund Investing: November 1996 at 3 (Dec. 1996) (ICI News No. ICI-96-107) (fund net assets exceeded $3.5 trillion as of Nov. 1996) with 82 Fed. Res. Bull. 12, table 1.21, at A13 (1996) (commercial bank deposits were approximately $2.5 trillion as of Sept. 1996). -[5]- See, e.g., "The SEC and the Mutual Fund Industry: An Enlightened Partnership," Remarks by Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC, before the ICI's General Membership Meeting at the Washington Hilton Hotel, Washington, D.C. (May 19, 1995); Simple Concept from SEC: Use (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 6====== the prospectus remains the most complete source of information about a fund, technical and unnecessarily lengthy prospectus disclosure often obscures important information relating to a fund investment and does not serve the information needs of the majority of fund investors.-[6]- As millions of Americans have turned to funds as an investment vehicle of choice,-[7]- investors need to be provided with clear and comprehensible information that will help them evaluate and compare fund investments. -[5]-(...continued) Plain English in Fund Prospectuses, L.A. TIMES, Mar. 2, 1995, at D14; J. BOGLE, BOGLE ON MUTUAL FUNDS 147 (1994); Rothchild, The War on Gobbledygook, TIME, Oct. 31, 1994, at 51; Skrzycki, Prospectuses to be in English, Donkeys to Fly Tomorrow, WASH. POST, Oct. 21, 1994, at B1. -[6]- A 1995 survey conducted on behalf of the Commission and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ("OCC") found that, although fund investors consulted the prospectus more than any other source of information about the fund they bought, they considered the prospectus only the fifth-best source of information, behind employer-provided written materials, financial publications, family or friends, and brokers. REPORT ON THE OCC/SEC SURVEY OF MUTUAL FUND INVESTORS 12-13 (June 26, 1996). See also ICI, THE PROFILE PROSPECTUS: AN ASSESSMENT BY MUTUAL FUND SHAREHOLDERS 4 (1996) ("ICI PROFILE SURVEY") (about half of fund shareholders surveyed had not consulted a prospectus before making a fund investment). -[7]- Over 30 million U.S. households own funds. ICI FACT BOOK, supra note 3, at 92. ==========================================START OF PAGE 7====== The Commission is committed to improving the disclosure provided to fund investors-[8]- and is proposing two major initiatives to meet this objective. First, the Commission is proposing changes to fund disclosure requirements in an effort to focus prospectus disclosure on essential information about a particular fund that would assist an investor in deciding whether to invest in that fund.-[9]- Second, in a companion release, the Commission is proposing a new rule to permit investors to buy fund shares based on a fund profile (the "profile") that would provide a summary of key information about a fund, including the fund's investment objectives, strategies, risks, performance, and fees.-[10]- Under this proposal, -[8]- See "Taking the Mystery Out of the Marketplace: The SEC's Consumer Education Campaign," Remarks by Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC, at the National Press Club, Washington, D.C. (Oct. 13, 1994); "Investor Protection: Tips from an SEC Insider," Remarks by Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC, before the Investors' Town Meeting at the Adam's Mark Hotel, Philadelphia, Pa. (June 11, 1996). -[9]- As part of the improvements to prospectus disclosure, the Commission is proposing a new rule intended to address certain broad categories of investment company names that are likely to mislead investors about an investment company's investments and risks. The new rule would require funds and other registered investment companies with names suggesting a particular investment emphasis to invest at least 80% of their assets in the type of investment suggested by their name. -[10]- Profile Release, supra note 1. ==========================================START OF PAGE 8====== investors would receive the fund's prospectus upon request or no later than with delivery of the purchase confirmation. These two initiatives are intended to improve fund disclosure by requiring prospectuses to focus on information central to investment decisions, to provide new disclosure options for investors, and to enhance the comparability of information about funds. Taken together, the proposals seek to promote more effective communication of information about funds without reducing the amount of information available to investors. As part of its commitment to give investors improved disclosure documents, the Commission recently proposed rule amendments to require the use of plain English principles in drafting prospectuses and to provide other guidance on improving the readability of prospectuses.-[11]- The Commission intends that the plain English initiatives serve as the standard for all disclosure documents, and the plain English proposals are an important counterpart of the proposed -[11]- Securities Act Release No. 7380 (Jan. 14, 1997) [62 FR 3152] ("Plain English Release"). In conjunction with these proposals, the Commission's Office of Investor Assistance has issued a draft of A Plain English Handbook: How to Create Clear SEC Disclosure Documents to explain the plain English principles of the proposed amendments and other techniques for preparing clear disclosure documents. See also "Plain English: A Work in Progress," Remarks by Isaac C. Hunt, Commissioner, SEC, before the First Annual Institute on Mergers and Acquisition: Corporate, Tax, Securities, and Related Aspects, Key Biscayne, Fla. (Feb. 6, 1997). ==========================================START OF PAGE 9====== fund disclosure initiatives. If adopted, the plain English requirements would apply to fund prospectuses and the profile. The Commission's efforts to improve fund disclosure are long-standing. In 1983, the Commission introduced an innovative approach to prospectus disclosure by adopting a two-part disclosure format.-[12]- Under this format, the Commission intended that a fund would provide investors with a simplified prospectus designed to contain essential information about the fund that assists an investor in making an investment decision. The Commission contemplated that more extensive information and detailed discussions of matters included in the prospectus would be available in a Statement of Additional Information ("SAI") that investors could obtain upon request. In adopting this new format, the Commission's goal was to provide investors with more useful information in "a prospectus that is substantially shorter and simpler, so that the prospectus clearly discloses the fundamental characteristics of the particular investment company. . . ."-[13]- Since 1983, the Commission has adopted a number of other initiatives to improve fund disclosure, including a uniform fee table and a requirement for management's discussion of -[12]- Investment Company Act Release No. 13436 (Aug. 12, 1983) [48 FR 37928] ("Form N-1A Adopting Release"). -[13]- Investment Company Act Release No. 12927 (Dec. 27, 1982) [48 FR 813, 814] ("Form N-1A Proposing Release"). ==========================================START OF PAGE 10====== fund performance ("MDFP").-[14]- While these changes have provided investors with clear and helpful information about fund expenses and performance, they were not intended to address overall prospectus disclosure requirements. The Commission has concluded that a comprehensive review and revision of fund disclosure requirements is necessary to improve the information provided in fund prospectuses.-[15]- The Commission's consideration of disclosure issues has included evaluating the use of the profile as a standardized, summary disclosure document. The Commission, with the cooperation of the Investment Company Institute ("ICI") and several large fund groups, conducted a pilot program permitting funds to use profiles ("pilot profiles") together -[14]- Investment Company Act Release Nos. 16244 (Feb. 1, 1988) [53 FR 3192] ("Fee Table Adopting Release") and 19382 (Apr. 6, 1993) [58 FR 19050] ("MDFP Adopting Release"). See also Investment Company Act Release Nos. 21216 (July 19, 1995) [60 FR 38454] ("Money Market Fund Prospectus Release") (proposing amendments designed to make money market fund prospectuses simpler and more informative) and 16245 (Feb. 2, 1988) [53 FR 3868] ("Performance Release") (adopting a uniform formula for calculating fund performance). -[15]- See, e.g., SEC, REPORT OF THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON THE CAPITAL FORMATION AND REGULATORY PROCESSES (July 24, 1996); SEC, REPORT OF THE TASK FORCE ON DISCLOSURE SIMPLIFICATION (1996) ("DISCLOSURE SIMPLIFICATION TASK FORCE REPORT") (recommending specific improvements in the disclosure provided by corporate issuers). ==========================================START OF PAGE 11====== with their prospectuses.-[16]- The pilot profiles (like the profile proposed today) contain a summary of key information about the fund. The program's purpose was to determine whether investors found the pilot profiles helpful in making investment decisions. Focus groups conducted on the Commission's behalf ("Focus Groups") responded very positively to the profile concept. Fund investors participating in a survey sponsored by the ICI also strongly favored the pilot profiles.-[17]- In another recent initiative, the Commission issued a release requesting comment on ways to improve risk disclosure and comparability of fund risk levels ("Risk Concept Release").-[18]- The Commission received over 3,700 comment letters, mostly from individual investors. Commenters confirmed the importance of risk disclosure to investors when evaluating and comparing funds and highlighted the need to improve prospectus disclosure of fund risks. In particular, -[16]- See Investment Company Institute (pub. avail. July 31, 1995) ("1995 Profile Letter"). The Division of Investment Management (the "Division") has permitted the pilot program, with some modifications, to continue for another year. See Investment Company Institute (pub. avail. July 29, 1996) ("1996 Profile Letter"). The Division also has permitted variable annuity registrants to use "variable annuity profiles" together with their prospectuses. National Association for Variable Annuities (pub. avail. June 4, 1996). -[17]- See ICI PROFILE SURVEY, supra note 6, at 31-32. -[18]- Investment Company Act Release No. 20974 (Mar. 29, 1995) [60 FR 17172]. ==========================================START OF PAGE 12====== commenters indicated that current risk disclosure is difficult to understand and does not fully convey to investors the risks associated with an investment in a fund. The Commission remains committed to the same goals articulated in adopting Form N-1A. The initiatives proposed today are intended to further these goals and achieve clear and concise disclosure that would assist fund investors in making investment decisions. Based on the Commission's review of current fund prospectuses and related disclosure requirements, the Commission has identified 5 major objectives that form the basis for today's initiatives: - Improved prospectus disclosure: Although some funds have made significant and commendable efforts to improve their prospectuses,-[19]- prospectus disclosure relating to a fund tends to be overly complex and difficult to follow and should be revised to focus on essential information about the fund to help an investor make an informed investment decision. - Fund names: Although a fund's name (like any other single piece of information about an investment) cannot tell the whole story about a fund investment, names may communicate a great deal to an investor, and investors should have greater assurance that a fund whose name suggests that the fund focuses on certain investments will make those investments. - Investor choice: Different investors prefer different amounts of information before making an investment decision, and regulatory requirements should not -[19]- See, e.g., McTague, Simply Beautiful: Shorn of Legalese, Even Prospectuses Make Sense, BARRON'S, Oct. 7, 1996, at F10 (about the recent efforts of the John Hancock funds and other fund groups to improve their prospectuses). ==========================================START OF PAGE 13====== foreclose options that respond to prospective investors' information needs. - Standardized fund summaries: Investors have expressed a strong preference for summary information about funds in a standard format; summaries should provide investors with additional tools to help them make better use of the extensive information available about funds. - Clearer risk disclosure: The risks of investing in a fund often are not readily apparent to investors and should be communicated more effectively. The proposed disclosure initiatives address these objectives. Improved Prospectus Disclosure The proposed amendments would change the disclosure requirements for fund prospectuses. The Commission regards the prospectus as an investor's primary source of information about a fund. A prospectus, however, is not useful to investors if it is in a form that discourages investors from reading it. The prospectus is intended to provide information about matters of fundamental importance to most investors.