Quantcast
The MFWire
Manage Email Alerts | Sponsorships | About MFWire | Who We Are

Subscribe to MFWire.com's News Alerts [click]

Rating:The SEC Opens the Door to a Share Class Revolution Not Rated 5.0 Email Routing List Email & Route  Print Print
Tuesday, January 24, 2017

The SEC Opens the Door to a Share Class Revolution

Reported by Neil Anderson, Managing Editor

The SEC has just cleared a path for what might become a distribution revolution in the mutual fund business. And though the change was probably spurred by the DoL rule, there's reason to believe that this shift will take hold even if the DoL rule falls under President Donald Trump's new administration.

Jay Baris
Morrison & Foerster LLP
Partner
On January 11, the SEC issued a no-action letter responding to a request made by Capital Group [profile] just five days earlier. In its response, the SEC gives its blessing to so-called "clean shares" that would have all loads and distribution fees stripped out and then have the broker selling the fund add on its own distribution fees. This could be a big deal for asset managers facing the passive fund onslaught, given that distribution fees (like all other fees) affect performance and passive funds are generally already clean of such fees; clean shares could make active-passive cost and performance comparisons, well, that much cleaner.

Michael Downer, Paul Roye, and Michael Triessl, all senior vice presidents and senior counsel for Capital Research and Management Company, penned the original letter to the SEC. Rachel Loko, senior counsel in the office of chief counsel for the SEC's division of investment management, wrote the regulatory agency's response.

The letters focus on section 22(d) of the Investment Company Act of 1940. That section requires mutual fund shares to only be sold at the public offering price, the single price (with whatever load and other fees are attached) listed in the fund's prospectus.

"The purpose here," Jay Baris, partner at Morrison & Foerster, explains to MFWire, "is a level playing field." (Baris also penned a client alert on the clean shares idea.)

B-Ds, says Baris, then wondered, "couldn't we just strip the sales charge on these mutual funds and we the broker-dealer will charge our customers whatever we want to charge them." Yet B-Ds "couldn't do that ... until now."

"It's basically decentralized sales charges," Baris adds.

Cap Group's Downer, speaking today at the FSI OneVoice conference in San Francisco, describes clean shares as giving active mutual fund shops the ability to show more outperformance over passive funds. He pitches clean shares as a way to revive active management.

Industry legal experts agree that Cap Group's request, and the SEC's response, were triggered at least in part by the pending DoL rule.

"What brought this on was the DoL rule that basically imposes a fiduciary obligation on brokers when they're putting clients into retirement accounts," Baris says.

"By allowing the clean share, the brokerage industry can figure out what the best cost structure is, and it'll assist them in meeting their obligations under the fiduciary rule," Bruce Leto, chair of the investment management group at Stradley Ronon, tells MFWire.

With the DoL rule's future uncertain under the new leadership in Washington, Leto predicts that the clean shares idea will still hold appeal for mutual fund shops. Baris agrees.

"I think clean shares are here to stay," Baris says. "It's a welcome, incremental advance in flexibility."

In a client alert, Drinker Biddle's Diana McCarthy looks ahead and wonders about "the extent to which other share classes may continue to co-exist with clean shares." For example, perhaps clean shares will trump another new type of share class, T shares. Leto has a prediction.

"I also don't think all share classes are going out of business and moving to clean shares," Leto says, arguing that there are "lots of different reasons" to have different share classes and that "many of those reasons remain" even in a clean shares world.

The SEC's no-action letter also left a key question unanswered, Leto says, via the letter's last footnote, number eight:

This letter does not address the effect under section 22(d) of a broker receiving revenue sharing payments from the fund's adviser.


"There's a lot of debate about that," Leto says. 

Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE

5.0
 Do You Recommend This Story?



GO TO: MFWire
Return to Top
 News Archives
2024: Q2Q1
2023: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2022: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2021: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2020: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2019: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2018: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2017: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2016: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2015: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2014: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2013: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2012: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2011: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2010: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2009: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2008: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2007: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2006: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2005: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2004: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2003: Q4Q3Q2Q1
2002: Q4Q3Q2Q1
 Subscribe via RSS:
Raw XML
Add to My Yahoo!
follow us in feedly


  1. WE Boston - Women's Initiative Joint Spring Networking Reception, May 15
  2. MFDF In Focus: Making Sense of ESG - A Morningstar Guide, May 16
  3. SEC IM 2024 Conference on Emerging Trends in Asset Management, May 16
  4. ALFI Roadshow to the USA, May 16
  5. 2024 ICI Leadership Summit, May 21-23
  6. MFDF webinar - Mutual Fund Director Compensation: the MPI Annual Survey (2024), May 21
  7. Schwab Institutional Investor Day, May 22
  8. MFDF Conference of Fund Leaders Forum, June 5
  9. MFDF in-person outreach: Continuing Regulatory Impacts on Fund Boards, June 11
  10. MFDF webinar - Digital Assets in the Fund Space (Part 1 of 2), June 12
  11. 2024 MMI Leadership Pathway Seminar, Jun 12-14
  12. 2024 Nicsa Fearless Leadership Symposium, June 12
  13. MFDF webinar - Lessons Learned from the Regional Bank Volatility and the Impact on Registered Funds, June 18
  14. MFDF Director Discussion Series - Open Forum (Philadelphia), June 20
  15. New York YPEM Cornhole Classic, June 25
  16. Morningstar Investment Conference Conference 2024, Jun 26-27
  17. MFDF webinar - Mid-Year Tax Update for Registered Investment Companies, July 16
  18. MFDF Director Discussion Series - Open Forum via Zoom, July 17
  19. MFDF Director Discussion Series - Open Forum (New York), July 23
  20. 2024 MMI Annual Conference, Oct 15-17
  21. 5th Annual ETFGI Global ETFs Insight Summit, October 29
  22. MFDF webinar - Digital Assets in the Fund Space (part 2 of 2), November 7
  23. MFDF 2025 Directors' Institute, January 27 - 29, 2025
  24. MFDF 2025 Fund Governance & Regulatory Insights Conference, March 6 - 7, 2025




©All rights reserved to InvestmentWires, Inc. 1997-2024
14 Wall Street | 20th Floor | New York, NY 10005 | P: 212-331-8968 | F: 212-331-8998
Privacy Policy :: Terms of Use