[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 15, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 15CFR801.9]

[Page 9-15]
 
                  TITLE 15--COMMERCE AND FOREIGN TRADE
 
    CHAPTER VIII--BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
 
PART 801_SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES BETWEEN U.S. AND FOREIGN 
PERSONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 801.9  Reports required.

    (a) Benchmark surveys. Section 4(a)(4) of the Act (22 U.S.C. 3103) 
provides that benchmark surveys of trade in services between U.S. and 
unaffiliated foreign persons be conducted, but not more frequently than 
every 5 years. General reporting requirements, exemption levels, and the 
year of coverage of the BE-

[[Page 10]]

20 survey may be found in Sec. 801.10, and general reporting 
requirements, exemption levels, and the year of coverage of the BE-80 
survey may be found in Sec. 801.11. More detailed instructions are 
given on the forms themselves.
    (b) Annual surveys. (1) BE-29, Foreign Ocean Carriers' Expenses in 
the United States:
    (i) Who must report. A BE-29 report is required from U.S. agents on 
behalf of foreign ocean carriers transporting freight or passengers to 
or from the United States. U.S. agents are steamship agents and other 
persons representing foreign carriers in arranging ocean transportation 
of freight and cargo between U.S. and foreign ports and in arranging 
port services in the United States. Foreign carriers are foreign persons 
that own or operate ocean going vessels calling at U.S. ports, including 
VLCC tankers discharging petroleum offshore to pipelines and lighter 
vessels destined for U.S. ports. They include carriers who own or who 
operate their own or chartered (United States or foreign-flag) vessels. 
They also include foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies operating their 
own or chartered vessels as carriers for their own accounts. Where the 
vessels under foreign registry are operated directly by a U.S. carrier 
for its own account, the operations of such vessels should be reported 
on Form BE-30, Ocean Freight Revenues and Foreign Expenses of United 
States Carriers. The Bureau of Economic Analysis may, in lieu of BE-29 
reports required from foreign carriers' U.S. agents, accept consolidated 
reports from foreign governments covering the operations of their 
national shipping concerns when, in the Bureau's discretion, such 
consolidated reports would provide the required information. Where such 
reports are accepted, the individual reports from foreign carriers' U.S. 
agents will not be required.
    (ii) Exemption. Any U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempted from reporting if the total number of port calls by foreign 
vessels handled in the reporting period is less than forty or total 
covered expenses are less than $250,000. For example, if an agent 
handled less than 40 port calls in a calendar year, the agent is 
exempted from reporting. If the agent handled 40 or more calls, the 
agent must report unless covered expenses for all foreign carriers 
handled by the agent were less than $250,000. The determination of 
whether a U.S. person is exempt may be based on the judgment of 
knowledgeable persons who can identify reportable transactions without 
conducting a detailed manual records search.
    (2) BE-36, Foreign Airline Operators' Revenues and Expenses in the 
United States:
    (i) Who must report. A BE-36 report is required from U.S. offices, 
agents, or other representatives of foreign airlines that are engaged in 
transporting passengers or freight and express to or from the United 
States. If the U.S. office, agent, or other representative does not have 
all the information required, it must obtain the additional information 
from the foreign airline operator.
    (ii) Exemption: A U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempted from reporting if total covered revenues and total covered 
expenses incurred in the United States are each less than $500,000 in 
the reporting period. If either total covered revenues or total covered 
expenses are $500,000 or more in the reporting period, a report must be 
filed.
    (3) BE-47, Annual Survey of Construction, Engineering, 
Architectural, and Mining Services Provided by U.S. Firms to 
Unaffiliated Foreign Persons:
    (i) Who must report. Form BE-47 must be filed by each U.S. person 
(other than U.S. Government agencies) providing the following types of 
services on a contract, fee, or similar basis to unaffiliated persons on 
foreign projects: The services of general contractors in the fields of 
building construction and heavy construction; construction work by 
special trade contractors, such as the erection of structural steel for 
bridges and buildings and on-site electrical work; services of a 
professional nature in the fields of engineering, architecture, and land 
surveying; and mining services in the development and operation of 
mineral properties, including oil and gas field services.
    (ii) Exemption. Any U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempted

