Why examiners care
What belongs on the calendar
- Form ADV annual updating amendment (within 90 days of fiscal year end).
- Form ADV other-than-annual amendments (when triggered).
- Annual delivery of brochure and Form CRS (or notice of availability).
- Annual compliance review (Rule 206(4)-7).
- Annual privacy notice (Reg S-P).
- Code of Ethics holdings reports — initial, quarterly, annual.
- Surprise custody examination (when applicable).
- Annual cybersecurity training and tabletop exercise.
- State filings (if SEC-exempt or notice-filing).
- Marketing-materials review cadence.
Three properties of a defensible calendar
- Owned — a named person (typically the CCO) is accountable for each item.
- Current — updated when rules change, when the firm's circumstances change, or when items are completed.
- Tied to evidence — each completed item has a record (the filing, the signed review, the attestation log) stored as part of books and records.
Common failure modes
- Calendar exists but is years out of date — items added when the rule was new, never refreshed.
- Calendar names the CCO for everything — no delegation, no accountability beyond one person.
- No connection between calendar entries and the resulting records.
- Personal calendar in someone's email rather than a system the firm can access.
Why the SEC pays attention
An out-of-date calendar is a leading indicator that other parts of the program have drifted too. Examiners ask to see the calendar early in an examination — both to check the firm's discipline and to figure out which areas to probe more deeply. A calendar that is current and tied to evidence builds examiner confidence; a calendar that's clearly fictional invites scrutiny everywhere else.
How StratiFi thinks about the compliance calendar
The calendar is the system that turns the compliance program from a binder into a practice. Done well, it's connected to the firm's other systems — the brochure, the personal-trading reports, the cybersecurity log — so that completing a calendar item produces evidence automatically. Done badly, it's a shared spreadsheet nobody trusts.
Frequently asked questions
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Is a compliance calendar required by the SEC?
Not by that name, but the SEC requires policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with applicable laws. A documented calendar of recurring obligations is the practical implementation. -
Who owns the calendar?
Typically the CCO, with delegation to specific functions for ownership of individual items. The CCO retains accountability for completeness. -
How often should the calendar be reviewed?
At least annually as part of the annual compliance review, and any time there's a regulatory change or a material change in the firm's operations.