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New ADV Part 2

On July 28, 2010, The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a Final Rule implementing a massive overhaul to the Form ADV Part II. The Rule now requires investment advisers to prepare the Form in a narrative "Plain English" format and imposes expanded disclosure requirements.

Compliance Dates:
  • October 12, 2010 – The Rule becomes effective
  • January 1, 2011 – Compliance becomes mandatory. All new Form ADV registrations must comply with the Rule
  • March 31, 2011 – This is the final compliance date for all advisers with fiscal year ending December 31, 2010.

Click here to read more about the new requirements for ADV Part 2 written by Geoffrey T. Chalmers, Esq. and Dalkis D. Muir, Esq.

Filing must be made within 90 days following the end of each adviser’s fiscal year.

The New ADV Part 2 - When Plain English isn’t so Plain

Are you ready with your new ADV Part 2 Narrative Brochure? Don't risk being out of compliance with the latest securities regulations mandated for the new Form ADV Part 2. Stay compliant with the "Plain English" requirement by relying on the professional writing services of our Investment Advisor Support Compliance Team. Let us provide you with the service of re-writing your old Form ADV Part II information so that you can focus on what matters the most, your clients.

Overview:

On July 28, 2010 the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted amendments to Part 2 of Form ADV and related rules that will substantially improve the quality of disclosure advisers provide to their clients. These changes require that advisers provide new and prospective clients with narrative "brochures" organized in a consistent, uniform manner that include plain English disclosures of the adviser's business practices, fees, conflicts of interest, and disciplinary information. Advisers also must provide "brochure supplements" to clients that contain information about the advisory employees that will provide advisory services to that client.

The amendments include:

Improved Format and Updating Requirements.

Advisers are required to prepare a narrative plain English brochure, presented in a consistent, uniform manner that will facilitate clients' comparison of different advisers' disclosures. The clear and concise narrative descriptions provided in the brochure will improve the ability of clients and prospective clients to evaluate advisers and to understand relevant conflicts of interest that the firms and their personnel face, the effects of those conflicts on the firms' services, and the steps the adviser takes to address the conflicts.

Advisers must deliver the brochure to a client before or at the time the adviser enters into an advisory contract with the client. In addition, advisers must provide each client annually with a summary of material changes to the brochure and either deliver an updated brochure or offer to provide the client with a copy of the updated brochure.

Expanded Content.

The new brochure includes the following topics:

  • Advisory business - An investment adviser must describe its advisory business, including the types of advisory services offered, whether it holds itself out as specializing in a particular type of advisory service, and the amount of client assets that it manages.
  • Fees and compensation - An investment adviser must describe in its brochure how it is compensated for its advisory services, provide a fee schedule, and disclose whether fees are negotiable. The investment adviser must also describe the types of other fees or expenses, such as brokerage, custody fees, and fund expenses that clients may pay in connection with the advisory services provided to them by the investment adviser.
  • Performance-based fees and side-by-side management - An investment adviser that accepts performance-based fees or that supervises an individual who accepts such fees is required to disclose this fact. If the investment adviser also manages accounts that are not charged a performance fee, the adviser must explain the conflicts of interest that arise from the simultaneous management of these accounts and must describe how it addresses those conflicts.
  • Methods of analysis, investment strategies, and risk of loss - An investment adviser must describe its methods of analysis and investment strategies and explain that investing in securities involves risk of loss which clients should be prepared to bear. Investment advisers must also explain the material risks involved for each significant method of analysis or strategy and particular type of security they recommend and must explain the risks in greater detail if those risks are unusual.
  • Disciplinary information - An investment adviser is required to disclose in its brochure material facts about any legal or disciplinary event that is material to a client's evaluation of the advisory business or of the integrity of its management personnel. An investment adviser must deliver promptly to clients updated information when there is new disclosure of a disciplinary event or a material change to an existing disciplinary event.
  • Code of ethics, participation or interest in client transactions, and personal trading - An investment adviser is required to describe briefly its code of ethics and state that a copy is available upon request. The adviser must also disclose whether it or an affiliate recommends to clients, or buys or sells for client accounts, securities in which the adviser or an affiliate has a material financial interest and, if so, the conflicts of interest associated with that practice. The adviser also must disclose whether it or an affiliate invests (or is allowed to invest) in the same securities that it recommends to clients or in related securities, such as options or other derivatives, and will have to explain the conflicts involved and how it addresses those conflicts. In addition, an investment adviser that trades in the recommended securities at or around the same time as the client has to explain the specific conflicts inherent in that practice and how it addresses them.
  • Brokerage practices - An investment adviser is required to describe the factors that it considers in selecting or recommending broker-dealers for client transactions and determining the reasonableness of brokers' compensation. Investment advisers also must disclose soft dollar practices (research or other products or services, other than execution, provided by brokers or a third party to the investment adviser in connection with client transactions); client referrals (using client brokerage to compensate brokers for client referrals); directed brokerage (asking or permitting clients to send trades to a specific broker for execution); and trade aggregation (bundling trades to obtain volume discounts on execution costs). Investment advisers must explain how they address the various conflicts of interest associated with these practices.



