SEC Demands More Forms from Canadian Funds to Play in U.S. Markets
Published Date: 5/29/2025
Notice
Summary
Foreign investment funds, especially Canadian ones, need to keep filing paperwork to get permission to sell their shares in the U.S. The SEC is asking for comments to extend this rule without big changes, so these funds keep following the rules and protecting investors. This process doesn’t cost extra money but helps keep everything clear and fair.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Estimated hours and dollar costs to comply
The Commission estimates that if a foreign fund files under rule 7d-1 it would incur about 90 hours of initial information-collection work for the fund and associated persons. The SEC estimates an external annual compliance cost of $5,256 and that an applying fund might face initial capital and start-up costs of about $20,000 in the first year to prepare required documentation and establish U.S. recordkeeping arrangements.
Foreign funds must file U.S. legal paperwork
Rule 7d-1 requires a foreign fund (by name, Canadian funds) that wants to register under the Investment Company Act to file an application with specific legal undertakings. The fund must file agreements with its directors, officers, and service providers; an irrevocable designation of a U.S. custodian as agent for service of process; charter and bylaw provisions requiring U.S. maintenance of records; contracts that require compliance with U.S. securities laws; and a list of affiliated persons that must be filed and periodically revised.
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