Regulation and compliance
Regulation and compliance
-
The new chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission is asking Congress to approve a large budget increase to pump up the agency's enforcement, examination and risk assessment efforts.
March 13 -
The Investment Company Institute has named Dean R. Sackett III and Donald C. Auerbach as leaders of its government affairs staff.
March 12 -
Unlike his predecessor, Paul Volcker, the current chairman of the Federal Reserve doesnt believe money market funds should be regulated like banks, with reserve requirements and mandatory insurance.
March 11 -
Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that a case three investors in Oakmark Funds had brought over what they alleged to be excessive fees failed to meet the burden of proof, setting an important precedent that protected fund firms against such cases.
March 10 -
In order to achieve meaningful reform of the financial services industry, Congress should create two key regulatory positions to oversee financial markets, according to a proposal last week by the Investment Company Institute.
March 9 -
To mitigate against any future financial catastrophes, the Investment Company Institute on Tuesday called for two new regulators that would focus on systemic risk and the capital markets, bridging the functions of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
March 3 -
The chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging has called for more scrutiny of target-date retirement funds after several 2010 target-date funds posted huge losses in 2008.
March 2 -
NEW YORK - The Securities and Exchange Commission has given U.S. companies more time to comment on its proposal to adopt international financial reporting standards (IFRS), but this extension may be creating uncertainty among those who thought the conversion was a done deal.
March 2 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission is reportedly scrutinizing asset management firms custodial arrangements to ensure that they are properly protecting customers assets.
March 2 -
Connecticut lawmakers have proposed hedge fund regulations, including obtaining a license, annual audit, disclosure of fees and significant changes in management or investment strategy, as well as a higher minimum investment threshold of $2.5 million for individuals and $5 million for institutions.
February 25 -
Investment Company Institute President Paul Schott Stevens testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Education and Labor Committee on Tuesday to avow that the 401(k) model is working, in spite of the markets downturn.
February 24 -
The Alternative Investment Management Association, a hedge fund group headquartered in the U.K., is pushing for more transparency, in an effort to stave off regulation.
February 23 -
Morningstar has developed a series of 18 asset allocation indexes for investors and advisers to use as benchmarks for target-date and target-risk funds.
February 23 -
MIAMI - In their frantic efforts to cut costs, many financial services companies have been jettisoning everything that isn't absolutely necessary to stay afloat. This may work in the short term, but senior leadership is starting to realize the continued need for expertise in regulation and compliance and customer service to provide seamless risk management, transparency and communication.
February 23 -
Money market fund assets have topped $4 trillion for the first time, greatly buoyed by the Treasury Departments $1 NAV guarantees and financing to purchase asset-backed commercial paper from money funds, which has eased the credit markets.
February 17 -
FINRA has fined two Wachovia units $4.5 million for failing to pass along breakpoint and rollover discounts for mutual fund and unit investment trust purchases, as well as for suitability violations and inadequate supervisory procedures.
February 12 -
Sens. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) have reintroduced legislation, the Harkin/Kohl Defined Contribution Fee Disclosure Act of 2009, that would require 401(k) plan providers to clearly disclose all of the fees they charge. The senators cite AARP research that shows if a 35-year-old invested $20,000 in a 401(k) plan over 30 years that yielded 6.5% a year and cost 0.5% in fees, their remaining balance would be $132,287, but if the fees were 1.5%, they would have only $99,679, or 25% less.
February 11 -
Debra Ryan, the longtime girlfriend of Samuel Israel III, who was found guilty of swindling Bayou Management hedge fund investors out of more than $400 million, pled guilty Tuesday to aiding and abetting the Israel when he was a fugitive.
February 10 -
The Investment Company Institute is pushing for improvements to municipal disclosure, which it generally considers limited, non-standardized and stale.
February 9 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission has begun distributing $321 million to the two million Alliance Capital investors who were harmed by market timing. This first installment is a total of $46 million, distributed to 300,000 investors.
February 9