Fund watchdogs blast SEC on money market proposal

The Securities and Exchange Commission hasn't provided enough proof to support its own proposal to ban second-tier securities from money market funds, the Consumer Federation of America and Fund Democracy Inc. said last week in a comment letter.
SEP 13, 2009
The Securities and Exchange Commission hasn't provided enough proof to support its own proposal to ban second-tier securities from money market funds, the Consumer Federation of America and Fund Democracy Inc. said last week in a comment letter. “Certain of the SEC's proposals lack sufficient empirical support,” Mercer Bullard, Fund Democracy's founder and president, and Barbara Roper, the CFA's director of investor protection, wrote in a letter. Comments are due today on the SEC's proposal to improve disclosure and reduce risky holdings in money market funds. In the letter, Mr. Bullard and Ms. Roper noted that second-tier securities didn't play a major role in the run on some money market funds last year, and that holdings of such securities have been reduced to almost nothing.
“It is easy [to] forget, in the wake of [the] recent high-profile failure of the Reserve Fund and the ensuing run on MMF assets, that MMFs historically have been a paragon of stability,” the letter said. “Reform of MMF regulation is needed, but only to the extent that identifiable benefits outweigh the costs.” Instead, Fund Democracy and the CFA suggested that the SEC should evaluate the potential benefits of mandatory private-liquidity insurance. The SEC also should clarify that employees of privately held fund managers — such as the manager of the Reserve Primary Fund, which dipped below $1 a share last September — are entitled to the same whistle-blower protections under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 as employees of publicly held fund managers. “If one of the manager's employees had blown the whistle on their employer, the employee would not have been protected by [the act's] whistle-blower provision under incorrectly decided legal precedents,” the letter said. Fund Democracy and the CFA also strongly oppose the SEC's proposal to permit a money market fund to freeze shareholder funds for five days following a money market fund failure. “The free timeout provision would increase incentives to run for the exits before the fund is closed and virtually guarantee that once the fund was reopened, a flood of redemptions will follow,” according to the letter. Kevin Callahan, a spokesman for the SEC, said that the agency doesn't comment on individual comment letters. “We look forward to evaluating all of the comments that we've received during the public-comment period,” he said. E-mail Sara Hansard at [email protected].

Latest News

Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act
Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act

Operational drag between an advisor signing and accounts going live is emerging as a competitive liability for wealth management firms.

M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation
M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation

Bain says companies face a "winner's paradox" as AI transformation collides with complex integrations.

Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition
Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition

Deal lifts global assets to roughly $523 billion under management.

What wine culture can teach investors about decision-making
What wine culture can teach investors about decision-making

Choice anxiety, prestige bias, and the temptation to make selections based on outsourced confidence are just some of the parallels between investing and the world of wine tasting.

Merrill Lynch, BofA's brokerage arm, hit with $7.5M SEC fine over missed suspicious activity reports
Merrill Lynch, BofA's brokerage arm, hit with $7.5M SEC fine over missed suspicious activity reports

Regulators found Bank of America's monitoring software had a known flaw Merrill left uncorrected for years.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.