Soft Dollar Arrangements
Investment companies and investment advisers often find it advantageous to contract with broker-dealers for research and brokerage services on behalf of their managed accounts. These services are not paid for directly by the portfolio manager, but by commission on the client’s account. Such payments are referred to as “soft dollars,” and they are regulated by Section 28(e) of the Exchange Act.
For example, an investment adviser may agree to direct a fixed portion of the company’s trades to a specific brokerage firm in exchange for access to that firm’s market expertise, including databases, software programs that analyze and monitor the market, and brokerage reports. The broker credits the money manager with money for the research out of the money it has agreed to accept for the brokerage fees. The investment company acquires access to a wider variety of market information than it could fund on its own, and the broker gains a guaranteed business for a slightly inflated commission.
With the elimination of fixed commission rates in 1975, the payment in soft dollars for brokerage and research services became vulnerable to potential conflicts of interest in selecting which broker-dealers to enlist. The