SEC Lets Multi-Class ETFs Mix It Up Without the Usual Red Tape
Published Date: 3/20/2026
Notice
Summary
The SEC is giving special permission to certain investment funds called Multi-Class ETFs, which have both regular ETF shares and mutual fund shares. This change helps brokers handle these shares more easily by relaxing some trading and disclosure rules starting March 17, 2026. About 100 funds have already asked for this relief, making it easier and smoother for investors and brokers to work with these new fund types.
Analyzed Economic Effects
6 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Authorized APs: 30-Day Margin Limitation
Broker‑dealer authorized participants (Broker‑Dealer APs) that create or redeem ETF Shares for customers may not extend or arrange credit on those ETF Shares until 30 days after the ETF Shares begin trading. They are exempted from the new‑issue lending prohibition in Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) only if they also do not receive payments or economic incentives from the fund complex other than limited non‑cash compensation allowed by FINRA Rule 2341(l)(5).
Confirmations May Omit Basket Details
If you are an investor who uses a broker for in-kind creation or redemption of ETF shares of a Multi‑Class ETF, your broker can omit the identity, price, and number of shares (or principal amount) of each component security from the trade confirmation. The confirmation must state the omitted information will be provided on request, and brokers must supply requested details within five business days (or within 15 business days for requests about transactions more than 30 days old).
Secondary‑Market Brokers Eligible For Relief
Broker‑dealers that trade ETF Shares exclusively in the secondary market (Non‑AP Broker‑Dealers) are exempted from Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) for extending or arranging credit on such ETF Shares, provided they do not receive payments or economic incentives from the fund complex other than limited non‑cash compensation permitted by FINRA Rule 2341(l)(5).
Creation/Redemption Allowed During Tender Offers
Authorized participants and certain covered persons may create or redeem ETF Shares in creation unit sizes, and may engage in secondary market transactions in ETF Shares, even after the first public announcement of a tender offer involving component securities, subject to conditions intended to prevent facilitating the tender offer.
Diversification Condition for Relief
The exemptions from Exchange Act section 11(d)(1) and rule 10b‑10 apply only to Multi‑Class ETFs that satisfy the Internal Revenue Code diversification requirement in IRC Sec. 851(b)(3)(B) (e.g., not more than 25% of assets invested in securities of any one issuer).
Daily Holdings Transparency Maintained
Multi‑Class ETFs relying on the exemption must operate the ETF Class in compliance with Rule 6c‑11 portfolio and transparency requirements, including daily public disclosure of portfolio holdings on the ETF's website and availability of information via sources like the NSCC, intermediaries, and the ETFs themselves.
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