Compliance

  • New Internal Revenue Service accounting rules aim to reconfigure the way investors report gains and losses when they sell stocks and mutual funds by putting the burden on those who handle the transactions.

    May 11
  • For years, Americans enjoyed the "wealth effect," the sense that their assets were gaining value rapidly enough that they didn't have to save much. This perception of ever-expanding prosperity gave them freedom to spend lavishly and enjoy life. The effect was a function of feeling wealthy as well as being wealthy.

    May 11
  • WASHINGTON — Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro, speaking before the Investment Company Institute’ s General Membership Meeting, said she favors the creation of a council of existing regulators to oversee risk in the financial markets, rather than granting that authority to a single regulator.

    May 11
  • WASHINGTON—At a separate summit on 401(k) reform during last weeks General Membership Meeting of the Investment Company Institute, Putnam Investments CEO Robert L. Reynolds called for sweeping retirement reform, beginning with mandatory automatic enrollment in qualified default options, savings escalation, the inclusion of retirement income options and full advice on asset allocation and retirement planning.

    May 11
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed fraud charges against the Reserve Primary Fund and its officers for failing to disclose the fund’s vulnerability to Lehman Brothers, as it filed for bankruptcy, instead falsely assuring investors that it would support the fund’s $1 net asset value.

    May 5
  • The current regulation that allows hedge funds and other advisers with fewer than 15 clients not to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission is a “gap [that] doesn’t make sense,” said Andrew Donohue, director of the division of investment management, speaking before the Mutual Fund Directors Forum.

    May 5
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is considering better disclosures for target-date funds, particularly their glide paths and asset allocations, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro told the Mutual Fund Directors Forum.

    May 5
  • With more than nine in 10 shareholders reporting Internet access, the SEC's summary prospectus rule represents more than just an opportunity to provide an easier-to-understand document. The new rule provides a unique chance to refine the overall shareholder communication model.

    May 4
  • Robert L. Reynolds loves a challenge. Without question, he certainly faces one. Trying to restore Putnam Investments' stature among America's top mutual fund companies after the firm's involvement in the trading scandal of 2003 and depletion of assets, now at $99 billion, a mere quarter of what they were in 2000-is a formidable task.

    May 4
  • NEW YORK - Most financial transactions are dependent upon trust, but the last two decades of deregulation have eroded that trust and created a global crisis of confidence, according to experts who met last week at a global forum in the heart of New York's financial district.

    May 4
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is holding its annual regional CCOutreach seminars between May and July.

    April 29
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is currently investigating 50 cases of credit-default swaps and 150 hedge funds, Chairman Mary Schapiro told the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. The investigations are in line with objectives of the Obama Administration to overhaul financial regulations.

    April 28
  • The House Education & Labor Committee last week proposed new rules for 401(k) disclosure that will give investors greater transparency into the fees they are paying, but some 401(k) advocates say the new rules are too aggressive and unnecessary.

    April 27
  • Commenting on the House Savings Recovery Act introduced this week, Rep. Ed Royce (R-Calif.) said, “Along with our struggling economy, over the past 16 months, millions of Americans have seen their personal savings and retirement accounts hit hard. Americans should be given every opportunity to help rebuild their savings. “

    April 23
  • The “Sixty Minutes” segment on 401(k)s that slammed them as being mediocre offerings with hidden fees is not the only shot being taken at the defined contribution model—not by a long shot.

    April 23
  • The House Education & Labor Committee has introduced the Fair Disclosure for Retirement Security Act of 2009, which would require 401(k) plans to clearly state all fees with the aim of helping workers shop around for the best retirement options.

    April 22
  • While mutual funds aren't technically required to start using the short-form, summary prospectus until 2011, companies that switch early could see significant savings in printing and mailing costs.

    April 20
  • Reserve Management has returned $45.8 billion, or 89% of the assets in the now-defunct Primary Fund, but is holding onto $3.5 billion to defend itself against more than 30 lawsuits.

    April 17
  • Although the underlying credit card and auto debt assets in the TALF funds are leveraged as much as 20:1, mutual fund companies anxious to invest in them are telling the Securities and Exchange Commission that they are structured as safe, non-recourse loans, the New York Daily News reports.

    April 16
  • The Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has just ruled in favor of investors in a case against Ameriprise Financial over the fees of 11 of its RiverSource mutual funds. Coming on the heels of a similar case against Harris Associates that the Supreme Court will hear this fall, it could signal a new era in favor of investors.

    April 16