[[Page 11]]

from reporting if, for all countries and all projects combined, the 
gross value of new contracts received and gross operating revenues are 
both less than $1,000,000. If either the gross value of new contracts 
received or gross operating revenues is $1,000,000 or more, then a 
report is required.
    (4) BE-48, Annual Survey of Reinsurance and other Insurance 
Transactions by U.S. Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons:
    (i) Who must report. Reports on Form BE-48 are required from U.S. 
persons who have engaged in reinsurance transactions with foreign 
persons, or who have received premiums from, or paid losses to, foreign 
persons in the capacity of primary insurers.
    (ii) Exemption. A. U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempt if, with respect to transactions with foreign persons, each of 
the following six items were $2 million or less in the reporting period: 
Reinsurance premiums received, reinsurance premiums paid, reinsurance 
losses paid, reinsurance losses recovered, primary insurance premiums 
received, and primary insurance losses paid. If any one of these items 
is greater than $2 million in the reporting period, a report must be 
filed.
    (5) BE-93, Annual Survey of Royalties, License Fees, and Other 
Receipts and Payments for Intangible Rights Between U.S. and 
Unaffiliated Foreign Persons:
    (i) Who must report. Reports on Form BE-93 are required from U.S. 
persons who have entered into agreements with unaffiliated foreign 
persons to buy, sell, or use intangible assets or proprietary rights, 
excluding oil royalties and other natural resources (mining) royalties.
    (ii) Exemption. A U.S. person otherwise required to report is exempt 
if total receipts and total payments of the types covered by the form 
are each $2 million or less in the reporting year. If the total of 
either covered receipts or payments is more than $2 million in the 
reporting year, a report must be filed.
    (6) BE-22, Annual Survey of Selected Services Transactions With 
Unaffiliated Foreign Persons:
    (i) Who must report--(A) Mandatory reporting. A BE-22 report is 
required from each U.S. person who had transactions (either sales or 
purchases) in excess of $1,000,000 with unaffiliated foreign persons in 
any of the covered services during the U.S. person's fiscal year. The 
determination of whether a U.S. person is subject to this mandatory 
reporting requirement may be judgmental, that is, based on the judgment 
of knowledgeable persons in a company who can identify reportable 
transactions on a recall basis, with a reasonable degree of certainty 
without conducting a detailed manual records search.
    (B) Voluntary reporting. If, during the U.S. person's fiscal year, 
the U.S. person's total transactions (either sales or purchases) in any 
of the covered services is $1,000,000 or less, the U.S. person is 
requested to provide an estimate of the total for each type of service. 
Provision of this information is voluntary. The estimates may be 
judgmental, that is, based on recall, without conducting a detailed 
manual records search.
    (C) Any U.S. person receiving a BE-22 survey form from BEA must 
complete all relevant parts of the form and return the form to BEA. A 
person that is not subject to the mandatory reporting requirement in 
paragraph (b)(6)(i)(A) of this section and is not filing information on 
a voluntary basis must only complete the ``Determination of reporting 
status'' and the ``Certification'' sections of the survey. This 
requirement is necessary to ensure compliance with the reporting 
requirements and efficient administration of the survey by eliminating 
unnecessary followup contact.
    (ii) Covered services. With the exceptions given in this paragraph, 
the services covered by this survey are the same as those covered by the 
BE-20, Benchmark Survey of Selected Services Transactions with 
Unaffiliated Foreign Persons--2001, as listed in Sec. 801.10(c) of this 
part. The exceptions are the addition of coverage of medical services, 
receipts only, and the elimination of coverage of four small types of 
services-agricultural services; management of health care facilities; 
mailing, reproduction, and commercial art; and temporary help supply 
services.