-[20]- The Commission's proposals are intended to update and streamline prospectus disclosure requirements to focus on essential information about a -[20]- See Form N-1A Proposing Release, supra note 13, at 814. ==========================================START OF PAGE 14====== particular fund and make the prospectus less technical and easier to read.-[21]- This initiative is designed to eliminate prospectus clutter that tends to obscure information that could help an investor make an investment decision. The proposed amendments would: -- move certain disclosure about fund organization and legal requirements from the prospectus to the SAI to focus prospectus disclosure on essential information about a fund, while continuing to assure that the information is available to those interested in reviewing it; -- permit a fund that is offered as an investment alternative in a participant-directed defined contribution plan to tailor its prospectus for use by plan participants; -- update and incorporate certain staff disclosure requirements into the amended registration form and include guidance about legal, interpretive, and operational matters in a new "Investment Company Registration Package," which, together, would provide more effective guidance about disclosure and legal matters;-[22]- and -[21]- Under the authority in section 10(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j(a)], the Commission is proposing amendments to current prospectus disclosure requirements based on its determination that certain disclosure requirements result in information that, while useful to some investors, is not necessary in the public interest or for the protection of investors to be included in the prospectus. -[22]- Incorporating certain staff disclosure requirements into the revised form is intended to formally identify those disclosure (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 15====== -- simplify current disclosure instructions to provide clearer guidance for preparing and filing fund registration statements. Fund Names and Investments In a companion release, the Commission is proposing a new rule under the Investment Company Act that would address certain broad categories of investment company names that are likely to mislead investors about an investment company's investments and risks. The rule would require a fund or any other registered investment company with a name that suggests a particular investment emphasis (e.g., a fund that calls itself the ABC Stock Fund, the XYZ Bond Fund, or the QRS U.S. Government Fund) to invest at least 80% of its assets in the type of investment suggested by its name.-[23]- Under -[22]-(...continued) requirements that would apply to all funds regardless of their particular circumstances. Among other things, the proposed approach seeks to address disclosure requirements that have been developed in connection with an issue presented by a specific fund, but applied to all funds regardless of their particular circumstances. See Securities Act Release No. 5906 (Feb. 15, 1978) (regarding a 1977 report of the Advisory Committee on Corporate Disclosure, which, among other things, recommended that, after identifying a disclosure problem of general significance, the Commission initiate rulemaking and not rely for prolonged periods on ad hoc procedures such as commenting on filings and enforcement actions). -[23]- Fund Names Release, supra note 2. ==========================================START OF PAGE 16====== current positions of the Division of Investment Management (the "Division"), these funds and investment companies generally are subject to a 65% investment requirement. The rule would address investment companies with names that suggest the company focuses its investments in a particular country or geographic region and investment companies with names that indicate the company's distributions are exempt from income tax. In addition, the rule would prohibit an investment company from using a name that suggests that the company or its shares are guaranteed or approved by the U.S. government. Investor Choice The proposed initiatives would give investors new disclosure options so that they could determine the amount of information they want to review before investing in a fund. The proposed profile would contain a summary of key information about a fund and enable investors who are comfortable with that level of information to purchase a fund's shares based on the profile.-[24]- Each investor using the profile to make an investment decision would receive the fund's prospectus with the confirmation of his or her -[24]- The profile would be a summary prospectus adopted under sections 10(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77j(b)] and 24(g) of the Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-24(g)]. ==========================================START OF PAGE 17====== investment. Investors also would have the option to request and review the fund's prospectus and other information about the fund (e.g., the fund's shareholder reports and SAI) before making an investment decision. Standardized Fund Summaries The proposals would require standardized information in the profile and in a new risk/return summary at the beginning of all fund prospectuses. The profile would include disclosure of 9 items in a specific order and in a question-and-answer format designed to help investors evaluate and compare funds.-[25]- The risk/return summary at the beginning of the prospectus (also included as the first 4 items in the proposed profile) would highlight information about a fund's investment objectives, strategies, risks and performance, and fees, and make this information readily available to investors in a consistent presentation. -[25]- The profile would include disclosure about a fund's investment objectives, strategies, risks and performance, fees, investment adviser and portfolio manager, purchase and redemption procedures, tax implications, and the services available to shareholders. See Profile Release, supra note 1. ==========================================START OF PAGE 18====== Clearer Risk Disclosure The proposals seek to improve prospectus disclosure about the risks of investing in a particular fund. Based in large part on comments received in response to the Risk Concept Release,-[26]- the proposals would improve risk disclosure as follows: -- Overall fund risks -- A fund would be required to discuss in the prospectus the overall risks of investing in the fund. The proposed amendments are designed to minimize the detailed and technical descriptions of the risks associated with specific portfolio securities typically included in a fund's prospectus and to elicit risk disclosure that relates to the particular fund and would be more useful to investors. -- Narrative risk summary -- The profile and the prospectus risk/return summary would include a narrative risk summary. The risk summary would provide a concise description of a fund's overall risks that could be used to evaluate and compare the risks of different funds. -- Graphic presentation of risk -- The profile and prospectus risk/return summary would include a bar chart reflecting a fund's returns over a ten-year period, which would illustrate fund risks by showing changes in the fund's performance from year to year. To help investors evaluate a fund's risks and returns -[26]- The Commission also considered other information about fund risk disclosure, including the results of an investor survey sponsored by the ICI. See ICI, SHAREHOLDER ASSESSMENT OF RISK DISCLOSURE METHODS (1996) ("ICI RISK SURVEY"). ==========================================START OF PAGE 19====== relative to "the market," a table accompanying the bar chart would compare the fund's performance to that of a broad-based securities market index. * * * * * The proposed initiatives are designed to promote more effective communication of information about funds without reducing the amount of information available to investors and other interested parties (e.g., financial analysts and advisers). The proposals would further Commission actions to improve prospectus disclosure beginning with the two-part disclosure format adopted in 1983. Permitting funds to use profiles would respond to investor support for a concise disclosure document highlighting key fund information. The profile would complement the revised prospectus, which, as the primary disclosure document, would be delivered to all investors that purchase fund shares. Taken together, these initiatives are intended to better realize the Commission's commitment to improving disclosure for fund investors. II. DISCUSSION Release Organization. The revised Form would retain the overall structure of current Form N-1A. To make the proposed requirements of revised Form N-1A easy to follow and to ==========================================START OF PAGE 20====== highlight the proposed changes, this release addresses revised Items in the order that they would appear in the Form. While some Items in proposed Part A (the prospectus) would not be changed (except for technical revisions to improve clarity), other Items would be new or extensively revised. Certain disclosure currently required in the prospectus would be moved to Part B (the SAI), where the information would continue to be available to investors and others who are interested in the information.-[27]- The proposed amendments would incorporate certain disclosure requirements from the Guidelines for Form N-1A (the "Guides") and the Generic Comment Letters ("GCLs") that have been issued over time by the Division.-[28]- The proposed amendments also would revise the General Instructions to Form N-1A to update the Instructions and make them easier to use. The release discusses in detail the proposed changes to the General Instructions after discussing -[27]- In addition, Parts B and C of proposed Form N-1A would include a number of technical revisions to clarify and simplify the Form's requirements. -[28]- See Letters to Registrants (Jan. 11, 1990) ("1990 GCL"); (Jan. 3, 1991) ("1991 GCL"); (Jan. 17, 1992) ("1992 GCL"); (Feb. 22, 1993) ("1993 GCL"); (Feb. 25, 1994) ("1994 GCL"); (Feb. 3, 1995) ("1995 GCL"); (Feb. 16, 1996) ("1996 GCL"). For a discussion of the Guides and GCLs, see infra notes 255-261 and accompanying text. ==========================================START OF PAGE 21====== changes to the Form's disclosure requirements.-[29]- The proposed amendments would add several definitions to the General Instructions to standardize certain terms used in the Form. In particular, a new definition of "fund" would accommodate the use of Form N-1A by series funds.