Roye Tells New Fund Directors of 'Lessons Learned'

Paying attention to what is happening underneath them can help fund directors recognize and stymie potential wrongdoing, Securities and Exchange Commission Paul Roye told a group of new mutual fund directors Friday

Emphasizing the presence of transfer agents and need for consistent and appropriate pricing, Roye explained the importance of the new compliance procedures rule to the future of the fund industry.

"Fund directors should be approving and periodically reviewing the policies and procedures of transfer agents against late trading by obtaining assurances that the policies and procedures are effectively administered," Roye said at the 2004 New Directors Workshop in Washington.

"In many cases, fund directors were left in the dark," Roye said, noting that a look at the lessons the scandal has taught is essential.

"Fund directors must be at the heart of establishing a fund's market timing policies and reviewing the methods the fund employs to alter market timing actions," he continued. But he added that following up on those methods is even more essential.

In providing some "general tenets," for directors, Roye said that a director who asks tough questions, brings "a healthy dose of skepticism," insists on compliance and demands accountability will be doing the main job, which is satisfying investors rather than fund managers.

"As a new director," Roye said, "it will be difficult to go wrong if you are guided in your decision-making by what is in the best interest of investors."

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Money Management Executive
MORE FROM FINANCIAL PLANNING