Compliance

  • NEW YORK - In the wake of the ongoing credit crisis and illiquid money market, much of it due to the failure of a single money market mutual fund, the Securities and Exchange Commission plans to overhaul Rule 2-a7. Separately, the Department of the Treasury is looking into creating a market stability regulator with omniscient powers across the "entire financial system."

    October 14
  • NEW YORK - As credit freezes up and liquidity all but vanishes, there is an enormous temptation for financial institutions and investors to hold on to their cash and brace for the worst.

    October 14
  • New Hampshire regulators have fined a now-defunct mortgage company, First Call Mortage, in which Peter Lynch of Fidelity fame had a 13% stake, The Wall Street Journal reports. As such, Lynch faces an $85,000 fine, and First Call, $767,500.

    October 10
  • With just $6 billion in assets left, of what once totaled $83 billion, Reserve Management is liquidating its 18 remaining funds.

    October 9
  • The U.S. Justice Department has subpoenaed several large firms and agencies as part of an investigation to determine whether Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. misled investors before its Sept. 15 bankruptcy filing, according to the Stamford Advocate.

    October 9
  • Despite a stable economic outlook for the foreseeable future, many Canadians are concerned that their government isn’t doing enough to prepare itself for the kind of downturn the rest of the world is experiencing, writes the National Post.

    October 9
  • The Federal Reserve announced Tuesday it will buy up to $1.3 trillion of the top-rated asset-backed and unsecured commercial paper in the markets—virtually a business loan bailout due to frozen money markets, the closest the government has come to making loans to businesses directly.

    October 7
  • NEW YORK—In the wake of the ongoing credit crisis and illiquid money market, much of it due to the failure of a single money market mutual fund, the Securities and Exchange Commission plans to overhaul Rule 2a-7. Separately, the Department of the Treasury is looking into creating a market stability regulator with omniscient powers across the "entire financial system."

    October 7
  • Investors in the now-defunct Primary Fund got their first indication of when they can expect redemptions last Monday, when Reserve Management announced it would return 32% of the fund's assets as of Sept. 15, or $20 billion, on Oct. 13.

    October 6
  • WASHINGTON—The House reversed Monday's rejection of a bill to stabilize the financial markets approving the measure on Friday with a vote of 263 to 171.

    October 3
  • In response to scrutiny over its ratings of instruments tied to subprime mortgages, Fitch Ratings has increased its own scrutiny over fund of hedge fund managers, warning that many such funds may not be able to meet redemption requirements if their risks are not closely monitored.

    October 2
  • The Reserve will liquidate its Primary Fund and begin returning cash to shareholders, according to an announcement on Monday.

    September 30
  • After three hours of contentious debate, the U.S. House unexpectedly rejected a bill for a $700 billion rescue package on Monday — 228 to 205 — that would create a government facility to buy troubled assets from banks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 777 points on the news.

    September 29
  • Canadian securities regulators have begun on-site reviews of money market funds, fearing their exposure to devalued securities.

    September 29
  • Recent moves by the U.S. government to prop up ailing money market funds seems to be helping stem the recent massive run on the funds, another fund implosion like the Reserve's Primary Fund can't be ruled out; managers may be holding investments that turn out to be worthless.

    September 29
  • The Department of the Treasury opened its money market mutual fund guarantee program Monday and provided details on how the $50 billion program, designed to stem a run on the $3.4 trillion money market fund industry, will work.

    September 29
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has created a nearly $32 million fair fund distribution to help current and former customers of Ameriprise Financial Services who were harmed by the company’s failure to disclose revenue sharing payments.

    September 26
  • Responding to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s temporary ban on short selling in hopes of helping to stabilize the markets, Vanguard and Bank of America’s Columbia Funds have stopped lending securities to such traders, The Boston Globe reports.

    September 25
  • One of the biggest arguments against the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street’s bad debt is that by having the government clean up investment houses’ balance sheets, the same firms that caused the problem might make outsized profits in helping the government assess the debt, the New York Times reports.

    September 25
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission issued an enforcement action Tuesday against AmSouth Bank and AmSouth Asset Management for defrauding the AmSouth mutual funds by using a portion of administrative fees that shareholders paid for marketing and other unrelated expenses that should have been paid out of the investment advisor’s coffers. Those expenses included the salary, bonus, benefits and country club membership of the president of the AmSouth Funds.

    September 24