-[30]- The General Instructions also would address other matters regarding the use of Form N-1A, including disclosure relating to multiple funds and classes, prospectuses used in the defined contribution plan market, and incorporation by reference. Plain English. Investment company registration statement forms currently include instructions, which govern all prospectus disclosure, directing a fund to provide information in the prospectus in a clear, concise, understandable manner by, among other things, avoiding the use of technical or legal terms, complex language, or excessive detail.-[31]- The Commission's plain English proposals also would apply to -[29]- See infra Part II.D. -[30]- Funds often organize as series funds and offer investors an opportunity to invest in one or more "portfolios," each of which has a specific investment objective. The revised Form would define a "fund" to include both the registrant and a series of the registrant unless otherwise indicated. -[31]- See, e.g., General Instruction G of Form N-1A. ==========================================START OF PAGE 22====== prospectus disclosure.-[32]- Initially, the proposed plain English principles would apply to the front and back cover pages of a fund's prospectus and to the summary of the prospectus, if any.-[33]- Because the Commission issued the plain English release before this release proposing amendments to Form N-1A, the proposed requirement for plain English risk factors disclosure does not specifically identify the proposed risk/return summary, which is the parallel type of disclosure for funds and is not a summary of the prospectus. If the proposed plain English requirements and the proposed risk/return summary are adopted, the Commission intends to clarify that plain English disclosure principles apply to the risk/return summary.-[34]- The Commission also requested comment whether the plain English disclosure principles should be modified for fund prospectuses. -[32]- See Plain English Release, supra note 11. -[33]- Id. (proposing amendments to add new paragraph (d) to rule 421 under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.421]). -[34]- To improve the clarity of prospectus disclosure, the Plain English Release also proposed revisions to Regulation S-K [17 CFR 229.10 et seq.], which sets out general disclosure requirements for corporate issuers. Similar requirements are included in specific rules for funds, and conforming changes to these rules would be made in connection with this and other fund disclosure initiatives. See proposed amendments to rule 481(b)(1) (disclaimer about the Commission's approval of securities offered in a prospectus), infra note 31. ==========================================START OF PAGE 23====== A. Part A -- Information in the Prospectus 1. Item 1 -- Front and Back Cover Pages Form N-1A requires certain information to appear on the outside front cover page of a fund's prospectus. In an effort to "unclutter" the prospectus cover page and avoid repeating information contained in the proposed risk/return summary at the beginning of the prospectus, the proposed amendments would simplify the disclosure currently required on the front cover page and require certain information to be included on the outside back cover page. The front cover page would be required to include a fund's name.-[35]- The front cover page also would include the disclaimer about the Commission's approval of the securities being offered and the accuracy and adequacy of the information included in the prospectus. The wording of the disclaimer would be simplified and the disclaimer would no longer be -[35]- When a prospectus relates to one or more series, both the name of the registrant and the series would be required to appear on the back cover page. The name of the registrant may assist investors in obtaining additional information about a particular series or the registrant. ==========================================START OF PAGE 24====== required to be in large capital letters and bold-faced type.-[36]- The proposed amendments would not require cover page disclosure that would repeat information required to be disclosed in the proposed risk/return summary. This information would include the identification of the type of fund offered (or a brief statement of the fund's investment objectives) and certain disclosure required for money market funds.-[37]- The proposed amendments also would no longer require a fund to provide statements that the prospectus sets forth concise information about the fund that a prospective investor ought to know before investing and should be retained for future reference.-[38]- These -[36]- Proposed amendments to rule 481(b)(1) under the Securities Act [17 CFR 230.481(b)(1)]. Amended rule 481(b)(1) would require disclosure to the effect that: The Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the adequacy of this prospectus and any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense. The same revisions to Item 501 of Regulation S-K [17 CFR 229.501] were recently proposed for corporate registrants. See Plain English Release, supra note 11. See also DISCLOSURE SIMPLIFICATION TASK FORCE REPORT, supra note 15, at 18. -[37]- See infra notes 52-58 and accompanying text. -[38]- See DISCLOSURE SIMPLIFICATION TASK FORCE REPORT, supra note 15, at 19 (recommending elimination of many legal warnings to make the cover page more inviting and present any necessary legal (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 25====== statements do not appear to be particularly helpful to investors. The proposed amendments would consolidate disclosure regarding the availability of additional information about a fund on the back cover page of the fund's prospectus. The back cover page would include disclosure about the availability and date of the SAI, which would be revised to require a telephone number that investors could use to obtain the SAI without charge. To ensure prompt delivery of the SAI to those investors who request it, a new Instruction would require a fund to send the SAI within 3 days of the receipt of a request.-[39]- The back cover page would include information (if applicable) regarding the incorporation by reference of a fund's SAI or financial information from the annual report into the prospectus and disclosure that other information about the fund has been filed with, and is -[38]-(...continued) warnings in a more readable style and format). See also Plain English Release, supra note 11, at 3160. -[39]- See Letter from Paul Schott Stevens, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, ICI, to Barry P. Barbash, Director, Division of Investment Management, SEC, at 11 (May 20, 1996) ("ICI Survey Letter") (recommending that funds be required to deliver shareholder reports within 3 days of a request); Form N-2 [17 CFR 274.11a-1] (requiring closed-end investment companies to include a telephone number for investors to request a SAI and to send the SAI within 2 days of a request). ==========================================START OF PAGE 26====== available from, the Commission.-[40]- The back cover page also would include disclosure about how a shareholder can make inquires about the fund.-[41]- 2. Item 2 -- Risk/Return Summary: Investments, Risks, and Performance The proposed amendments would require at the beginning of every prospectus a risk/return summary that would provide key information about a fund's investment objectives, principal strategies, risks, performance, and fees. This information would be required to appear in a specific sequence and to be presented in a question-and-answer format.-[42]- The proposed question-and-answer format, frequently used by many -[40]- The disclosure would be revised to indicate, among other things, that information about the fund (including the SAI) is available on the Commission's Internet Web site. Currently, only funds that disseminate prospectuses electronically are required to provide disclosure about the Commission's Web site. See Investment Company Act Release No. 21946 (May 9, 1996) [61 FR 24652]. -[41]- This information currently is required by Item 6(e) to be disclosed in the prospectus. To assist the Division in responding to investor inquiries, the proposed amendments would require a fund to include its Investment Company Act file number on the back cover page. -[42]- The information in the risk/return summary would be substantially the same as the first 4 items of the proposed profile. See Profile Release, supra note 1. ==========================================START OF PAGE 27====== funds, is intended to help communicate the required information effectively. The Commission requests comment on this format and whether funds instead should be permitted to choose the type of heading for the prescribed disclosure topics. The risk/return summary, like the profile, is intended to respond to investors' strong preference for summary information about a fund in a standardized format.-[43]- Since the profile would be optional, the proposed risk/return summary in the prospectus would provide all investors with key information about a fund in a standardized, easily accessible place that could be used to evaluate and compare fund investments. -[43]- Focus Group participants, for example, expressed strong support for summary information in a standardized format. In addition, in connection with the profile initiative, many individual investors have written to the Commission about the need for concise, summary information relating to a fund. See also Profile Prospectuses: An Idea Whose Time Has Come, MUTUAL FUNDS MAGAZINE, Aug. 1996, at 11. In keeping with the goal of providing key information in a standardized summary, proposed General Instruction C.2(b) would not permit a fund to include in the risk/return summary information that is not required or otherwise permitted. ==========================================START OF PAGE 28====== a. Investment Objectives and Principal Strategies The proposed amendments would require a fund to disclose in the risk/return summary its investment objectives and to summarize, based on the information provided in the prospectus, how the fund intends to achieve those objectives. The summary would be required to identify the fund's principal investment strategies, including the particular types of securities in which the fund invests or will invest principally, and any policy of the fund to concentrate in an industry or group of industries.-[44]- A fund also would be required to inform investors about the availability of additional information about the fund's investments in the fund's shareholder reports. Fund annual reports typically include the MDFP, which discusses a fund's strategies that materially affected the fund's performance during the most recent fiscal year.-[45]- The Division's review of and experience with MDFP disclosure indicates that the annual report may be a valuable resource -[44]- The criteria for determining whether a particular strategy is a principal strategy and disclosure about concentration policies are discussed infra notes 109-112 and accompanying text. -[45]- See proposed Item 5 (current Item 5A) (requiring the MDFP to be disclosed in the prospectus unless disclosed in the annual report). ==========================================START OF PAGE 29====== for investors.-[46]- The proposed amendments would require the risk/return summary to contain disclosure to the following effect: Additional information about the fund's investments is available in the fund's annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. In particular, the fund's annual report discusses the relevant market conditions and investment strategies used by the fund's investment adviser that materially affected the fund's performance during the last fiscal year. You may obtain these reports at no cost by calling ______________.