SEC Fees

There have been a few threads on this in the past, and each time it's mentioned that these fees were jacked up a while back, but that they were supposed to come back down. The current rate is .000031 times the amount on any sales of stock you make ($31 per million)

I did some searching and this is what I found:

In March 2001, there was the Competitive Market Supervision Act, which was passed in the senate. It was supposed to reduce the fee to $15/million on sales.
http://www.sia.com/press/html/pr_sec_fees.html

Then there was the Investor and Capital Markets Fee Relief Act, which was signed by the president in January 2002. It was also supposed to reduce the fee to $15/million and be retroactive to December 28, 2001.
http://www.sec.gov/news/headlines/feerate8.htm

The Securities Industry Asscociation has a page of support for this bill, but nothing new on it since it was passed.
http://www.sia.com/Section_31/html/sia_resources.html

So what I want to know is, why the hell am I still paying $31 per million on all my sell transactions? I've paid over $5,000 in SEC fees this year and I'm not a big volume trader. And if there was or is supposed to be a retroactive rebate, I want to make sure it flows to me, the guy who paid the fees, and is not kept by my firm or clearing firm as a profit.

Can anyone shed some light on this?
 
Quote from lescor:

And if there was or is supposed to be a retroactive rebate, I want to make sure it flows to me, the guy who paid the fees, and is not kept by my firm or clearing firm as a profit.

Can anyone shed some light on this? [/B]

That is a great question lescor. Why don't you ask Jeff or Rob, I am sure they might be able to shed some light on this. If you get the answer, please feel free to let us know.
Off the top of my head, I think I have paid over 25,000 in SEC fees this year, sure would be nice to get half that back!
 
Back
Top