Regulation and compliance
Regulation and compliance
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Just when the mutual fund scandal seemed to be offering little in the way of new twists and turns, the plot thickens.
July 26 -
Many Congressmen are finding out that when it comes to fund reform, "you can't always get what you want," as Mick Jagger sings.
July 19 -
Things went from bad to worse for Invesco Funds, as federal securities regulators announced plans to increase the number of individuals facing civil fraud charges.
July 19 -
In a little over 11 weeks, firms are going to have to hire a chief compliance officer, a requirement that could prove to be a tall task for fund shops, particularly smaller ones.
July 19 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission reportedly may soon charge Fremont Investment Advisors and an ex-employee for late trading and market timing, the company said.
July 19 -
Investors have filed a class-action suit against Salomon Smith Barney for allegedly breaching its fiduciary duty between March 22, 1999 and March 22, 2004 by claiming its financial advisers were selling mutual funds objectively when, in fact, they were steering them into the firm's "inferior" proprietary family of more than 220 funds.
July 19 -
NEW YORK -- At a recent news conference held here, Calvert, a socially responsible investment management firm headquartered in Bethesda, Md., unveiled new corporate guidelines it created for the proper ethical and moral treatment of women workers. The news event was co-sponsored by Calvert and the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), which provides financial and technical support for the enhancement of women's rights.
July 19 -
Playing favorites and making quid pro quo deals have been longstanding practices in the financial services industry, and the 401(k) marketplace is not immune to its ill effects. As such, federal regulators have joined their state counterparts in examining the opaque nature of 401(k) fees and related revenue-sharing arrangements.
July 19 -
The NASD has fined five brokerage firms $625,000 for failure to have the supervisory systems in place to detect and prevent late trading. The five are D.A. Davidson & Co., T.D. Waterhouse Investor Services, Stifel Nicolaus & Co., National Planning Corp. and SII Investments, Inc. Each of these firms processed trades after the 4 p.m. close of the market, the NASD said.
July 5 -
Bank One Corp.'s mutual fund arm on Tuesday agreed to a $90 million settlement with New York state and federal regulators for allowing hedge funds to engage in abusive round-trip trading of its fund shares, a racket that depleted the returns of long-term shareholders.
July 5 -
In a new era for independent directors, Dawn-Marie Driscoll, already a busy woman, is likely to be even more in demand. She is president of Driscoll Associates, a Cape Coral, Fla.-based business ethics consulting firm, and executive fellow and advisory board member at the Center for Business Ethics at Bentley College in Waltham, Mass. In addition, she serves as an independent trustee and board chairman for the mutual funds at Scudder Investments and serves on the board of governors of the Investment Company Institute. She has also been a member of the ICI directors' services committee since its 1995 formation and served as its chairman from 1998 to 2002.
July 5 -
CHICAGO--During a star-studded Morningstar investment conference panel, investor advocate Mercer Bullard called for a complete overhaul of the way fund companies conduct business, while Bob Pozen and Ed Haldeman warned of the unintended consequences of overzealous regulation.
July 5 -
There was no place of refuge for tainted mutual fund shop Pilgrim Baxter & Associates, as the company last Monday agreed to a $100 million settlement with regulators for engaging in abusive trading practices.
June 28 -
Some states are unfairly discriminating against investors choosing to invest in 529 college savings plans outside of the state in which they reside, creating mounting problems for the industry, according to a recent white paper by the College Savings Foundation (CSF).
June 28 -
For mutual funds, it was the shot heard round the world.
June 28 -
Rep. Paul Gillmore (R-Ohio) has introduced a companion bill in the House to the Mutual Fund Reform Act sponsored by Senator Peter Fitzgerald (R-Ill.) in the Senate. A companion bill is similar or identical to another piece of legislation introduced in the opposite house of Congress. Fitzgerald's bill aims to ban 12b-1 fees and improve disclosure on mutual fund fees so that consumers can more easily compare what they pay for competing funds.
June 28 -
Morningstar Managing Director Don Phillips has been a visible industry figure since the scandal broke, calling for investors to avoid certain shops entangled in the scandal as well as urging the industry to adopt several reforms. MME Associate Editor Chris Frankie sat down with Phillips just before the Morningstar Investment Conference to get his views on the ICI's new president, Congress and investors.
June 28 -
SEC Commissioner Cynthia Glassman last week said she is not sold on the agency's rule proposals requiring an independent chairman and the implementation of a mandatory redemption fee.
June 21 -
ICI President Paul Schott Stevens said last week that his agency is firmly behind reform in the industry and called on the SEC to "administer strong medicine to prevent trading abuses in the future."
June 21 -
The former CEO of Putnam Investments, Lawrence J. Lasser, has settled his severance package dispute with the company and will receive $78 million from the parent firm, Marsh & McLennan.
June 21