The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that it has voted to
propose rule changes designed to improve disclosure for investors about
variable annuities and variable life insurance contracts. The proposal is
intended to help investors better understand these contracts' features,
fees, and risks, and to more easily find the information that they need to make
an informed investment decision.
"This proposal is another important step in the Commission's efforts to
provide Main Street investors with better information to make informed
investment decisions. I have participated in many roundtables with retail
investors over the last several months, and investors have emphasized their
preference for clear and concise disclosure," said SEC Chairman Jay Clayton.
"Providing key summary information about variable annuities and variable
life insurance contracts to investors is particularly important in light of the
long-term nature of these contracts and their potential
complexity."
The proposal would newly permit these contracts to use a summary prospectus
to provide disclosures to investors. This document would be a concise,
reader-friendly summary of key facts about the contract. More-detailed
information about the contract would be available online, and an investor also
could choose to have that information delivered in paper or electronic format at
no charge.
Mutual funds have been permitted to use a similar layered approach to
disclosure—with investors receiving a summary prospectus, and more-detailed
information available on request—since 2009.
The Commission has requested public comment on the proposed rule changes, as
well as on hypothetical summary prospectus samples that it has published.
The Commission has also published a Feedback Flier that it will use to seek
investor input about what improvements would make the summary prospectus easier
to read and understand, and what information investors would like to see
included.
The public comment period will remain open through February 15, 2019.
FACT
SHEET
Updated Disclosure Requirements and Summary
Prospectus for Variable Annuity and Variable Life Insurance
Contracts
Oct. 30, 2018
Action
The Commission proposed a new rule, and rule and form amendments, that are
intended to help investors make informed investment decisions regarding variable
annuity and variable life insurance contracts. The proposed rule would
permit a person to satisfy its prospectus delivery obligations under the
Securities Act for a variable contract by sending or giving a summary prospectus
to investors and making the statutory prospectus available online. The
proposal leverages both technology and a layered disclosure approach to improve
the ability of investors to understand and evaluate variable
contracts.
Proposal's
Highlights
New Option to Use a Summary Prospectus for Variable
Contracts
Proposed new rule 498A under the Securities Act would permit the use of two
distinct types of contract summary prospectuses:
- initial summary prospectuses covering variable contracts currently offered
to new investors; and
- updating summary prospectuses for existing investors.
The initial summary prospectus would include: an overview of the contract; a
table summarizing certain key information about the contract's fees, risks, and
other important considerations; and more detailed disclosures relating to fees,
purchases, withdrawals, and other contract benefits. The updating summary
prospectus would include a brief description of certain changes to the contract
that occurred during the previous year, as well as the key information table
from the initial summary prospectus.
In certain types of variable contracts, investors allocate their investment
to one or more underlying investment options (typically, mutual funds).
Certain key information about these funds would be provided in both the initial
summary prospectus and updating summary prospectus.
Availability of Variable Contract Statutory Prospectus and Other
Materials
The proposed rule would require the variable contract's
statutory prospectus, as well as the contract's Statement of Additional
Information (SAI), to be publicly accessible, free of charge, at a website
address specified on, or hyperlinked in, the cover of the summary
prospectus. An investor who receives a contract summary prospectus would
be able to request the contract's statutory prospectus and SAI to be sent in
paper or electronically, at no cost to the investor.
Optional Method to Satisfy Prospectus Delivery Requirements for Underlying
Mutual Funds
The proposed rule would permit variable contracts to make prospectuses for
underlying mutual fund investment options, and other documents relating to these
funds, available online. The variable contract's summary prospectus would
provide certain key information about these funds. Investors would be able
to request and receive these funds' prospectuses (and the other related
documents that are available online) in paper or electronically at no
cost.
Updates to Variable Contract Registration Forms
The amendments to Forms N-3, N-4, and N-6—the registration forms for variable
contracts—that the Commission proposed are designed to update and enhance the
disclosure regime for these investment products. These amendments are
intended to improve the content, format, and presentation of information to
investors, including by updating the required disclosures to reflect industry
developments (e.g., the prevalence of optional insurance benefits in today's
variable contracts). In addition, the Commission proposed amendments to
require the use of the Inline eXtensible Business Reporting Language (Inline
XBRL) format for the submission of certain required disclosures in the variable
contract statutory prospectus. This would provide a mechanism for allowing
investors, their investment professionals, data aggregators, and other data
users to efficiently analyze and compare the available information about
variable contracts.
Other Amendments
Finally, the Commission proposed certain technical and conforming amendments
to its rules that would reflect the new regime for variable contract summary
prospectuses. The Commission also proposed other amendments and the
rescission of certain rules and forms that were rendered moot by legislative
actions or are otherwise no longer necessary.
What’s Next?
The comment period for the proposal will close on February 15, 2019. This comment period will permit investors and other interested parties the opportunity to review the proposal materials, and to submit comments, data, and other information to the comment file.