-[47]- -[46]- Commenters also have cited the annual report as a source of valuable information. See Voss Sanders, Dear Shareholder, MORNINGSTAR MUTUAL FUNDS, Apr. 26, 1996, at 1 (commenting on improved annual report disclosure). -[47]- If applicable, a fund could indicate that its annual and semi-annual reports are available on its Internet site or by E-mail. In addition, a fund that provides its MDFP in the prospectus or a money market fund (which is not required to prepare a MDFP) would omit the second sentence of this disclosure. Instruction 3 to proposed Item 2(b)(2) would require a fund to send, as applicable, the annual or semi-annual report within 3 business days of a request. The Commission views prompt delivery of the annual or semi-annual report or SAI to those investors who request it to be imperative to the goal of promoting effective communication about funds. The Commission's Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations would examine a fund's compliance with the 3-day mailing requirement, and the Commission would bring an enforcement action in an appropriate case for failing to comply with the requirement. See also Profile Release, supra note 1 (discussing the Commission's intention in connection with the profile initiative to monitor a fund's compliance with the proposed requirement to send the fund's prospectus within 3 days of a request). ==========================================START OF PAGE 30====== The proposed amendments would require this disclosure to appear in the context of information about a fund's investments. The Commission requests comment on this approach. For example, would disclosure about the availability of additional information about the fund (e.g., the fund's shareholder reports, SAI, or any other information) be more helpful to investors if the disclosure was presented under a separate caption in the risk/return summary or on the back cover page of the prospectus? Should this disclosure include an explanation about the various types of information available to investors?-[48]- b. Risks Narrative Risk Disclosure. The proposed amendments would require a fund to summarize the principal risks of investing in the fund based on the information provided in the prospectus. More than 75% of the individual investors commenting on the Risk Concept Release specifically favored requiring a risk summary in fund prospectuses. This disclosure would be required to focus on the risks to which the fund's particular portfolio as a whole is subject and the circumstances reasonably likely to affect adversely the fund's -[48]- As proposed, the back cover page of the prospectus would include more general disclosure about the availability of additional information. ==========================================START OF PAGE 31====== net asset value, yield, and total return.-[49]- The risk section of the risk/return summary also would include disclosure about the risk of losing money and identify the types of investors for whom the fund may be an appropriate or inappropriate investment (based on, for example, an investor's risk tolerance and time horizon).-[50]- A fund, at its option, could discuss in the risk section the potential rewards of investing in the fund as long as the discussion provides a balanced presentation of the fund's risks and rewards.-[51]- -[49]- See infra notes 133-138 and accompanying text. The proposed amendments also would require a fund to disclose, if applicable, that it is non-diversified. See section 5(b) of the Investment Company Act [15 U.S.C. 80a-5(b)] (regarding diversified and non-diversified funds). To help investors understand this disclosure, a non-diversified fund would be required to describe the effects and to summarize the risks of non-diversification. -[50]- Information about whether a fund is appropriate for particular types of investors is designed to help investors evaluate and compare funds based on their investment goals and individual circumstances. In the pilot profiles, this information is presented under a separate caption relating to the appropriateness of an investment for certain investors. Because this information is closely related to the risks of investing in a fund, the proposed amendments would integrate this disclosure into the risk section of the risk/return summary. -[51]- The 1996 Profile Letter, in contrast, permits disclosure about the rewards of investing in a fund only if presented separately from disclosure about the fund's risks. 1996 Profile Letter, supra note 16, at 2. ==========================================START OF PAGE 32====== Special Risk Disclosure Requirements. Certain types of funds are required to provide special disclosure on the cover page of their prospectuses. Form N-1A requires a money market fund to disclose on the cover page of its prospectus that an investment in the fund is neither insured nor guaranteed by the U.S. Government, and that there can be no assurance that the fund will be able to maintain a stable net asset value of $1.00 per share.-[52]- The Form requires a tax-exempt money market fund that concentrates its investments in a particular state (a "single state money market fund") to disclose that the fund may invest a significant percentage of its assets in a single issuer and that investing in the fund may be riskier than investing in other types of money market funds.-[53]- The disclosure required for all money market funds is intended to alert investors that investing in a money market fund is not without risk.-[54]- The disclosure required for single state money market funds seeks to inform investors about the particular risks associated with a single state money market fund and to distinguish these -[52]- Item 1(a)(vi). -[53]- Item 1(a)(vii). This disclosure is not required if the fund limits its investments in a single issuer to no more than 5% of the fund's assets. -[54]- See Investment Company Act Release Nos. 17589 (July 17, 1990) [55 FR 30239, 30247] and 18005 (Feb. 20, 1991) [56 FR 8113, 8123] (proposing and adopting revisions to rules relating to money market funds). ==========================================START OF PAGE 33====== funds from other money market funds.-[55]- In addition, a fund that is advised by or sold through a bank is required to disclose on the cover page of its prospectus that the fund's shares are not deposits or obligations of, nor guaranteed or endorsed by, the bank, and that the shares are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") or any other government agency.-[56]- This disclosure is intended to alert investors that funds advised by or sold through banks are not federally insured.-[57]- -[55]- Unlike other money market funds, a single state money market fund is not subject to the issuer diversification requirements of rule 2a-7 [17 CFR 270.2a-7]. In March 1996, the Commission adopted amendments to rule 2a-7 that would require a single state money market fund, with respect to 75% of its assets, to invest no more than 5% of its assets in securities of a single issuer. Investment Company Act Release No. 21837 (Mar. 21, 1996) [61 FR 13956]. The Commission has suspended the compliance date for these amendments pending the adoption of technical changes to amended rule 2a-7. Investment Company Act Release Nos. 22135 (Aug. 13, 1996) [61 FR 42786] and 22283 (Dec. 10, 1996) [61 FR 66621]. -[56]- 1994 GCL, supra note 28, at II.B; Letter to Registrants from Barbara J. Green, Deputy Director, Division of Investment Management, SEC (May 13, 1993) ("Division Bank Letter"). -[57]- See Division Bank Letter, supra note 56. See also Testimony of Ricki Helfer, Chairman, FDIC, on FDIC Survey of Nondeposit Investment Sales at FDIC-Insured Institutions Before the Subcomm. on Capital Markets, Securities, and Government Sponsored Enterprises of the House Comm. on Banking and Financial Services, 104th Cong., 2d Sess. (June 26, 1996) (citing surveys in October 1995 and April 1996 indicating that approximately one-third of bank customers either (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 34====== The proposed amendments would move the required disclosure for all money market funds, single state money market funds, and funds advised by or sold through banks to the risk section of the risk/return summary. Since this disclosure relates directly to a particular fund's risks, it would appear to be more meaningful to investors when presented in the context of information about the fund's risks. The proposed approach also would help streamline the prospectus cover page and avoid repeating information on the cover page and in the risk section of the risk/return summary. The proposed amendments would revise the wording of the current disclosure required for all money market funds and funds advised by or sold through banks. The proposed amendments would simplify the disclosure that fund shares are not federally insured as follows: An investment in the fund is not insured or guaranteed by the FDIC or any other government agency. The proposed amendments also would simplify the technical disclosure that a money market fund may not be able to -[57]-(...continued) thought that, or did not know whether, funds sold through banks were insured). ==========================================START OF PAGE 35====== maintain a stable net asset value. The revised disclosure would state: Although the fund seeks to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 per share, it is possible to lose money by investing in the fund.-[58]- The Commission requests comment whether the disclosure required for all money market funds, single state money market funds, and funds advised by or sold through banks should be moved from the prospectus cover page to the risk/return summary. If the disclosure is moved from the cover page, should it be highlighted in a typographically distinctive manner (e.g., boldface or italics)? The Commission also requests comment on the wording of the proposed disclosure. In addition, the Commission requests comment whether the disclosure for single state money market funds should continue to be required. The disclosure, for example, may exaggerate the risks of a single state money market fund since these funds, like all money market funds, may purchase only those -[58]- The proposed disclosure, which would be required to be given by a money market fund in place of the proposed general risk disclosure about losing money, seeks to strike a balance between the potential to lose money in a money market fund and the relative risk of losing money in a money market fund as compared to other types of funds. ==========================================START OF PAGE 36====== portfolio instruments that meet the credit quality and maturity requirements of rule 2a-7.-[59]- Risk/Return Bar Chart and Table. The proposed amendments would require a bar chart showing a fund's annual returns for each of the last 10 calendar years and a table comparing the fund's average annual returns for the last one, five, and ten fiscal years to those of a broad-based securities market index.-[60]- The bar chart would illustrate graphically a fund's past risks by showing changes in the fund's returns over time. The information in the table would enable investors to evaluate a fund's performance and risks relative to "the market." Over 75% of individual investors responding to the Risk Concept Release favored a bar chart presentation of fund risks.-[61]- Focus Group participants found -[59]- Among other things, rule 2a-7 requires a money market fund to invest in securities that are rated in one of the two highest categories by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (or, if unrated, to be of comparable quality) and have a maturity of 13 months or less. Rule 2a-7(a)(9) and (c)(3). -[60]- Proposed Item 2(c)(2). -[61]- Risk Concept Release, supra note 18. See also ICI Risk Survey, supra note 26, at 21, 37 (51% of survey participants indicated they were very confident about using a bar chart to compare the risks of different funds and 49% of survey participants indicated they were very confident in using a bar chart to assess the risks of a single fund). In addition, all commenters responding to the Commission's initiative to (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 37====== both a bar chart and tabular presentation of fund performance helpful in evaluating and comparing fund investments, particularly when the table included return information for a broad-based index. The proposed amendments would require the bar chart and table to be included in the risk section of the risk/return summary under a subheading that refers to both risk and performance.