SEC Cyber Proposals Receive Mixed Feedback From Industry

Many comments offered tepid support for the SEC’s goal and asked for greater flexibility in reporting and rule harmonization.



Commenters replying to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s three cybersecurity proposals requested additional flexibility and two years to comply with anything the regulator adopts, based on responses submitted through the deadline Monday.

The three proposals, first published in March are known as Reg S-P, Reg SCI and New Rule 10 (sometimes called Reg BD). Many firms also requested that the rules be harmonized with each other.

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The Proposals

Reg S-P applies to broker/dealers and registered advisers. It requires covered entities to adopt policies to protect customer records and to notify clients who are affected by data breaches that could put them at risk. Covered entities must inform affected customers “as soon as practicable,” but no longer than 30 days after they become aware of the breach.

The update to Reg SCI expands the scope of entities subject to Regulation Systems Compliance and Integrity and would require SCI entities to maintain security policies and to undergo business-continuity and disaster testing. That testing would require SCI entities to assess how prepared they are to manage the unavailability of a third party to which they outsource.

This proposal would expand the definition of SCI entities to include registered security-based swap data repositories; broker-dealers registered with the SEC under Section 15(b) that exceed a total assets threshold or a transaction activity threshold in NMS stocks, exchange-listed options, U.S Treasury securities, or Agency securities; and all clearing agencies exempted from registration.

The proposal would require SCI entities to notify immediately the SEC of certain significant digital events, such as those that deny access to systems. This disclosure would be confidential.

Michael Pappacena, a cybersecurity partner at the ACA Group, explains that the SEC has been increasing its focus on the role of third parties and outsourcing in the financial industry. He says the SEC wants to see that “if you are trusting third parties with key business functions, that you are performing due diligence” and that core systems can survive if those third parties are affected by a digital attack.

New Rule 10 would require clearing agencies, securities exchanges, transfer agents and other actors to maintain policies designed to address their cybersecurity risks, which must be reviewed and updated annually. This rule would also require immediate confidential notice to the SEC of a cybersecurity incident.

Industry Feedback

The Investment Adviser Association offered qualified support for the proposals. In its letter to the SEC, the IAA stated that it supports requiring advisers to have an incident response program. The association requested that the program be limited to protecting sensitive data, not all data, and that the SEC narrow the requirement to monitor service providers to only those managing sensitive data.

On Reg S-P, the Financial Services Institute and Investment Company Institute both asked that the SEC modify the 30-day notification requirement. The FSI asked that the timeline be extended to 60 days and that the SEC account for state laws which also require notification. The ICI asked the SEC to account for police investigations into the incident, which may require confidentiality, and that the SEC allow at least 24 months to comply with the rule after it is finalized.

Nasdaq noted that law enforcement may even request a delay in disclosure as part of its investigation, so as to not inform perpetrators about what authorities know about a breach. Nasdaq urged the SEC to account for this possibility in its final rule and also requested that the SEC harmonize the disclosure timelines between the rules and between state governments with similar requirements.

Amazon Web Services elaborated on the concern of hasty public disclosure. Its comment explained that mass disclosure to affected customers could signal the existence of vulnerabilities, which could then be further exploited. AWS also noted that speedy disclosure requirements for all three rules would encourage false positives and misinformation, since there would be little time to review disclosures, which would only lead to more confusion.

Pappacena says immediate notification would be difficult to accomplish in practice, because the personnel who are informed enough about the incident to report it accurately would also be those working to correct the problem. The SEC also requires additional updates if anything in the disclosure becomes materially inaccurate, another burden for those trying to put out the fire.

The North American Securities Administrators Association wrote that, given the short window required for disclosure in response to a cybersecurity incident, some firms may be unsure of the extent of the breach and therefore unsure if disclosure is even required. To remedy this, the NASSA recommended that where the language “reasonably likely” appears in reference to determining if compromised data could cause substantial harm, it should be replaced with “reasonably possible” to clarify that if an organization is unsure of the extent, it should still disclose the potential compromise to the SEC or clients as appropriate.

Adviser Product Partnerships

Potomac makes model strategies available at American Trust Custody; Central Pension Fund partners with V3locity; Lumen Advisors and Sparo announce collaboration; and more.  


Potomac Makes Model Strategies Available at American Trust Custody
 

Potomac Fund Management Inc. announced that its model strategies are now available on the ModelxChange platform, created by American Trust Custody.  

A web-based interface, ModelxChange is designed to help professional money managers, investment advisers and plan recordkeepers. Meanwhile Potomac develops investment strategies that provide a tactical solution to help protect against market risk.  

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“We know that ModelxChange has sought to provide access to ETF and mutual fund model portfolios from many of the top asset managers in the world,” Jeff Goodnow, chief growth officer of Potomac, said in a statement. “We are thrilled to bring Potomac’s quantitative approach to the ModelxChange Gallery, arming advisers with a model portfolio solution built to conquer risk.” 

Central Pension Fund Selects Vitech’s V3locity to Upgrade Pension System 

Vitech Systems Group announced its partnership with the Central Pension Fund. 

The partnership aims to upgrade the CPF’s pension administration system utilizing Vitech’s V3locity cloud-based administration, engagement and analytics platform. The CPF is one of the largest multiemployer defined benefit pension funds in the U.S., with more than 210,000 participants.  

“The scale of employers involved makes this transformation project unique, and Vitech is honored to be a part of it,” said Vitech CEO David Burns in a statement. “We look forward to seeing the results of its improved short- and long-term operational and technical capabilities.” 

Lumen Advisors and Sparo Launch ESG Investing Partnership on Betterment Platform 

Lumen Advisor LLCs has signed a licensing agreement with Sparo Corp., a Microsoft for Startups company. 

The partnership will offer financial products focused on verifiable environmental, social and corporate governance investing on the Betterment platform. The launch of the platform is set to coincide with Microsoft’s Entrepreneurship for Positive Impact “ChangeNow” event hosted in Paris on May 25. 

James Barchiesi, the founder and CEO of Lumen Advisors, said in a statement, “Our partnership with Sparo will allow us to offer customers of financial platforms such as Betterment the option to tailor-make their portfolios towards impactful outcomes with reasonable returns.”

Janus Henderson Announces New Joint Venture with Privacore Capital  

Janus Henderson Investors announced plans for a new joint venture with Privacore Capital, an open-architecture distributor and consultant for alternative investment products tailored to private wealth clients. 

“We recognize that the democratization of alternatives among private wealth clients is still in the early stages, and this trend presents a significant opportunity for firms with strong relationships with retail intermediaries—like Janus Henderson—to expand the breadth and quality of alternative investment solutions for clients,” said Janus Henderson’s CEO, Ali Dibadj, in a statement. 

The firm plans to formally launch the joint venture, called, simply, Privacore, toward the middle of the year and will engage with clients and GPs in the second half of 2023. Privacore will be led by Brendan Boyle and Bill Cashel as co-principals, according to the announcement. 

LifeYield and Playbook Partner to Advise Millennial and Generation Z Investors.  

LifeYield LLC, the fintech firm in tax-efficient investing and income optimization, announced its partnership with Playbook, a digital platform serving early-career investors with financial planning and tax-efficient investing advice. 

Playbook has integrated LifeYield technology into its platform and introduced its new Playbook at Work offering for employers. Playbook at Work encourages employees to save by illustrating how tax-smart investing and multi-account portfolio management can accelerate their wealth creation. 

“Playbook takes the best advice from a wealth advisor and uses software to personalize and

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