Subject: Tailored Shareholder Reports, Treatment of Annual Prospectus Updates for Existing Investors, and Improved Fee and Risk Disclosure for Mutual Funds and Exchange-Traded Funds; Fee Information in Investment Company Advertisements(File No. S7-09-20)
From: Robert Rutkowski
Affiliation:

Jan. 05, 2021



Jay Clayton, Chairman
SEC Headquarters
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC 20549
(202) 551-2100
chairmanoffice@sec.gov

Vanessa A. Countryman
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street NE
Washington, DC 20549-1090
rule-comments@sec.gov

Re: Tailored Shareholder Reports, Treatment of Annual Prospectus Updates
for Existing Investors, and Improved Fee and Risk Disclosure for Mutual
Funds and Exchange-Traded Funds; Fee Information in Investment Company
Advertisements(File No. S7-09-20)

Dear Chairman and Secretary:

The Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund (AFREF) commented on
the above referenced proposed rule (“the Proposal”) by the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the “SEC” of the “Commission”) concerning the
simplification and streamlining of the most useful information and fees
to investors.

The Commission’s proposal to simplify the presentation of fees and
expenses to improve the ability of investors to understand these
critical disclosures, as well as its proposal to improve the quality of
disclosures on open-ended funds, are both clearly a step in the right
direction. However, it is recommended that the Commission perform
investor testing on these new disclosures to ensure that they are in
fact the most effective way to make fund risks, returns, and expenses
clear to investors. Such additional study is also necessary to make
critical decisions about electronic vs paper delivery.

Also suggested is that the Commission re-consider its approach in
exempting funds with less than 10% of total assets invested in
additional fee investment vehicles from inclusion in the acquired fund
fees and expenses (AFFE) table, especially as it pertains to business
development companies (BDCs) who continue to present issues related to
corporate governance and whose investment advisers often have a
conflict-of-interest with the BDC’s shareholders.

Full comment letter:
https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=9e87e368-c11cda5f-9e8707de-86ab8bdaf1e2-f4169ed4c8a897e3&q=1&e=294bcfe3-113b-422b-bf02-fe6d3b2d6ab4&u=https%3A%2F%2Fourfinancialsecurity.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2021%2F01%2FSEC-Disclosure-Rule-Comment-Letter-FINAL.pdf

Take time to review these comments and give them the weight they deserve.

Yours sincerely.
Robert E. Rutkowski

cc:
Legislative Correspondence Team