-[62]- To help investors use the information in the bar chart and table, the proposed amendments would require a fund to explain how the information illustrates the fund's risks and performance. An example of the risk/return bar chart and table is set forth below: -[61]-(...continued) simplify money market fund prospectuses supported the proposal to replace the financial highlights information in money market fund prospectuses with a ten-year bar chart reflecting a money market fund's returns. See Summary of Comment Letters on Proposed Amendments to the Rules Regulating Money Market Fund Prospectuses Made in Response to Investment Company Act Release No. 21216, at 2 (File No. S7-21-95) ("Money Market Prospectus Comment Summary"). -[62]- The 1996 Profile Letter, in contrast, requires the bar chart and table to appear under a caption relating to a fund's past performance. 1996 Profile Letter, supra note 16, at 2. ==========================================START OF PAGE 38====== RISK AND PERFORMANCE INFORMATION The bar chart and table shown below illustrate the XYZ Stock Fund's risks and performance by showing changes in the Fund's performance from year to year over a 10-year period and by showing how the Fund's average annual returns for one, five, and ten years compare to those of a broad-based securities market index. How the Fund has performed in the past is not necessarily an indication of how the Fund will perform in the future. (see Additional Materials for an example of the bar graph and the table; http://www.sec.gov/rules/extra/337398.htm) ==========================================START OF PAGE 39====== Bar Chart Return Information.-[63]- The proposed amendments would require the bar chart to reflect annual returns for a fund's last 10 calendar years.-[64]- Requiring calendar year returns is intended to help investors compare the risks of different funds over similar time periods. A fund would calculate the annual returns in the bar chart by using the same method required for calculating annual -[63]- Funds generally file Form N-1A electronically on the Commission's electronic data gathering analysis and retrieval system ("EDGAR"). Although EDGAR currently does not reproduce graphic images like the bar chart, the EDGAR rules require a fair and accurate narrative description or tabular presentation in the place of any omitted material. Rule 304(a) of Regulation S-T [17 CFR 232.304(a)]. The Commission anticipates future modifications that would permit EDGAR to reflect graphic images on electronically-filed documents. -[64]- A fund also would be required to present the corresponding numerical return next to each bar. The proposed amendments would require a fund to have at least one calendar year of returns before including the bar chart. A fund that includes a single bar in the bar chart or a fund that does not include the bar chart because the fund does not have annual returns for a full calendar year would be required to modify, as appropriate, the narrative explanation accompanying the bar chart and table (e.g., by stating that the information shows the fund's risks and performance by comparing the fund's performance to a broad measure of market performance). The proposed amendments would require the bar chart of a fund in operation for fewer than 10 years to include annual returns for the life of the fund. ==========================================START OF PAGE 40====== returns in the financial highlights information included in fund prospectuses.-[65]- Like the returns in the financial highlights information, the returns in the bar chart would not reflect sales loads. Sales loads can be accurately and fairly reflected in return information of the type contained in the table by deducting sales loads at the beginning (or end) of particular periods from a hypothetical initial fund investment.-[66]- Reflecting sales loads in the bar chart, however, may be impracticable. In addition, reflecting the payment of sales loads may be less important in the bar chart than in the table, since the bar chart is intended primarily to depict fund risks graphically. The proposed amendments would require a fund that charges sales loads to disclose that sales loads are not reflected in the bar chart and that if the loads were included, returns would be less than those shown.-[67]- The Commission requests comment on the proposed bar chart. In particular, the Commission requests comment whether the bar -[65]- Instruction 1(a) to proposed Item 2(c)(2). See also Instruction 3 to proposed Item 9(a) (regarding the calculation of total returns provided in financial highlights information). -[66]- As a consequence, the fund's average annual returns in the table would reflect the payment of sales loads (if any). -[67]- Instruction 1(a) to proposed Item 2(c)(2) (requiring similar disclosure if a fund charges account fees). ==========================================START OF PAGE 41====== chart communicates information about fund risks effectively or whether the bar chart has limitations that detract from its usefulness.-[68]- The Commission requests comment whether the bar chart should include return information for additional or different time periods. For example, should the bar chart reflect return information for shorter time periods (e.g., calendar quarters) or longer time periods (e.g., for the life of the fund when more than 10 years)? The Commission also requests comment whether the return information in the bar chart should include sales loads and, specifically, how sales loads could be accurately and fairly reflected. Bar Chart Presentation for More than One Fund. The proposed amendments would not limit the number of funds for which return information could be included in a single bar chart. While the proposed approach would give funds flexibility in preparing the bar chart, including return information in a single bar chart for a number of funds could make the graphic presentation of the bar chart complex and -[68]- See, e.g., Remarks by Steven M.H. Wallman, Commissioner, SEC, before the ICI's 1995 Investment Company Directors Conference and New Directors Workshop, Washington, D.C. (Sept. 22, 1995) (discussing circumstances when a bar chart's presentation of fund risks may be confusing to investors, such as when bar charts use different scales). ==========================================START OF PAGE 42====== difficult to follow.-[69]- Bar charts included in the pilot profiles reflect information for only one fund.-[70]- In addition, Focus Group participants found prototype bar charts that included information for 6 funds (i.e., 6 bars per year) to be confusing. The Commission requests comment whether the number of funds that could be included in a single bar chart should be limited to one fund or to some other number of funds (e.g., 2, 4, or no more than 6 funds). This approach could enhance the clarity of the bar chart presentation. Limiting the number of funds that could be included in a single bar chart, however, could require a prospectus offering several funds to include more than one chart, which, in turn, could complicate bar chart disclosure and lengthen the prospectus. Multiple Class Funds. In contrast to the proposed approach with respect to the bar chart presentation for funds, the proposed amendments would require a multiple class fund to -[69]- While the proposed amendments would not impose a specific limit on the number of funds included in a bar chart, the presentation of the bar chart would be subject to the general requirement that information in the prospectus be set forth in a clear and understandable manner. See proposed General Instruction C.1(a). -[70]- See 1995 Profile Letter, supra note 16 (permitting the pilot profiles to include disclosure for a single fund or series of a fund). ==========================================START OF PAGE 43====== include annual return information in the bar chart for only one class.-[71]- Unlike individual funds, classes represent interests in the same investment portfolio, and the returns of each class differ only to the extent the classes do not have the same expenses. Including return information for all classes appears to be unnecessary to illustrate the risks of investing in the fund. In addition, the proposed amendments would require the table accompanying the bar chart to provide return information for each class so that investors would be able to identify and compare the performance of the classes offered in the prospectus. The proposed amendments would require the bar chart to reflect annual return information for the class offered in the prospectus that has returns for the longest period over the last 10 years. This approach is intended to provide the greatest amount of information about changes in the fund's returns. When two or more classes have returns for at least 10 years or returns for the same period but fewer than 10 years, the fund would be required to provide annual returns for the class with the greatest net assets as of the end of the most recent calendar year. Focusing on the class with the greatest net assets is intended to provide returns in the bar chart for a "representative" class offered in the prospectus. -[71]- Instruction 3(a) to proposed Item 2(c)(2). ==========================================START OF PAGE 44====== The proposed requirements may result in including returns in the bar chart for a class that has lower annual operating expenses (and better performance) than other classes offered in the prospectus. The Commission considered several other approaches, including requiring a fund to show returns in the bar chart for the class with the highest annual operating expenses. The Commission has not proposed these alternatives because they would make the bar chart requirements too complex and difficult to apply. In addition, the bar chart primarily is designed to show graphically the risks of investing in a fund and not the costs of investing in the fund. The Commission requests comment whether the bar chart presentation for multiple class funds should be limited to one class. If so, should the selection of the class be made on a basis other than that proposed? Tabular Presentation of Fund and Index Returns. The proposed amendments would require the table accompanying the bar chart to present the fund's average annual returns for the last one, five, and ten fiscal years (or for the life of the fund, if shorter)-[72]- and to compare that information -[72]- The proposed amendments would require a money market fund to provide its 7-day yield in the table. A non-money market fund would be permitted to disclose its yield, and any fund (including a money market fund) would be permitted to disclose its tax-equivalent yield. When yield information is disclosed, a fund (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 45====== to the returns of a broad-based securities market index.-[73]- Requiring comparative return information for a broad-based securities market index would provide investors with a basis for evaluating a fund's performance and risks relative to the market.-[74]- The proposed approach also would be consistent with the line graph presentation of fund performance required in MDFP disclosure.