[[Page 12]]

    (7) BE-82, Annual Survey of Financial Services Transactions Between 
U.S. Financial Services Providers and Unaffiliated Foreign Persons:
    (i) A BE-82, Annual Survey of Financial Services Transactions 
Between U.S. Financial Services Providers and Unaffiliated Foreign 
Persons, will be conducted covering companies' 1995 fiscal year and 
every year thereafter except when a BE-80 Benchmark Survey of Financial 
Services Transactions Between U.S. Financial Services Providers and 
Unaffiliated Foreign Persons, is conducted (see Sec. 801.11). All legal 
authorities, provisions, definitions, and requirements contained in 
Sec. 801.1 through Sec. 801.8 are applicable to this survey. 
Additional rules and regulations for the BE-82 survey are given in 
paragraphs (b)(7)(i)(A) through (D) of this section. More detailed 
instructions are given on the report from itself.
    (A) Who must report--(1) Mandatory reporting. Reports are required 
from each U.S. person who is a financial services provider or 
intermediary, or whose consolidated U.S. enterprise includes a 
separately organized subsidiary or part that is a financial services 
provider or intermediary, and who had transactions (either sales or 
purchases) directly with unaffiliated foreign persons in all financial 
services combined in excess of $10 million during its fiscal year 
covered by the survey. The $10 million threshold should be applied to 
financial services transactions with unaffiliated foreign persons by all 
parts of the consolidated U.S. enterprise combined that are financial 
services providers or intermediaries. Because the $10 million threshold 
applies separately to sales and purchases, the mandatory reporting 
requirement may apply only to sales, to purchases, or to both sales and 
purchases.
    (i) The determination of whether a U.S. financial services provider 
or intermediary is subject to this mandatory reporting requirement may 
be judgmental, that is, based on the judgement of knowledgeable persons 
in a company who can identify reportable transactions on a recall basis, 
with a reasonable degree of certainty, without conducting a detailed 
manual records search.
    (ii) Reporters who file pursuant to this mandatory reporting 
requirement must provide data on total sales and/or purchases of each of 
the covered types of financial services transactions and must 
disaggregate the totals by country.
    (2) Voluntary reporting. If, during the fiscal year covered, sales 
or purchases of financial services by a firm that is a financial 
services provider or intermediary, or by a firm's subsidiaries or parts 
combined that are financial services providers or intermediaries, are 
$10,000,000 or less, the U.S. person is requested to provide an estimate 
of the total for each type of service. Provision of this information is 
voluntary. Because the $10,000,000 threshold applies separately to sales 
and purchases, this voluntary reporting option may apply only to sales, 
only to purchases, or to both sales or purchases.
    (B) BE-82 definition of financial services provider. Except for 
Monetary Authorities (i.e., Central Banks), the definition of financial 
services provider used for this survey is identical in coverage to 
Sector 52--Finance and Insurance--of the North American Industry 
Classification System, United States, 1997. For example, companies and/
or subsidiaries and other separable parts of companies in the following 
industries are defined as financial services providers: Depository 
credit intermediation and related activities (including commercial 
banking, holding companies, savings institutions, check cashing, and 
debit card issuing); nondepository credit intermediation (including 
credit card issuing, sales financing, and consumer lending); securities, 
commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related 
activities (including security and commodity futures brokers, dealers, 
exchanges, traders, underwriters, investment bankers, and providers of 
securities custody services); insurance carriers and related activities 
(including agents, brokers, and services providers); investment advisors 
and managers and funds, trusts, and other financial vehicles (including 
mutual funds, pension funds, real estate investment trusts, investors, 
stock quotation services, etc.).

[[Page 13]]

