Definition
Prospectus
The SEC-required formal disclosure document for a securities offering, mandated by the Securities Act of 1933. It contains the investment objectives, principal risks, fees and expenses, performance history, management information, and procedures for buying and selling shares. For mutual funds, variable annuities, and other continuously offered products, the prospectus must be delivered to investors at or before the time of sale.
When a client purchases shares of a mutual fund, the broker-dealer must ensure that the client receives a current prospectus (either the summary prospectus or the full statutory prospectus) at or before confirmation of the sale. A red-bordered preliminary prospectus (red herring) may be circulated during the cooling-off period to gauge interest, but it cannot show a final offering price and is not itself an offer to sell.
Candidates often confuse the prospectus with the Statement of Additional Information (SAI). The prospectus is the primary disclosure document and must be delivered to investors. The SAI is a supplementary document with deeper detail that must be available on request at no cost but is not automatically delivered. Candidates also confuse the red herring (preliminary, no final price) with a tombstone advertisement (a bare-bones notice that is not itself an offer).
How is Prospectus tested on the exam?
- Identifying when the prospectus must be delivered (at or before confirmation of the sale)
- Distinguishing between the summary prospectus, the full statutory prospectus, and the Statement of Additional Information (SAI)
- Recognizing the red herring (preliminary prospectus) and its restrictions during the cooling-off period
- Understanding that a tombstone advertisement is not itself an offer and is limited in what it can contain
- Knowing which products require multiple prospectuses (variable annuity: contract prospectus plus separate-account or underlying-fund prospectus)
Regulatory limits
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Prospectus delivery requirement (continuously offered products) | At or before confirmation of sale | Applies to mutual funds, variable annuities, and similar continuously offered registered products |
| Statement of Additional Information (SAI) availability | Provided on request at no charge | Supplementary disclosure with deeper detail than the prospectus itself |
| Summary prospectus delivery (SEC Rule 498) | Permitted if the full statutory prospectus is publicly available online | The summary plus website availability of the full document satisfies the delivery requirement |
| Cooling-off period (registration statement filing to effectiveness) | Minimum of 20 calendar days | During this period only a red herring (preliminary prospectus) may be used; no final offering price |
Prospectus delivery: at or before confirmation of sale. SAI: on request, no charge. Red herring: preliminary, no final price, used during the cooling-off period. Tombstone: just a notice, not an offer.
Practice questions
Test your understanding with the questions below. Pick an answer to reveal the explanation.
A registered representative recommends shares of a mutual fund to a customer who agrees to buy. Under SEC rules governing continuously offered registered investment companies, when must the customer receive the prospectus?
B is correct. For mutual funds and other continuously offered registered products, the prospectus delivery rule requires the document to be in the investor's hands at or before the confirmation of the sale. Either the summary prospectus (with the full statutory prospectus available online under SEC Rule 498) or the full statutory prospectus satisfies the requirement.
A is incorrect because delivery is tied to the confirmation of sale, not to settlement. C is incorrect because delivery is mandatory, not on request only. The Statement of Additional Information (SAI), by contrast, is the supplementary document that must be provided on request. D is incorrect because there is no thirty-day grace period for prospectus delivery on a continuously offered product.
The Series 6 exam tests prospectus delivery timing on virtually every administration. Knowing the at-or-before-confirmation rule, and how it differs from the SAI (on request) and from a red herring (cooling-off period only), is essential for any question about offering a mutual fund, variable annuity, or other registered investment company product to a customer.
Which of the following statements accurately describes the relationship between the summary prospectus, the full statutory prospectus, and the Statement of Additional Information (SAI) for a mutual fund?
C is correct. Under SEC Rule 498, a fund may deliver the summary prospectus to satisfy the prospectus delivery requirement, provided the full statutory prospectus is publicly available online. Either document satisfies delivery. The SAI is a separate, supplementary disclosure document with deeper detail (fund history, additional policies, officer and trustee information) and must be made available on request at no charge.
A is incorrect because the summary prospectus does not replace the SAI; the SAI is a distinct document. B is incorrect because the SAI is not required to be delivered automatically. it is provided on request. D is incorrect because the prospectus is the primary disclosure document. the SAI is supplementary.
The Series 6 exam tests the layered disclosure structure for registered investment companies: summary prospectus, full statutory prospectus, and SAI. Understanding which documents must be delivered, which must be made available, and which substitute for each other is foundational for selling mutual fund and variable contract shares correctly.
What concepts relate to Prospectus?
This term is part of this cluster :
Where does Prospectus appear on the Series 65 exam?
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:
Where does Prospectus appear on the Series 6 exam?
This term is tested in the following FINRA Series 6 topic areas:
Who uses Prospectus on the Series 6?
This term is part of the day-to-day workflow for these Series 6 audiences:
Bank-Channel Reps
Wealth-desk reps at Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, regional banks, and credit unions moving from teller to wealth desk.
read the guide โInsurance Producers
Career insurance agents at Northwestern Mutual, MassMutual, NY Life, Guardian, and independent agencies adding variable products.
read the guide โ