-[75]- -[72]-(...continued) would be required to include a telephone number that investors can use without charge to obtain current yield information. -[73]- A fund's average annual returns would be calculated using the same method required to calculate fund performance included in advertisements, which reflects the payment of sales loads and recurring shareholder account fees. Instruction 2(a) to proposed Item 2(c)(2) (incorporating the requirements of proposed Item 21). See also proposed Item 5 (requiring sales loads and recurring shareholder account fees to be reflected in the return information shown in the MDFP line graph). Consistent with the preparation of the MDFP line graph, if a fund has not had the same adviser for the last 10 years, the fund would be permitted to begin the bar chart and performance information in the table on the date the new adviser began to provide advisory services to the fund so long as certain conditions are met. -[74]- See MDFP Adopting Release, supra note 14, at 19054. Consistent with the preparation of the MDFP line graph, if a fund changes indexes, the fund would be required to explain the reasons for the change and provide information for both the newly selected and the former index. -[75]- See Instruction 5 to proposed Item 5(b) (defining "appropriate broad-based securities market index"). See also 1996 Profile Letter, (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 46====== Consistent with the requirements for preparing the MDFP line graph, the proposed amendments would allow a fund to include return information for other indexes, including a "peer group" index of comparable funds.-[76]- Focus Group participants indicated that comparing fund returns to a broad-based securities market index and a peer group index could be useful in evaluating and comparing fund investments.-[77]- -[75]-(...continued) supra note 16, at 3 (permitting a fund, at its option, to compare its returns to those of an appropriate broad-based securities market index). -[76]- If an additional index is included, the fund would be required to discuss the additional index in the narrative explanation accompanying the bar chart and table. Instruction 2(b) to proposed Item 2(c)(2). -[77]- Other commenters have suggested different ways to provide comparative return information. See Letter from John C. Bogle, Chairman of the Board, The Vanguard Group, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, SEC, at 3 (July 28, 1995) (File No. S7-10-95) (recommending disclosure of fund and market index returns on a quarterly basis over a 10-year period); Letter from Daniel Pierce, Chairman of Board, Scudder, Stevens & Clark, Inc., to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, SEC, at 2 (July 28, 1995) (recommending that a fund's returns be compared to both a benchmark index (e.g., the S&P 500) and a risk-free measure (e.g., the yield on 3-month U.S. Treasury bills)); ICI Survey Letter, supra note 39, at 8-9 (recommending that a fund be permitted to show either a broad-based market index or an appropriate index of fund performance). ==========================================START OF PAGE 47====== The Commission believes that a comparison of a fund's performance to a broad-based securities market index can assist investors in evaluating the risk of a fund investment. The proposed amendments would include this information in the table accompanying the bar chart to minimize the complexity of the graphic presentation of a fund's risks and returns. The Commission recognizes that other presentations could improve fund risk disclosure and requests comment on alternative approaches.-[78]- Specifically, the Commission requests comment on requiring the annual returns of a broad-based securities market index (and any optional peer group or other index) to appear in the bar chart instead of the table. By providing investors with a graphic illustration of the relationship between the returns of the fund and the index(es), this approach could help investors evaluate the comparative risk of the fund and the index(es). Including additional bars or lines for index comparisons in the bar chart, however, could complicate the chart (especially if the chart included return information for more than one fund) and make it difficult for investors to follow. As an alternative to, or in addition to the bar chart, the Commission requests comment on requiring a fund to show its -[78]- Focus Group participants did not express a preference as to the placement of this information in the bar chart or accompanying table. ==========================================START OF PAGE 48====== highest and lowest annual returns (or "range" of returns) over a ten-year or other period compared with the same information for a broad-based market index (and any optional peer group or other index). This information, which could be presented as a separate table or included in the proposed table showing a fund's average annual returns, could help investors assess fund risks. 3. Item 3 -- Risk/Return Summary: Fee Table Form N-1A would continue to require a fee table in the prospectus, which summarizes the sales loads and expenses associated with an investment in a fund. The fee table seeks to provide uniformity, simplicity, and comparability in fee disclosure.-[79]- Consistent with this objective, the Commission is proposing several amendments designed to improve fee table disclosure. a. Fee Table Example Form N-1A requires an "Example" to accompany the fee table that discloses the cumulative amount of fund expenses over one, three, five, and ten year periods based on a hypothetical -[79]- See Fee Table Adopting Release, supra note 14, at 3194. ==========================================START OF PAGE 49====== investment of $1,000 and an annual 5% return. The Example primarily is intended to provide information about the cost of investing in one fund that can be compared with similar information about another fund.-[80]- Focus Group participants, however, had difficulty understanding and using the information in the Example. -[80]- Id. (also noting that the Example provides information about the cost of a fund investment). ==========================================START OF PAGE 50====== The proposed amendments seek to improve the Example by requiring a fund to provide a specific narrative description that explains the purpose of the information presented. The revised Form would require a narrative explanation to the following effect: This Example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the fund to the cost of investing in other mutual funds.-[81]- To further assist investors in understanding the Example, the proposed amendments would revise the description of how the Example is calculated.-[82]- The proposed amendments also would increase the initial hypothetical investment in the Example from $1,000 to $10,000. -[81]- Like the current Form, the proposed amendments would require a fund that charges sales loads on reinvested dividends to disclose that these loads are not reflected in the Example and that, if the loads were included, the expenses reflected in the Example would be higher. Instruction 4(d) to proposed Item 3 would require this disclosure to follow the Example to avoid informing investors about what is not included in the Example before they have an opportunity to review what is included. -[82]- See proposed Item 3. Instruction 4(a) to proposed Item 3 also would permit a fund to adjust the expenses included in the Example to reflect the completion of the amortization period for expenses associated with the initial organization of the fund. See Money Market Fund Prospectus Release, supra note 14, at 38458 (proposing this change). ==========================================START OF PAGE 51====== The increase is intended to reflect a typical fund investment (many funds have minimum investments exceeding $1,000) and more closely approximate the amount of expenses that may be paid over time.-[83]- Using the $10,000 figure in the Example also would be consistent with the $10,000 hypothetical initial account value used in the MDFP line graph.-[84]- The Commission requests comment on the proposed amendments. The Commission also requests comment whether the Example communicates useful information to investors and, specifically, whether the Example should continue to be required. The Commission requests comment about other ways to provide information that investors can use to compare the costs of fund investments. -[83]- See Letter from John C. Bogle, Chairman of the Board, The Vanguard Group, to Barry P. Barbash, Director, Division of Investment Management, SEC (Sept. 16, 1996) (suggesting that few investors have as little as $1,000 invested in a given fund, and that the average fund investment typically amounts to $10,000-25,000, with the median investment probably in the range of $6,000-7,000). -[84]- See proposed Item 5(b). ==========================================START OF PAGE 52====== b. Shareholder Account Fees Instructions to the fee table require a fund to include, under the caption "Other Expenses," fees that are charged to all shareholder accounts.-[85]- Funds that have account fees (e.g., account maintenance fees) typically charge these fees as a fixed dollar amount and disclose the fees in a separate line item to the fee table.-[86]- Because account fees are paid directly by shareholders and are not fund operating expenses, the proposed amendments would create a new line item in the shareholder transaction section of the fee table that would describe the type of account fees charged by a fund.-[87]- Like the fee table requirements applicable to sales loads, the proposed amendments would -[85]- Instruction 10 to Item 2(a). -[86]- Certain funds charge shareholder account fees as a percentage of assets invested. A small number of funds charge account fees based on the fund's average net assets. -[87]- Instruction 2(d) to proposed Item 3. This Instruction would address when account fees must be included in the fee table. For example, account fees would be required in the fee table even if a fund waived the fees for certain shareholders, such as employees of the fund's investment adviser and investors with large account balances. In certain circumstances, case-by-case determinations would continue to be made regarding the inclusion (or exclusion) of account fees from the fee table based on the number and type of shareholders subject to the fee and the services provided. ==========================================START OF PAGE 53====== require a fund to show the maximum account fee imposed.-[88]- c. Improving and Simplifying Fee Table Presentation Fee Table Narrative. Form N-1A requires a fund to provide a narrative description following the fee table explaining the purpose of the table.-[89]- To help investors use the information presented, the proposed amendments would require the narrative explanation to appear before (rather than after) -[88]- If an account fee is charged only to accounts that do not meet a certain threshold (e.g., accounts under $2,500) or if an account fee is non-recurring (e.g., it is paid to open or close an account), a fund would be permitted to disclose the threshold or the type of fee imposed in a parenthetical to the caption or in a footnote to the fee table. In computing the expenses shown in the Example, Instruction 4(d) to proposed Item 3 would allow the allocation of account fees when they are charged to invest in more than one fund. See Money Market Fund Prospectus Release, supra note 14, at 38461 (proposing this change). In addition, a fund that charges account fees based on a minimum investment requirement would be permitted to prorate its account fees for purposes of the Example if the fund's minimum account requirement exceeds $10,000 (the proposed hypothetical investment). For instance, adjusting an account fee of $100 to $50 would be appropriate to avoid overstating the fee in the Example when the fund's minimum investment requirement is $20,000. -[89]- Instruction 1 to Item 2(a). ==========================================START OF PAGE 54====== the fee table and to include disclosure to the following effect: This table describes the fees and expenses you may pay in connection with an investment in the fund. New Fee Table Headings and Captions. The fee table is divided into two sections: "Shareholder Transaction Expenses" and "Annual Fund Operating Expenses." Captions beneath the two general headings list the fees that make up transaction and operating expenses. The general heading for the shareholder transaction section of the fee table refers to shareholder transaction "expenses" and captions underneath this heading refer to sales "loads" and redemption and exchange "fees." The proposed amendments would revise the shareholder transaction section so that the general heading and captions consistently refer to "fees." As a result of this change, captions relating to sales loads would refer to "sales fees." Since some investors are familiar with the term "load" and many funds use the term "no load" in marketing materials, however, these captions would include the term "load" in parentheses (e.g., "Maximum Sales Fee (Load) Imposed on Purchases").