    (C) Covered types of services. The BE-82 survey covers the same 
types of financial services transactions that are covered by the BE-80 
benchmark survey, as listed in Sec. 801.11(c).
    (D) What to file. (1) The BE-82 survey consists of Forms BE-82 (A) 
and BE-82(B). Before completing a form BE-82 (B), a consolidated U.S. 
enterprise (including the top parent and all of its subsidiaries and 
parts combined) must complete Form BE-82 (A) to determine its reporting 
status. If the enterprise is subject to the mandatory reporting 
requirement, or if it is exempt from the mandatory reporting requirement 
but chooses to report data voluntarily, either a separate Form BE-82(B) 
for each separately organized financial services subsidiary or part of a 
consolidated U.S. enterprise, or a single BE-82(B) representing the sum 
of all covered transactions by all financial services subsidiaries or 
parts of the enterprise combined must be completed.
    (2) Reporters who receive the BE-82 survey from BEA, but that are 
not reporting data in either the mandatory or voluntary section of any 
BE-82(B), must return the Exemption Claim, attached to Form BE-82 (A), 
to BEA.
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (c) Quarterly surveys. (1) BE-30, Ocean Freight Revenues and Foreign 
Expenses of United States Carriers:
    (i) Who must report. A BE-30 report is required from U.S. carriers, 
i.e., from U.S. persons that own or operate dry cargo, passenger 
(including combination), and tanker vessels regardless of whether the 
vessels are registered in the United States or in foreign countries. 
Operators are persons who enter into any form of transportation contract 
with shippers of merchandise (or their agents) for the transportation of 
freight and cargo between U.S. and foreign ports or between foreign 
ports, whether on the operators' own vessels or chartered vessels.
    (ii) Exemption. A U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempted from reporting if total annual covered revenues (i.e., revenues 
on outbound, cross-trade, and inbound cargoes and charter hire received) 
and total annual covered expenses (i.e., charter hire paid and expenses 
in foreign countries) are, or are expected to be, each less than 
$500,000. If either total annual covered revenues or total annual 
covered expenses are, or are expected to be, $500,000 or more, a report 
must be filed.
    (2) BE-37, U.S. Airline Operators' Foreign Revenues and Expenses:
    (i) Who must report. A BE-37 report is required from all U.S. 
airline operators engaged in transportation of passengers and freight to 
and from the United States or between foreign points.
    (ii) Exemption. A U.S. person otherwise required to report is 
exempted from reporting if total annual covered revenues (i.e., revenues 
from carrying U.S. export freight to foreign countries) and total annual 
covered expenses (i.e., expenses incurred outside the United States and 
aircraft leasing expenses) are, or are expected to be, each less than 
$500,000. If either total annual covered revenues or total annual 
covered expenses are, or are expected to be, $500,000 or more, a report 
must be filed.

[51 FR 7772, Mar. 6, 1986, as amended at 52 FR 19843, May 28, 1987; 52 
FR 46589, Dec. 9, 1987; 53 FR 39455, Oct. 7, 1988; 53 FR 41563, Oct. 24, 
1988; 57 FR 59289, Dec. 15, 1992; 59 FR 53935, Oct. 27, 1994; 60 FR 
57337, Nov. 15, 1995; 62 FR 68163, Dec. 31, 1997; 65 FR 77284, Dec. 11, 
2000; 65 FR 77813, Dec. 13, 2000; 66 FR 63917, Dec. 11, 2001; 67 FR 
71104, Nov. 29, 2002]

    Effective Date Note 1: At 68 FR 69956, Dec. 16, 2003, Sec. 801.9 
was amended by adding paragraph (c)(4), effective Jan. 15, 2003. For the 
convenience of the user, the added text is set forth as follows:

Sec. 801.9  Reports required.

                                * * * * *

    (c) * * *
    (4) BE-85, Quarterly Survey of Financial Services Transactions 
Between U.S. Financial Services Providers and Unaffiliated Foreign 
Persons:
    (i) A BE-85, Quarterly Survey of Financial Services Transactions 
Between U.S. Financial Services Providers and Unaffiliated Foreign 
Persons, will be conducted covering the first quarter of the 2004 
calendar year and every quarter thereafter.
    (A) Who must report--(1) Mandatory reporting. Reports are required 
from each U.S. person who is a financial services provider or 
intermediary, or whose consolidated U.S. enterprise includes a 
separately organized subsidiary or part that is a financial services 
provider or intermediary, and that had sales of covered services to 
unaffiliated foreign

