Performance-Based Fee

Laws & Regulations High Relevance

Compensation based on capital gains or appreciation of client assets, generally prohibited for investment advisers EXCEPT for qualified clients. Qualified client = At least $1.1M under management with this adviser OR in excess of $2.2M net worth (excluding primary residence). Creates conflict of interest by incentivizing excessive risk.

Example

An adviser managing a $1.5M portfolio can charge 1% base fee plus 20% of returns exceeding the S&P 500 (fulcrum fee) because the client meets the $1.1M AUM threshold. A client with $2.1M net worth does NOT qualify ($2.2M exactly is too low: must be "in excess of" $2.2M).

Common Confusion

Students confuse qualified client thresholds ($1.1M AUM / $2.2M net worth) with accredited investor thresholds ($1M net worth / $200K income). Also confusing "at least" $1.1M (inclusive) with "in excess of" $2.2M (exclusive: $2.2M exactly does NOT qualify).

How This Is Tested

  • Determining if a client qualifies for performance-based fees based on AUM or net worth
  • Identifying whether a client with exactly $2.2M net worth qualifies (they do NOT: must exceed $2.2M)
  • Distinguishing qualified client from accredited investor or qualified purchaser thresholds
  • Understanding that primary residence is excluded from net worth calculation
  • Recognizing that performance fees based on average AUM are NOT performance fees (no benchmark comparison)

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Qualified client: Assets under management At least $1.1 million With THIS investment adviser after entering contract (inclusive)
Qualified client: Net worth In excess of $2.2 million Before entering contract (exclusive: $2.2M exactly does NOT qualify). Excludes primary residence.
Threshold adjustment frequency Every 5 years SEC adjusts for inflation based on Personal Consumption Expenditures Chain-Type Price Index
Fulcrum fee averaging period At least 12 months Performance must be averaged over minimum 12-month period against benchmark

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Marcus, age 55, has $950,000 under management with his investment adviser and owns a home worth $800,000 with a $300,000 mortgage. He has $1.3 million in other investments (401(k), brokerage accounts) and $150,000 in cash savings. His adviser wants to charge a performance-based fee. Does Marcus qualify as a qualified client?

Question 2

Under SEC regulations, what is the minimum net worth (excluding primary residence) required for a client to qualify for performance-based fee arrangements?

🔥

Master Laws & Regulations Concepts

CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Performance-Based Fee and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.

Access Free Beta
Question 3

A client has the following financial profile: $600,000 investment portfolio, $450,000 in retirement accounts, $1.5 million primary residence with a $400,000 mortgage, and $200,000 in cash. A home equity line of credit (HELOC) of $75,000 was drawn 30 days ago for home improvements. What is the client's net worth for determining qualified client status?

Question 4

All of the following statements about performance-based fees for investment advisers are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser wants to charge performance-based fees to a prospective client. Which of the following would qualify the client for this fee arrangement?

1. The client has $1.1 million in assets under management with this adviser
2. The client has a net worth of exactly $2.2 million (excluding primary residence)
3. The client is an officer of the investment adviser firm
4. The client has $1.5 million in total investments, with $800,000 managed by this adviser

💡 Memory Aid

Think "PAY FOR PERFORMANCE = PROVE YOU'RE WEALTHY": Only qualified clients can pay performance fees. Remember "1-1-2-2" for thresholds: 1.1M AUM (at least, inclusive) OR 2.2M net worth (in excess of, exclusive). Primary residence? OUT (excluded from net worth). Mnemonic: "Performance = Permission from Wealth".

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: