From compliance
Guides creation, content, and delivery of client disclosure documents for investment advisers and broker-dealers, including Form ADV Part 2A/2B, Form CRS, prospectuses, privacy notices, trade confirmations, and account statements.
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Guide the understanding of disclosure document requirements — what documents must exist, what they must contain, and when they must be delivered. This skill covers Form ADV, Form CRS, prospectus obligations, privacy notices, trade confirmations, account statements, and delivery methods — enabling a user or agent to design compliant disclosure workflows.
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Guide the understanding of disclosure document requirements — what documents must exist, what they must contain, and when they must be delivered. This skill covers Form ADV, Form CRS, prospectus obligations, privacy notices, trade confirmations, account statements, and delivery methods — enabling a user or agent to design compliant disclosure workflows.
9 — Compliance & Regulatory Guidance
prospective
Filed electronically via IARD (Investment Adviser Registration Depository). Contains:
Part 1 is publicly available through the SEC's Investment Adviser Public Disclosure (IAPD) website. It is not delivered to clients but is a regulatory filing that must be kept current (annual updating amendment within 90 days of fiscal year end, interim amendments for material changes).
The primary disclosure document for RIAs. Must contain 18 items:
Delivery requirements: Initial delivery to prospective clients before or at the time of entering the advisory contract. Annual offer to deliver updated brochure (or delivery of a summary of material changes with an offer to provide the full brochure) within 120 days of fiscal year end. Interim delivery required for material changes that clients should know about.
Provides information about specific supervised persons who provide investment advice:
Delivered to clients before or at the time the supervised person begins providing advice. Updated for material changes.
Required for both RIAs and BDs. Maximum 2 pages (4 for dual registrants). Must follow SEC-prescribed format with specific headings and conversation starters:
Required sections:
Delivery timing:
Mutual funds: Summary prospectus must be delivered at or before the time of sale (point of sale delivery). The summary prospectus must provide access to the full statutory prospectus and SAI (online or upon request).
ETFs: No point-of-sale prospectus delivery is required for exchange-traded transactions (SEC Rule 498). However, the prospectus must be available online, and a paper copy must be delivered upon request within 3 business days.
New issues (IPOs): Prospectus must be delivered before or with the confirmation of sale.
Statement of Additional Information (SAI): Not routinely delivered but must be available upon request. Contains additional detail on investment policies, portfolio turnover, taxation, financial statements, and fund governance.
Regulation S-P (17 CFR Part 248) requires financial institutions to protect customer nonpublic personal information (NPI):
SEC Rule 10b-10 requires broker-dealers to send trade confirmations to customers at or before completion of each transaction:
Required content:
Timing: At or before the completion of the transaction. For most equity transactions, this means at or before T+1 settlement.
FINRA Rule 2231 governs customer account statements:
SEC Rule 206(4)-6 requires registered investment advisers that exercise proxy voting authority to:
SEC guidance permits electronic delivery of disclosure documents if:
Firms must maintain records of electronic delivery consent and have systems to track document access.
| Document | Trigger | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Form ADV Part 2A | New advisory relationship | Before or at entering advisory contract |
| Form ADV Part 2A (annual) | Fiscal year end | Within 120 days |
| Form ADV Part 2B | New supervised person | Before advice begins |
| Form CRS | New relationship / recommendation | Before or at earliest trigger event |
| Prospectus (mutual fund) | Purchase | At or before point of sale |
| Prospectus (ETF) | Request | Within 3 business days of request |
| Privacy notice (initial) | Account opening | At account opening |
| Privacy notice (annual) | Annual cycle | Once per 12-month period (if required) |
| Trade confirmation | Trade execution | At or before completion of transaction |
| Account statement | Quarterly / annually | Per FINRA Rule 2231 schedule |
Scenario: A newly registered RIA firm begins taking on clients. The firm delivers Form ADV Part 2A during onboarding but does not file or deliver Form CRS, believing it is only required for broker-dealers. The firm signs advisory agreements with 50 clients over six months before discovering the oversight. Compliance Issues: Form CRS is required for both RIAs and BDs. The firm has violated the delivery requirement for all 50 clients and has also failed to file the form with the SEC via IARD. This is a material compliance deficiency that would likely be identified in an SEC examination. Analysis: The firm must immediately: (1) draft a Form CRS compliant with SEC format requirements, (2) file it with the SEC via IARD, (3) deliver it to all existing clients, and (4) implement procedures to ensure delivery at the required trigger points going forward. The firm should consider disclosing the lapse to its CCO and potentially to the SEC if the deficiency is material. The 50 advisory agreements remain valid but the disclosure deficiency exposes the firm to regulatory action.
Scenario: An RIA updated its fee schedule mid-year, increasing advisory fees by 25 basis points for new clients. The firm also began offering a new service (financial planning) and added two new supervised persons. The firm does not distribute an updated brochure or summary of material changes, planning to address all changes in the next annual ADV delivery. Compliance Issues: Material changes require interim delivery, not just annual updates. A 25 bps fee increase, addition of a new service, and new supervised persons providing advice are all material changes. Waiting until the annual update cycle delays required disclosure. Analysis: The firm must: (1) file an amended Form ADV promptly with the SEC, (2) deliver a summary of material changes or an updated brochure to existing clients who are affected, (3) deliver Part 2B supplements for the new supervised persons to clients they advise, and (4) ensure new clients receive the updated documents before entering into advisory agreements. The annual delivery obligation supplements — but does not replace — the interim delivery requirement for material changes.
Scenario: A broker-dealer's back-office system delays trade confirmations for fixed-income transactions by 5-7 business days after settlement due to a systems processing bottleneck. Equity confirmations are sent on trade date. The delay affects approximately 2,000 fixed-income transactions per quarter. Compliance Issues: SEC Rule 10b-10 requires confirmations at or before completion of the transaction. A 5-7 day delay after settlement is a clear violation. Fixed-income confirmations must include accrued interest calculations, which may explain the processing delay, but the regulatory requirement does not accommodate systems limitations. Analysis: The firm must: (1) remediate the systems bottleneck to ensure timely confirmation delivery, (2) review the scope of the issue (how many clients affected, over what period), (3) consider filing a FINRA rule violation with compliance, (4) assess whether the delay caused client harm (e.g., inability to identify errors or unauthorized trades in a timely manner), and (5) implement monitoring to prevent recurrence. Firms should prioritize confirmation delivery systems for all asset classes, not just equities.