-[90]- -[90]- See ICI Survey Letter, supra note 39 (changing the caption from "sales load" to "sales charge," without using the term "load"). ==========================================START OF PAGE 55====== The proposed amendments also would revise the caption "12b-1 Fees," which includes any distribution and other expenses a fund pays under a rule 12b-1 plan.-[91]- The proposed amendments would change the caption to "Marketing (12b-1) Fees."-[92]- Retaining the designation "12b-1" would enable investors familiar with rule 12b-1 plans to identify those fees in the fee table. The Commission requests comment whether another caption (e.g., "Distribution (12b-1) Fees") would be more appropriate. To help explain the difference between the fees paid by shareholders and expenses paid by the fund, the proposed amendments would require the following parentheticals after each heading: "Shareholder Fees (fees paid directly from your account)" and "Annual Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that are deducted from the fund's assets)."-[93]- Fee Schedules. Instructions to the fee table permit a fund to include a tabular presentation within the fee table that shows a range of deferred sales loads over time and a -[91]- 17 CFR 270.12b-1. -[92]- Focus Group participants indicated that the term "marketing fees" would help them understand the expenses included in the line item. -[93]- See ICI Survey Letter, supra note 39 (enclosing a prototype profile that includes similar explanatory information). ==========================================START OF PAGE 56====== range of exchange fees.-[94]- Since the presentation of a table within the larger fee table tends to complicate the fee disclosure and may discourage investors from reviewing the information presented, the proposed amendments would no longer permit this disclosure in the fee table. Like the current Form, the proposed amendments would continue to permit a fund to explain the range of deferred sales loads or exchange fees in a footnote.-[95]- Expense Reimbursement and Fee Waiver Arrangements. Instructions to the fee table require a fund that has an expense reimbursement or fee waiver arrangement to reflect the arrangement in the fee table if the reimbursement or waiver will continue.-[96]- The proposed amendments would clarify that a fund is required to reflect expense reimbursement and fee waiver arrangements without regard to -[94]- Instructions 5 and 7 to Item 2(a). -[95]- Instructions 2(a)(i) and 2(c) to proposed Item 3. The GCLs require a fund to disclose wire redemption charges in a footnote to the fee table. 1991 GCL, supra note 28, at II.G. Given the small amount of these fees (typically $5 to $10 per redemption) and since these fees are charged only when shareholders elect to receive redemption proceeds by wire, the proposed amendments would not require disclosure of wire redemption charges in the fee table. A fund may include this disclosure in a footnote to the table or together with other prospectus disclosure regarding redemption procedures. -[96]- Instruction 13 to Item 2(a). ==========================================START OF PAGE 57====== whether the arrangement has been guaranteed for a full fiscal year.-[97]- This approach is intended to assure that investors are informed about decreases in expense reimbursement and fee waiver arrangements that could affect the fund's performance. Other Expenses. Instructions to the fee table permit a fund to subdivide the line item for "Other Expenses" into 3 subcategories of its own choosing.-[98]- Since some funds identify the fees that make up this line item by adding a parenthetical following the "Other Expenses" caption, the proposed amendments would permit a fund to identify the expenses that comprise this line item either under separate subcaptions or in a parenthetical following the "Other Expenses" caption.-[99]- When subcaptions are provided, the proposed amendments would clarify that the subcaptions must identify the 3 largest expenses that comprise "Other Expenses." -[97]- Instruction 3(e) to proposed Item 3. See Money Market Fund Prospectus Release, supra note 14, at 38458 (proposing this clarification). -[98]- Instruction 10(b) to Item 2(a). -[99]- Instruction 3(c)(iii) to proposed Item 3. ==========================================START OF PAGE 58====== 4. Item 4 -- Investment Strategies and Risk Disclosure Prospectus disclosure about fund investments and risks typically consists of descriptions of each type of security in which a fund may invest and the risks associated with those securities. The investments described often include instruments, such as illiquid securities, repurchase agreements, and options and futures contracts, that do not have a significant role in achieving a fund's investment objectives. Disclosing information about each type of security in which a fund might invest does not appear to help investors evaluate how the fund's portfolio will be managed or the risks of investing in the fund. This disclosure also adds substantial length and complexity to fund prospectuses, contributing to investor perceptions that prospectuses are too complicated and discouraging investors from reading a fund's prospectus.-[100]- The Commission believes that prospectus disclosure would be more useful to investors if it emphasized the principal investment strategies of a fund and the principal risks of investing in the fund, rather than the characteristics and -[100]- See Money Market Fund Prospectus Release, supra note 14, at 38456 (giving examples of lengthy and technical disclosure about portfolio holdings frequently found in money market fund prospectuses). ==========================================START OF PAGE 59====== risks of each type of instrument in which the fund may invest.-[101]- Since funds are intended to offer investors professional investment management,-[102]- the focus of investment disclosure should be on the fund's investment objectives and the principal means used by the fund's adviser to achieve those objectives. Consistent with this view, the proposed amendments seek to encourage prospectus disclosure that would help investors understand how a fund's portfolio will be managed. The proposed amendments are designed to be consistent with, and to implement more effectively, the Commission's intention in adopting Form N-1A that the prospectus should describe a fund's "fundamental characteristics."-[103]- -[101]- The ICI has recommended that prospectus disclosure focus primarily on a fund's broad investment objectives, practices, and associated risks, and not on particular types of securities in which the fund invests. See, e.g., Letter from Paul Schott Stevens, General Counsel, ICI, to Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary, SEC, at 4-6 (July 28, 1995) ("1995 ICI Risk Comment Letter"); Letter from Amy B.R. Lancellotta, Associate Counsel, ICI, to C. Gladwyn Goins, Associate Director, Division of Investment Management, SEC, at 7 (Mar. 7, 1995) ("1995 ICI Disclosure Letter"). -[102]- See, e.g., 1 T. LEMKE, G. LINS & A.T. SMITH III, REGULATION OF INVESTMENT COMPANIES  1.01, at 1-1 (1996). -[103]- See Form N-1A Proposing Release, supra note 13, at 815; Form N-1A Adopting Release, supra note 12, at 39729. See also Money Market Fund Prospectus Release, supra note 14 (proposing amendments that would permit money market funds to include in their prospectuses "basic, general (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 60====== a. Investment Objectives and Implementation of Investment Objectives To assist investors in identifying funds that meet their investment needs, the proposed amendments, like the current Form, would require prospectus disclosure of a fund's investment objectives.-[104]- The proposed amendments, however, would change the disclosure requirements regarding how a fund intends to achieve its investment objectives. Form N-1A currently requires a fund to disclose the types of securities in which it invests or will invest principally as well as any "special investment practices and techniques" that will be used in connection with investing in those securities.-[105]- Form N-1A also requires disclosure -[103]-(...continued) statements about their investment objectives and portfolio composition"). -[104]- Proposed Item 4(a). A fund may refer to its investment objectives as investment goals. If a fund's investment objectives can be changed without a shareholder vote, the proposed amendments would continue to require disclosure of this fact in the prospectus. Although not required by Form N-1A, some funds disclose in the prospectus that their investment objectives may not be changed without a shareholder vote. Since investors generally do not expect fund investment objectives to change, this disclosure does not appear to help investors evaluate and compare funds. This disclosure would be moved to the SAI and proposed Item 12(c)(1)(vii) would require a fund to disclose when its investment objectives may not be changed without a shareholder vote. -[105]- Item 4(a)(ii)(B)(1). ==========================================START OF PAGE 61====== about "significant investment policies or techniques" that a fund intends to use, subject to certain limitations.-[106]- One of those limitations directs a fund to limit prospectus disclosure about practices that place no more than 5% of a fund's assets at risk.-[107]- Many funds disclose in their prospectuses information about securities and investment practices that do not and may not ever place more than 5% of a fund's assets at risk, often to retain the flexibility to exceed the 5% threshold in the future.-[108]- -[106]- Item 4(a)(ii)(D). -[107]- Item 4(b)(ii). Item 4(b)(i) directs a fund not to disclose so-called "negative" practices (i.e., practices in which a fund may not or does not intend to engage). Instruction 3 to proposed Item 4(b)(1) would retain this limitation by providing that a negative strategy is not a principal strategy. Avoiding disclosure about negative strategies should help keep prospectus disclosure focused on what the fund will do to achieve its investment objectives, rather than on what the fund will not do. -[108]- A fund, within a short period of time, may increase its holdings of a particular type of security from less than 5% of its assets to more than 5%, which, under the current Form, requires a different level of disclosure about the security. To avoid having to amend their prospectuses in response to changes in portfolio holdings, many funds include information in their prospectuses about any security or strategy that might at some point place more than 5% of the fund's assets at risk. ==========================================START OF PAGE 62====== The proposed amendments would eliminate the 5% standard. Instead, the revised Form would require a fund to disclose in the prospectus the principal strategies to be used to achieve its investment objectives, including the particular type or types of securities in which the fund will invest principally.-[109]- This approach is designed to shift prospectus disclosure away from an inventory of the various investments a fund may make and to focus disclosure on a fund's overall portfolio management. Whether a particular strategy (including a strategy to invest in a particular type of security) would constitute a principal strategy that must be disclosed in the fund's prospectus would depend upon the strategy's anticipated importance in achieving the fund's investment objectives and how the strategy affects the fund's potential risks and returns.