SEC to end $1 a share for some funds

WASHINGTON -- Regulators voted by a narrow margin Wednesday to end a longtime staple of the investment industry -- the fixed $1 share price for money-market mutual funds -- at least for some money funds used by big investors.

The idea is to minimize the risk of a mass withdrawal from the funds during a financial panic.

The Securities and Exchange Commission also is letting money funds block withdrawals when their assets fall below certain levels or impose fees for withdrawals.

The new rules were adopted Wednesday on a 3-2 vote. They were opposed by one Democratic and one Republican commissioner.

The fund industry will have two years to comply, a shorter period than the industry had sought. The share prices of the funds involved will be required to "float," as with other mutual funds. Big institutional investors could lose principal if the value of the shares falls below $1. Individual investors likely won't be affected.

"It does strike a very good balance between reducing the likelihood of runs in money funds while protecting an important cash-management vehicle for individual investors," said Marie Chandoha, president and chief executive officer of Charles Schwab Investment Management.

The idea behind adopting floating prices for a portion of the $2.6 trillion money-market fund industry is to remind investors that while the funds are safer than stocks and many other investments, they still carry some risk. Regulators say greater awareness of the risk would reduce the potential for crippling runs on money funds because investors would have acclimated themselves to fluctuating prices.

The SEC action "will reduce the risk of runs in money-market funds and provide important new tools that will help further protect investors and the financial system in a crisis," SEC Chairman Mary Jo White said at a public meeting of the five-member commission.

The Financial Stability Oversight Council, a group of high-level regulators that includes the heads of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department, has identified money-market funds as a potential risk to the global system.

A run on a money-market fund during the financial crisis showed how risky the funds could be. The Lehman Brothers collapse in the fall of 2008 triggered the failure of the Reserve Primary Fund, one of the biggest money-market funds, which held Lehman debt. The Reserve Primary Fund lost so much money that it "broke the buck," as its value fell to 97 cents a share.

The decline escalated fears over the safety of money funds and inflamed the crisis. The next week, investors pulled around $300 billion from so-called prime money funds, representing 14 percent of the assets in those funds. Short-term lending, relied on by companies to pay suppliers and make payroll, froze up as investors abandoned the funds. The Fed stepped in to temporarily guarantee assets of all money funds so investors could be assured that they would be protected from losses.

Daniel Gallagher, a Republican SEC commissioner, said the regulators' action puts the industry and investors on notice that there won't be a government rescue of money-market funds.

"We are taking action to correct any impression of a federal backstop," Gallagher said. The SEC "can't bail out any firm or product."

Gallagher had opposed an earlier SEC proposal that called for money-market funds to hold capital reserves against possible losses, which he said was more suitable for banks.

The new floating-price requirement applies only to prime institutional funds, which are considered riskier. They represent about 35 percent of money-market funds, according to the Investment Company Institute, the fund industry's trade group. Those funds attract mainly big institutional investors and are considered more risk-prone because they invest in short-term corporate debt.

The industry has lobbied against the requirement for floating share prices, saying it would make money funds unattractive.

Two groups that advocate strict financial regulation say the SEC plan doesn't go far enough and that all money funds should be required to have floating prices to reduce the risk to the system.

"It's grossly inadequate," said Dennis Kelleher, president of Better Markets, a nonprofit group.

Limiting floating prices to the funds favored by big investors could lead those investors to exit quickly at a time of stress and leave "retail investors holding the bag" in other funds that could be damaged, Kelleher said.

The previous SEC chairman, Mary Schapiro, pushed unsuccessfully in 2012 for floating share prices for all money-market funds and a requirement that funds hold capital reserves of 1 percent of their assets. But three of the five SEC commissioners at the time opposed those changes, and her proposal was never put up for a vote.

Then the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which included Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner at the time, prodded the SEC to act. The SEC proposed the changes in June 2013, opening them to public comment.

Information for this article was contributed by Dave Michaels of Bloomberg News.

Business on 07/24/2014

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