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Mutual fund reform update
1.Mutual fund reform update
2.Impact of mutual fund reform
3.Mutual fund fees
4.Making mutual fund fees more transparent
5.Breakpoints
6.Mutual fund sales compensation
7.Soft dollars and directed brokerage
8.Market timing and late trading
9.Addressing market timing and late trading
10.Mutual fund governance
 
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Mutual fund sales compensation

Another area where regulators have mandated greater transparency is with regard to the various ways that brokers may be compensated or rewarded for selling mutual funds, and the potential conflicts of interest that may arise from such compensation arrangements.

Because fee structures vary widely from one fund to another, brokers that sell mutual funds may be paid in a variety of ways, including the following:

Payments from these sources compensate brokers for providing a wide range of services, including administering shareholder records, processing transactions, training the registered representatives who sell funds, and investor education. While brokerage houses contend that these services provide investors and fund advisers with valuable benefits, regulators decry the lack of transparency in brokerage firm compensation, since it is virtually impossible for investors to know precisely how brokers are paid out of fund assets.

Regulators are looking particularly closely at revenue sharing and shelf space arrangements because of the financial incentives they may create for brokers to recommend one fund over another. While brokers argue that spotlighting a particular fund is no guarantee of sales, others say that compensating brokers for promoting a fund may not be in the best interest of the firms' clients. The SEC has adopted a new regulation mandating clearer disclosure of fund distribution costs and potential conflicts of interest, and has proposed a new rule that would require these disclosures at the point — or time — of sale.





 
         
   
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