[[Page 14]]

persons that exceeded $20 million for the previous fiscal year or 
expects sales to exceed that amount during the current fiscal year, or 
had purchases of covered services from unaffiliated foreign persons that 
exceeded $15 million for the previous fiscal year or expects purchases 
to exceed that amount during the current fiscal year. These thresholds 
should be applied to financial services transactions with unaffiliated 
foreign persons by all parts of the consolidated U.S. enterprise 
combined that are financial services providers or intermediaries. 
Because the thresholds are applied separately to sales and purchases, 
the mandatory reporting requirement may apply only to sales, only to 
purchases, or to both sales and purchases.
    (i) The determination of whether a U.S. financial services provider 
or intermediary is subject to this mandatory reporting requirement may 
be based on the judgement of knowledgeable persons in a company who can 
identify reportable transactions on a recall basis, with a reasonable 
degree of certainty, without conducting a detailed manual records 
search.
    (ii) Reporters who file pursuant to this mandatory reporting 
requirement must provide data on total sales and/or purchases of each of 
the covered types of financial services transactions and must 
disaggregate the totals by country.
    (2) Voluntary reporting. If a financial services provider or 
intermediary, or all of a firm's subsidiaries or parts combined that are 
financial services providers or intermediaries, had covered sales of $20 
million or less, or covered purchases of $15 million or less during the 
previous fiscal year, and if covered sales or purchases are not expected 
to exceed these amounts in the current fiscal year, a person is 
requested to provide an estimate of the total for each type of service 
for the most recent quarter. Provision of this information is voluntary. 
The estimates may be based on the reasoned judgement of the reporting 
entity. Because these thresholds apply separately to sales and 
purchases, voluntary reporting may apply only to sales, only to 
purchases, or to both.
    (B) BE-85 definition of financial services provider. The definition 
of financial services provider used for this survey is identical in 
coverage to Sector 52--Finance and Insurance--of the North American 
Industry Classification System, United States, 2002. For example, 
companies and/or subsidiaries and other separable parts of companies in 
the following industries are defined as financial services providers: 
Depository credit intermediation and related activities (including 
commercial banking, holding companies, savings institutions, check 
cashing, and debit card issuing); nondepository credit intermediation 
(including credit card issuing, sales financing, and consumer lending); 
securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and 
related activities (including security and commodity futures brokers, 
dealers, exchanges, traders, underwriters, investment bankers, and 
providers of securities custody services); insurance carriers and 
related activities (including agents, brokers, and services providers); 
investment advisors and managers and funds, trusts, and other financial 
vehicles (including mutual funds, pension funds, real estate investment 
trusts, investors, stock quotation services, etc.).
    (C) Covered types of services. The BE-85 survey covers the following 
types of financial services transactions (purchases and/or sales) 
between U.S. financial services providers and unaffiliated foreign 
persons: Brokerage services, including foreign exchange brokerage 
services; underwriting and private placement services; financial 
management services; credit-related services, except credit card 
services; credit card services; financial advisory and custody services; 
security lending services; electronic funds transfers; and other 
financial services.
    (ii) [Reserved]

    Effective Date Note 2: At 68 FR 75409 and 75411, Dec. 31, 2003, 
Sec. 801.9 was amended by adding paragraphs (c)(5) and (c)(6), 
effective Jan. 30, 2004. For the convenience of the user, the added text 
is set forth as follows:

Sec. 801.9  Reports required.

                                * * * * *

    (c) * * *
    (5) BE-45, Quarterly Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. 
Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons:
    (i) A BE-45, Quarterly Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. 
Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons, will be conducted covering the 
first quarter of the 2004 calendar year and every quarter thereafter.
    (A) Who must report--(1) Mandatory reporting. Reports are required 
from each U.S. insurance company whose covered transactions with foreign 
persons exceeded $8 million for the previous fiscal year or are expected 
to exceed that amount during the current fiscal year. This threshold is 
applied separately to each of the eight individual types of transactions 
covered by the survey rather than to the sum of the data for all eight 
types combined. Quarterly reports for a year may be required 
retroactively when it is determined that the exemption level has been 
exceeded.
    (2) Voluntary reporting. Reports are requested from each U.S. 
insurance company whose covered transactions with foreign persons were 
$8 million or less for the previous fiscal year and are not expected to 
exceed the $8 million amount during the current fiscal year. Provision 
of this information is voluntary. The estimates may be based on recall, 
without conducting a detailed records search.

