Compliance

  • While it may not decide the fate of about a dozen similar “excessive fee” cases that were brought against mutual fund companies in 2003 and 2004, charging that they should impose institutional-share, rather than retail-share fees on individual investors, it is an important step in the right direction.

    May 28
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission voted unanimously last Wednesday on a proposal that would require mutual funds to provide risk/return, fee and strategy information using the same new digital data tagging system as the 500 largest U.S. corporations.

    May 26
  • Talk about tapping into the powers that be inside the Beltway.

    May 26
  • PHILADELPHIA - Boards may have grown in power since the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, but mutual fund companies should take care to temper that influence so it doesn't interfere with business.

    May 26
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission voted unanimously yesterday on a proposal that would require mutual funds to provide risk/return, fee and strategy information using the same new digital data tagging system as the 500 largest U.S. corporations.

    May 22
  • The move to XBRL filings will roll out in stages, with about 500 so-called "large" domestic and foreign issuers expected to submit XBRL versions of financial reports this winter. This is according to the Securities and Exchange Commission, which last week issued a rule proposal concerning XBRL adoption.

    May 21
  • WASHINGTON — Market participants hailed yesterday’s long-awaited but widely expected Supreme Court decision that upheld 42 states’ preferential tax treatment of their bonds as a “resounding victory” for the municipal securities market.

    May 20
  • The mood at the Investment Company Institute's 50th Annual General Membership Meeting in Washington, D.C., earlier this month, themed "Our Foundations, Our Future," was markedly upbeat. Certainly, this is welcome and refreshing, especially following the dot-com crash of 2000-2001, the mutual fund scandals of 2003-2005 and this year's subprime credit crisis hitting the financial services industry and Wall Street, in particular, so hard.

    May 19
  • A lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission alleges that more than 30 firms spent in excess of $3 million over the course of three years to lure the business of Boston mutual fund giant Fidelity Investments.

    May 15
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has formally proposed that all U.S. companies use interactive data tagging when they provide financial information.

    May 15
  • Four years ago, the board of directors of the Gabelli Funds conducted a thorough investigation into charges by the Securities and Exchange Commission that market timing had occurred in its funds, according to a press release the invesment manager issued on behalf of one of its former principals who is now under investigation.

    May 15
  • Looking at the current economic landscape, we know the challenges our industry faces today may be like storms we have weathered in the past. Challenges often become catalysts for important changes in regulation, technology and business practices.

    May 12
  • Securities and Exchange Commissioner Paul Atkins has announced he will leave the agency when his term expires in June to return to the private sector.

    May 12
  • WASHINGTON - As regulatory burdens increase, mutual fund boards of directors' attention to the real business at hand-sound asset management and fiduciary responsibility to the end investor-is conversely being depleted, industry heavyweights attested, speaking at the Investment Company Institute's 50th Annual General Membership Meeting here last Thursday.

    May 12
  • WASHINGTON - The credit crisis is 75% to 85% unwound in terms of the financial markets, but the economy may still be on shaky ground, Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase told the 1,500 delegates assembled here for the Investment Company Institute’s 50th GMM.“I would say this thing has largely already worked its way through. It probably won’t get worse at this point. Increased capital requirements will take about six months longer” to bring markets and counter-party risk tolerance back to normalcy, Dimon said.However, he was quick to add: “The recession, I don’t know. To paraphrase Yogi Berra, it’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”Markets perform in cycles, Dimon reminded executives, listing the 2001 technology bubble, Long Term Capital Management’s overleveraged exposure to Russia in 1997, the real estate and savings and loan crisis of 1990, overvalued earnings in 1987 and the subsequent stock market crash, the recession of 1982 and the oil shortages in 1974.
“The difference in this one is it’s a housing crisis,” said Dimon, who included among those to blame for the subprime crisis those mortgage bankers who failed to properly verify borrowers’ income or appraisers’ real estate assessments.Dimon also praised the government for its swift action in bailing out Bear Stearns and a cadre of more than 1,000 investment bankers at his own firm who, after he got “the Thursday telephone call” about whether or not to purchase the ailing firm, spent the entire weekend performing due diligence on the deal.In answer to a question from an audience member, Dimon exhorted mutual fund executives to continue to bring innovative products to market but to be extremely cautious when doing so.As an example, Dimon said, collateralized debt obligations, CDO warehouses and structured investment vehicles that invested in subprime mortgages are so complex that to try to assess the price in one such instrument, JPMorgan ran a Monte Carlo simulation on one of its mainframe computers for seven hours.Questionable mark-to-market policies also factored into the subprime troubles, he added. But that said, Dimon said he is tired of being “vilified” by the media for bailing out Bear Stearns or operating a bank that itself sold subprime mortgages and products derived from them. And as to banks’ role in making credit and loans too available to the American public, Dimon stressed that the consumers of subprime CDOs and other structured products over the past two years, have largely been institutional and not retail investors.The ICI booked Dimon’s appearance many months ahead of JPMorgan’s recent preeminent role in partnering with the government on the Bear Stearns deal, noted Edward Bernard, chairman of the ICI’s General Membership Meeting Planning Committee, and vice chairman of T. Rowe Price Group.“We thank Mr. Dimon for honoring his commitment” at this exceptionally busy time, Bernard said.

    May 9
  • WASHINGTON - Regulators, employers and the financial services industry must work together to expand the use of 401(k) plans and increase worker participation, the Investment Company Institute's President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens said Wednesday at the institute's 50th annual general membership meeting.

    May 8
  • Legg Mason, citing $206 million in charges tied to supporting money market funds with subprime and other illiquid fixed-income exposure, posted a net loss of $256 million in the first quarter, down from profits of $173 million in the year-ago period.

    May 7
  • Former AllianceBernstein mutual fund sales manager John Carl won a $12 million arbitration lawsuit for having been dismissed from the company on the pretext of his role in the market-timing scandal.

    May 7
  • Securities and Exchange Commissioner Paul Atkins has announced he will leave the agency when his term expires in June to return to the private sector.

    May 6