Title 15 › Chapter 2B–1— SECURITIES INVESTOR PROTECTION › § 78ddd
SIPC must set up a SIPC Fund and keep all money it gets (except certain lender payments) in that fund. The fund can hold cash, U.S. government or agency securities, and “confirmed lines of credit” (borrowings SIPC can draw that are repayable at least one year later). SIPC may also keep other credit lines it does not count in the fund but can spend like fund money. Within 120 days after December 30, 1970, the fund had to total at least $75,000,000, minus any amounts spent. To help meet that goal, each SIPC member had to pay by that same 120-day deadline an assessment equal to one-eighth of 1 percent (0.125%) of its 1969 gross revenues from the securities business. The Commission could set lower rates for some member classes but not below one-sixteenth of 1 percent (0.0625%), and no member’s required payment under that rule could be less than $150. SIPC can set further assessments by its bylaws to build the fund and repay borrowings. Those assessments can be based on gross revenues or other factors (for example, transaction volume, number of accounts, cash and securities held, net capital, or business type). No other kinds of assessments are allowed except the initial one and bylaw assessments. SIPC must charge at least one-half of 1 percent (0.5%) per year of gross securities revenue until the fund reaches $150,000,000, while SIPC has certain borrowings outstanding, or when the fund (not counting confirmed lines of credit) is below $100,000,000. The minimum member charge was $25 per year through December 31, 1979, and after that the minimum is set by bylaw but cannot exceed 0.02% of gross revenues. After December 31, 1973, confirmed lines of credit may not count for more than $50,000,000 of the fund, and all such lines must be phased out when the fund reaches $150,000,000. SIPC may borrow and issue debt and may pledge future assessments and assets to secure borrowings. If the fund looks insufficient, the Commission may arrange Treasury-backed loans to SIPC if it finds the loan protects customers and market confidence and SIPC gives a repayment plan; to help repay such loans the Commission may impose a transaction fee on equity purchases up to one-fiftieth of 1 percent (0.02%) of the purchase price (no fee on purchases under $5,000 and other limited exemptions). The Commission may issue obligations to the Secretary of the Treasury up to $2,500,000,000 to support these loans. Pre-1970 self-regulatory organization trust funds may be transferred to reduce member assessments unless such Treasury-backed borrowings or confirmed-line borrowings are outstanding. Late assessments bear interest and may carry a penalty up to 25%. Gross revenues for assessments are computed on a consolidated basis including subsidiaries, except foreign subsidiaries.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 78ddd
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60