[[Page 15]]

    (B) Any person receiving a BE-45 survey form from BEA must complete 
all relevant parts of the form and return the form to BEA. A person not 
subject to the mandatory reporting requirement in paragraph (c)(5)(i)(A) 
of this section and is not filing information on a voluntary basis must 
only complete the ``Determination of reporting status'' and the 
``Certification'' sections of the survey. This requirement is necessary 
to ensure compliance with the reporting requirements and efficient 
administration of the survey by eliminating unnecessary followup 
contact.
    (C) Covered insurance transactions. The transactions covered by this 
survey are: reinsurance premiums received, reinsurance premiums paid, 
reinsurance losses paid, reinsurance losses recovered, primary insurance 
premiums received, primary insurance losses paid, auxiliary insurance 
services receipts, and auxiliary insurance services payments. (Auxiliary 
insurance services include agent's commissions, insurance brokering and 
agency services, insurance consulting services, evaluation and 
adjustment services, actuarial services, salvage administration 
services, and regulatory and monitoring services on indemnities and 
recovery services.)
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (6) BE-25, Quarterly Survey of Transactions with Unaffiliated 
Foreign Persons in Selected Services and in Intangible Assets: (i) A BE-
25, Quarterly Survey of Transactions with Unaffiliated Foreign Persons 
in Selected Services and in Intangible Assets, will be conducted 
covering the first quarter of the 2004 calendar year and every quarter 
thereafter.
    (A) Who must report--(1) Mandatory reporting. Reports are required 
from each U.S. person that:
    (a) Had sales of covered services to unaffiliated foreign persons 
that exceeded $6 million for the previous fiscal year or are expected to 
exceed that amount during the current fiscal year; or (b) had purchases 
of covered services from unaffiliated foreign persons that exceeded $4 
million for the previous fiscal year or are expected to exceed that 
amount during the current fiscal year. Because the thresholds are 
applied separately to sales and purchases, the mandatory reporting 
requirement may apply only to sales, only to purchases, or to both sales 
and purchases. Quarterly reports for a year may be required 
retroactively when it is determined that the exemption level has been 
exceeded.
    (2) Voluntary reporting. Reports are requested from each U.S. person 
that had sales of covered services to unaffiliated foreign persons that 
were $6 million or less for the previous fiscal year and are expected to 
be less than or equal to that amount during the current fiscal year, or 
had purchases of covered services from unaffiliated foreign persons that 
were $4 million or less for the previous fiscal year and are expected to 
be less than or equal to that amount during the current fiscal year. 
Provision of this information is voluntary. The estimates may be based 
on recall, without conducting a detailed records search. Because these 
thresholds apply separately to sales and purchases, voluntary reporting 
may apply only to sales, only to purchases, or to both.
    (B) Any person receiving a BE-25 survey form from BEA must complete 
all relevant parts of the form and return the form to BEA. A person that 
is not subject to the mandatory reporting requirement in paragraph 
(c)(6)(i)(A) of this section and is not filing information on a 
voluntary basis must only complete the ``Determination of reporting 
status'' and the ``Certification'' sections of the survey. This 
requirement is necessary to ensure compliance with the reporting 
requirements and efficient administration of the survey by eliminating 
unnecessary followup contact.
    (C) Covered services and intangible assets. The services covered by 
this survey are: Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping services; 
computer and data processing services; construction services; foreign 
expenses related to construction projects; data base and other 
information services; engineering, architectural, and surveying 
services; industrial engineering services; industrial-type maintenance, 
installation, alteration, and training services; legal services; 
management, consulting, and public relations services; operational 
leasing services; research, development, and testing services; and 
telecommunication services. The intangible assets covered by this survey 
are rights related to: industrial processes and products; books, compact 
discs, audio tapes and other copyrighted material and intellectual 
property; trademarks, brand names, and signatures; performances and 
events pre-recorded on motion picture film and television tape, 
including digital recording; broadcast and recording of live 
performances and events; general use computer software; business format 
franchising fees; and other intangible assets, including indefeasible 
rights of users.
    (ii) [Reserved]