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The troubles at Big Five accounting firm Arthur Andersen of Chicago over its auditing of the financial statements of Enron Corp. may be raising issues for the mutual fund industry.
March 18 -
Arthur Andersen's recent troubles in the wake of Enron's financial meltdown and its uncertain future have begun wafting over to the fund industry.
March 18 -
This is not the first time the fund industry has faced challenges with independent auditors.
March 18 -
With the recent issuance of Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Treasury Department guidance on capitalization, a drawn out conflict with the fund industry over the tax treatment of fund start-up costs appears to be drawing to a close. The Investment Company Institute has not issued an official comment on the issue, but it has indicated that the new rules do not go far enough in terms of the costs that can be expensed.
February 18 -
The financial implosion of Enron late last year has brought increased scrutiny to the regulations that govern 401(k) plans. Now, some say the longstanding issue of portfolio disclosure might be next.
February 11 -
As lawmakers debate possible reforms to 401(k) rules in the wake of Enron's financial collapse, Ted Benna, who launched the first 401(k) more than two decades ago, has suggested that workers be barred from spending their own money on stock in their companies.
February 11 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission's comment period on actively managed exchange-traded funds ended last week, but the new type of ETFs that will likely soon be approved by the Commission are those based on fixed-income indices.
January 21 -
Looking ahead to 2002 there are several issues both with mutual fund regulation and proposed legislation that will likely reach some conclusion this year. Late last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission sent out a letter seeking comment on the development of actively managed exchange-traded funds. Those comments are due in January 2002, and Alan Rosenblat, an attorney with Philadelphia-based law firm Dechert, expects that the SEC will release guidelines about that over the course of this year.
January 7 -
This past year was particularly active in terms of mutual fund regulation, according to industry lawyers. A number of initiatives from the Securities and Exchange Commission that had been discussed in recent years, including independent fund director and after-tax reporting issues, came to fruition in 2001.
December 31 -
NASD Regulation continues to monitor sales of variable annuities and fine dealers who violate suitability rules and record-keeping requirements. Two firms were named in the most recent enforcement action and more actions are possible, industry experts say.
December 17 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission is apparently close to starting a review of fund rules. However many industry observers are unsure which rules might be affected, and how fund marketing might be affected in turn.
October 22 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission's caseload was decimated by the terrorist attack on the World Trader Center, the home of its New York offices.
September 24 -
Prudential Financial has appointed Scott Sleyster, the president of its guaranteed products unit, to head the company's retirement services business.
August 27 -
Harvey Pitt has not even been formally sworn in as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, yet already some industry observers are concerned that mutual funds may take a back seat once he takes the wheel.
August 13 -
A House subcommittee approved the Retirement Security Advice Act Thursday afternoon, prompting its proponents to insist that the House will pass it by year's end. It was the quickest markup of a bill in the history of the Committee on Education and the Workforce, lasting a short six minutes. But brewing far from the corridors of those meeting halls is an opposition that hopes for the bill's demise in the Senate.
August 6 -
The reason behind the recent proposal of the New York Stock Exchange to limit how much investment companies can pay in closed-end listing fees is not clear, but chances are it's not out of kindness.
August 6 -
The Investment Company Institute's call last week for less portfolio holdings disclosure is probably the best indication that the Securities and Exchange Commission is getting ready to increase disclosure requirements, according to industry observers.
July 23 -
This year's Morningstar conference began with the issuance of a challenge to the fund industry by Morningstar managing director Don Phillips to improve investors' experience with mutual funds.
July 2 -
Hearings are expected to commence soon on a new bill that would allow retirement plan providers to offer advisory services to plan participants, something that is largely prohibited now. Representative John Boehner (R-Ohio), chairman of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce introduced the bill, called the Retirement Security Advice Act, last month.
July 2 -
An NASDR arbitration panel has ruled against Franklin Templeton of San Mateo, Calif. in an arbitration case filed in 1999 against the fund adviser by Daniel Calabria, a former fund executive.
June 25