Supplements.

An adviser is required to deliver "brochure supplements" to clients providing them with information about the specific individuals who will provide advisory services to them before or at the time the specific individuals begin to provide advisory services. The supplement will contain brief resume-like disclosure about the educational background, business experience, other business activities, and disciplinary history of the individual so that the client can assess the person's background and qualifications. It will also include contact information for the person's supervisor in case the client has a concern about the person.

Internet Availability.

Advisers are required to electronically file brochures at the Investment Adviser Registration Depository (IARD), which will be publicly available on the SEC's web site. The new public access to adviser brochures will make it easier for the public to obtain information regarding investment advisers they may be interested in hiring, and permit advisory clients to compare and contrast their advisers' business practices and conflicts with other advisers.

Implementation

The amended rules and forms are effective on October 12, 2010. Compliance of the new forms and amended rules is as follows:

New Advisers. Each adviser applying for registration with the Commission after January 1, 2011 must file a brochure or brochures that meet the requirements of amended Part 2A as part of the application for registration on Form ADV. Such adviser must, upon registering, begin to deliver to their clients and prospective clients a brochure or brochures and brochure supplements that meet the requirements of the amended Form ADV.

Registered Advisers. Each adviser that is currently registered with the Commission whose fiscal year ends on or after December 31, 2010, must include in its next annual updating amendment to its Form ADV a brochure or brochures that meet the requirements of the amended Form ADV and upon filing such new brochure, begin to deliver to their new clients and prospective clients the new brochure and brochure supplements that meet the requirements of the amended Form ADV. In addition, within 60 days of filing the new brochure, the adviser must deliver to its existing clients the new brochure and brochure supplements that meet the requirements of the amended Form ADV.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Form ADV Annual Amendment

Firms are required to file an Annual Updating Amendment on the IARD within 90 days of their fiscal year end. Investment Advisor Compliance Services can complete your annual amendment quickly and efficiently. We will notify you in a timely manner of the annual renewal process and provide instructions for payment to maintain your firm’s registration for the upcoming year.

When must Form ADV be amended?


If the firm is registered in a state that requires an annual amendment, a firm should file the annual updating amendment within 90 days of the close of its fiscal year (e.g., by March 31st for those on a calendar-year basis). The firm should update information that has changed, including recalculating assets under management. During the year, if there are material changes to the information on the Form ADV, the firm should do an "other-than-annual" amendment within 30 days of the change. Regulators can answer questions about whether a change is deemed material.

What is Form ADV Part 2, and can it be filed electronically?


Part 2 of Form ADV, often called the "brochure," is a disclosure document that describes a firm’s business and the methods used to charge clients. Firms must give it to prospective clients. Much of the information is in narrative format. Some states allow the Part 2 to be filed electronically through Web IARD while other states mandate other filing methods.

Form ADV Part 2 is a disclosure document that, under state and federal securities laws, is required to be given to clients. On July 28, 2010, the Securities and Exchange Commission adopted amendments to Part 2 of Form ADV and related rules that require investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 to provide new and prospective clients with a brochure and brochure supplements written in plain English. (Release No. IA-3060; File No. S7-10-00) See also: Electronic Filing for Investment Advisers on IARD: Forms, Policy, and Law
The new Part 2 consists of three parts:

  • Part 2A of Form ADV: Firm Brochure
  • Part 2A Appendix 1 of Form ADV: Wrap Fee Program Brochure
  • Part 2B of Form ADV: Brochure Supplement.


Every registered investment adviser will be required to submit a brochure or brochures containing the information elicited by Part 2A of Form ADV and Part 2B of Form ADV. Only those investment advisers that sponsor, or act as portfolio managers for, wrap fee programs will be required to submit the Part 2A Appendix 1 of Form ADV: Wrap Fee Program Brochure. To determine whether you are required to complete and file a Part 2A Appendix 1 of Form ADV: Wrap Fee Program Brochure, you should review the instructions to Part 2A and check with the state(s) in which you are registered, or applying for registration.
Form ADV Part 2 is capable of being filed electronically through the IARD system; however, unlike Form ADV Part 1, it must be completed offline and uploaded to the IARD system. The form must be submitted in a text searchable PDF format in order to be accepted by the IARD system.