The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued the revised
fee rates applicable to most securities transactions, in accordance with the
amendments to the Exchange Act of 1934 made by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.
The Exchange Act requires each national securities exchange and national securities
association to pay transaction fees to the SEC, based both on the aggregate
dollar amount of sales of certain securities transacted on the exchange, and
also on the aggregate dollar amount of sales of certain securities transacted
by or through any member of the association other than on an exchange.
The SEC announced that, on February 21, 2012, the fees rates applicable to
those securities transactions will decrease from USD19.20 per million dollars
to USD18 per million dollars. On the other hand, the assessment on security
futures transactions will remain unchanged at USD0.0042 for each round turn
transaction.
It was noted that the fee rates for fiscal year 2012, previously announced
on May 2, 2011, never became effective. As stated in that announcement, those
fee rates would not become effective if, as was the case, a regular appropriation
to the SEC for fiscal year 2012 was not enacted by October 1, 2011.
The Dodd-Frank Act established a new method for annually adjusting the fee
rates applicable under the Exchange Act. The SEC must now adjust the fee rates
to a uniform adjusted rate that is reasonably likely to produce aggregate fee
collections (including assessments on security futures transactions) equal to
the regular fiscal appropriation to the SEC for the applicable fiscal year.
In that regard, the regular appropriation to the SEC for fiscal year 2012 is
USD1.32bn, and it has estimated that it will collect just over USD503m in fees
for the period prior to the effective date of the new fee rate. The uniform
adjusted fee rate is then computed by dividing the residual fees to be collected
of USD817m by the estimate of the aggregate dollar amount of sales for the remainder
of fiscal year 2012 of some USD45.4 trillion, resulting in a uniform fee for
fiscal year 2012 of USD18 per million.