SEC Seeks to Extend Investment Fund Merger Approval Rule
Published Date: 2/28/2025
Notice
Summary
The SEC is asking to keep Rule 17a-8, which helps certain investment funds merge smoothly with their related companies. This rule makes sure fund directors check important details, get fair asset values, and get shareholder approval when needed. About 200 funds follow this rule yearly, spending around 7 hours each, with some costs for evaluations and votes, but it keeps mergers fair and clear.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Compliance costs for fund mergers
Rule 17a-8 requires certain registered investment funds to follow board review steps, valuation procedures, and shareholder-approval rules when they merge with related companies. The SEC estimates an average burden of 7 hours per fund, about 200 funds rely on the rule (1,400 hours total), and annual cost estimates include $16,180 for an independent evaluator report and a total annual cost burden of $3,151,248.
Investor vote required in many fund mergers
Rule 17a-8 generally requires a fund being acquired to obtain approval of the merger by a majority of its outstanding voting securities, except in certain situations. The SEC staff estimates that each year about 24 funds hold shareholder votes that otherwise would not have been held, and the average net cost burden of obtaining such a merger approval is estimated at $131,302.
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