On October 26, 2022, in a divided 3-2 vote, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) proposed a new rule, 206(4)-11, under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and related amendments (the “Proposed Rule”) requiring SEC-registered investment advisers to exercise effective and sufficient oversight over their service providers so as to fulfill the adviser’s fiduciary duty, comply with the federal securities laws and protect investors from potential harm. Notably, the Proposed Rule prohibits advisers from outsourcing certain services or functions to service providers without meeting minimum diligence and monitoring requirements. Continue Reading The SEC’s Proposed Outsourcing Oversight Requirements for Investment Advisers






Data security notification requirements could become much stricter under a proposed rulemaking from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The proposal, published January 12, 2021, would impose new security incident notification requirements on federally regulated “banking organizations” and, notably, their service providers. If adopted, the proposed rule would expand upon existing notification requirements—adding a 36-hour notice window—and would, for the first time, impose direct notification obligations on service providers.