-[110]- In determining what is a principal strategy, a fund would consider, among other things, the amount of assets expected to be committed to the strategy, the amount of assets expected to be placed at risk by the strategy, and the likelihood of losing some or all of those assets.-[111]- The proposed amendments would -[109]- Proposed Item 4(b)(1). A bond fund, for example, typically would discuss the maturities, durations, ratings, and issuers of the bonds in which the fund principally invests. -[110]- Instruction 1 to proposed Item 4(b)(1) would define a strategy to include any policy, practice, or technique used to achieve a fund's investment objectives. -[111]- Instruction 2 to proposed Item 4(b)(1). ==========================================START OF PAGE 63====== require disclosure about non-principal strategies to appear in the SAI.-[112]- Focusing disclosure requirements on a fund's principal strategies is intended to improve prospectus disclosure by eliminating the need for disclosure about securities and strategies that do not have an important role in achieving the fund's investment objectives. Under the revised Form, for example, it generally would be unnecessary to include in the prospectus disclosure about a fund's cash management practices (e.g., entering into overnight repurchase agreements) since these practices are not typically among a fund's principal strategies.-[113]- To further focus prospectus disclosure on a fund's principal strategies, the proposed amendments would require the prospectus to explain in general terms how the fund's -[112]- Proposed Item 12(b). -[113]- Similarly, in most cases, a fund would be able to move to the SAI disclosure about hedging strategies that limit downside risk, securities lending, purchasing securities on a "when-issued" basis, short selling "against the box" to defer recognition of gains or losses, and investing in illiquid or restricted securities, since these strategies typically are not principal strategies. ==========================================START OF PAGE 64====== adviser decides what securities to buy and sell.-[114]- This disclosure is intended to provide investors with general information about the fund's investment approach and how the fund's portfolio will be managed. The information might describe, for example, whether an equity fund emphasizes value or growth, or blends the two approaches, or whether the fund invests in stocks based on a "top-down" analysis of economic trends or a "bottom-up" analysis that focuses on the financial condition and competitiveness of individual companies.-[115]- Concentration. Form N-1A requires a fund to disclose in its prospectus any policy to concentrate (i.e., invest 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries. The proposed amendments would retain this requirement since concentrating in an industry or group of -[114]- Proposed Item 4(b)(2). The prospectus of a value-oriented fund might state, for example, that the fund's adviser selects stocks it considers to be undervalued by recognized measures of economic value such as earnings, cash flow, and book value. A growth and income fund might state that it invests in the stock of issuers whose earnings have increased from year to year and issuers that have paid dividends continuously for a certain period of time. -[115]- Because proposed Item 4(b)(2) would require the prospectus to explain in general terms how the fund's adviser decides what securities to buy and sell, a fund (or its adviser) would not be required to provide proprietary information about its investment strategies. ==========================================START OF PAGE 65====== industries is likely to be a principal strategy in achieving a fund's investment objectives.-[116]- The proposed amendments also would continue to require a single state money market fund to discuss its concentration in securities issued by a particular state or by issuers located within a state. Temporary Defensive Positions. Many funds adopt policies permitting them to take "temporary defensive positions" to avoid losses in response to adverse market, economic, political, or other conditions. When a fund assumes a temporary defensive position, the fund may depart from its usual investment strategies without a shareholder vote or specific notice to shareholders. The GCLs require a fund to disclose, if applicable, certain information about the possibility of taking temporary defensive positions.-[117]- The proposed amendments would continue to require disclosure about temporary defensive positions to alert investors of potential changes in a fund's investments.-[118]- In particular, the proposed -[116]- Proposed Item 4(b)(3). -[117]- 1994 GCL, supra note 28, at II.E. -[118]- Proposed Item 4(e). See also Fund Names Release, supra note 2 (permitting a fund with a name suggesting that the fund focuses on a (continued...) ==========================================START OF PAGE 66====== amendments would require a fund to disclose the percentage of its assets that may be committed to temporary defensive positions (e.g., up to 100% of the fund's assets), the risks, if any, associated with the positions, and the likely effect of these positions on the fund's performance. The Commission requests comment on requiring this information given the temporary nature of defensive positions and the proposed approach of focusing prospectus disclosure on a fund's principal strategies.-[119]- Portfolio Turnover. The Guides require a fund that has had in the past year, or anticipates having, a portfolio turnover rate of approximately 100% or more to disclose in the prospectus any tax and brokerage consequences that will result from the fund's "high" portfolio turnover rate.-[120]- The proposed amendments would require prospectus disclosure only when a fund anticipates having a portfolio turnover rate -[118]-(...continued) particular type of investment to make other investments while assuming a temporary defensive position). -[119]- In light of these considerations, the revised Form, unlike the 1994 GCL, supra note 28, would not require a fund to disclose the types of securities in which it may invest while taking a temporary defensive position. -[120]- Guide 5. ==========================================START OF PAGE 67====== of 100% or more in the coming year.-[121]- This approach is designed to focus prospectus disclosure on a fund's expected portfolio practices, not past practices.-[122]- The proposed amendments would require disclosure of the fund's anticipated portfolio turnover rate and what that rate means (e.g., that a portfolio turnover rate of 200% is equivalent to the fund buying and selling all of the securities in its portfolio twice in the course of a year).-[123]- Disclosing the anticipated turnover rate and explaining its meaning are intended to enable investors to evaluate how actively a fund buys and sells portfolio -[121]- Proposed Item 4(b)(4). A fund that expects its portfolio turnover rate to be less than 100% would continue to be required to disclose the anticipated rate of its portfolio turnover in the SAI. As under the current requirements, a money market fund would not be required to discuss portfolio turnover in either the prospectus or the SAI. See MDFP Adopting Release, supra note 14, at 19051 n.3. -[122]- Information about a fund's portfolio turnover rate in previous fiscal years is disclosed in the financial highlights table. See proposed Item 9. -[123]- Like any other fund, a "balanced" fund would discuss its anticipated turnover rate with respect to its entire portfolio. Guide 5, in contrast, requires a balanced fund to discuss portfolio turnover separately for the stock and bond portions of the fund's portfolio. ==========================================START OF PAGE 68====== securities and to compare the anticipated portfolio turnover rates of different funds. The proposed amendments also would require a fund to explain the tax consequences to shareholders of the fund's high portfolio turnover rate. In addition, the proposed amendments would require a fund to explain how trading costs associated with the fund's high portfolio turnover may affect the fund's performance. The Commission requests comment on the proposed requirements. In particular, the Commission requests comment whether a fund with a portfolio turnover rate of 100% should be viewed as having a high portfolio turnover rate. An informal review by the Division of fund portfolio turnover rates suggests that nearly half of all funds have portfolio turnover rates exceeding 100%. The Commission also requests comment whether specific information about portfolio turnover should be required in connection with prospectus disclosure about a fund's investment strategies. In response to current disclosure requirements, for example, funds often make generic statements that do not appear to help investors evaluate and compare fund investments.-[124]- -[124]- Prospectuses, for example, state that high portfolio turnover rates will likely result in higher transaction costs and may increase taxable gains. ==========================================START OF PAGE 69====== Classification and Subclassification. All funds that register on Form N-1A are classified as management companies and subclassified as open-end companies under sections 4 and 5 of the Investment Company Act.-[125]- Funds may be further subclassified as diversified or non-diversified under section 5. Form N-1A requires a fund to disclose its classification and subclassifications in the prospectus.-[126]- The proposed amendments would move to the SAI disclosure about a fund's legal status as an open-end management company.-[127]- This information is technical and repetitive of information required to be disclosed in the prospectus. A fund's classification as a management company is communicated to investors through disclosure about the fund's investment adviser and portfolio management. A fund's open-end status is communicated through disclosure about the redeemability of the fund's shares. The proposed amendments also would move to the SAI disclosure that a fund is diversified under section 5. Since most funds are diversified, this information (which often -[125]- See 15 U.S.C. 80a-4, -5. -[126]- Item 4(a)(i)(B). -[127]- Proposed Item 12(a). ==========================================START OF PAGE 70====== includes a technical description of the diversification requirements under the Investment Company Act) does not appear to provide investors with useful information about a particular fund. A non-diversified fund would continue to be required to disclose its non-diversified status in the prospectus.-[128]- To avoid technical disclosure, the proposed amendments would require a non-diversified fund to describe the effects of non-diversification (e.g., by indicating that, compared to diversified funds, the fund may invest a greater percentage of its assets in a particular issuer) and to disclose the risks of investing in the fund. Section 8 Policies. Section 8 requires a fund to disclose in its registration statement the fund's policies with respect to borrowing money, issuing senior securities, underwriting securities issued by other persons, investing in real estate or commodities, and making loans.-[129]- Most funds do not engage in these practices to a significant extent, because -[128]- Proposed Item 4(d). -[129]- 15 U.S.C. 80a-8. Section 8 also requires a fund to disclose in the registration statement its policies on concentration and portfolio turnover, see supra note 121 and accompanying text, and any other policies that the fund deems fundamental or that may not be changed without shareholder approval. ==========================================START OF PAGE 71====== the Investment Company Act limits their use by funds.-[130]- Although they are not required to do so,