August 22, 2012
--- Thirteen
trade associations filed a comment letter with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), outlining objections to a proposal that would increase
regulation on money market funds. ---
The SEC is
proposing changes to the regulation of funds, including requiring the funds to
abandon the stable $1 net asset value (NAV) in favor of a floating value, as
well as combining significant capital requirements with holdback restrictions
on redemptions.
The
requirements would cause administrative difficulties for retirement plan
administrators and fiduciaries, the groups contended, and fundamentally alter
the structure of money market funds, making them far less desirable for
retirement savers and the plans they participate in.
If passed,
defined benefit (DB) plan fiduciaries may exit money market funds that are
subject to redemption holdbacks because the funds would no longer meet the
plans’ needs for ready liquidity. Employee Retirement Income Security Act
(ERISA) fiduciaries would be required to examine these changes in light of
their fiduciary duty to plans and participants. The proposal under
consideration would require that held back or restricted shares be used to make
the fund whole if a fund cannot maintain its $1 NAV. Under ERISA, however,
shares “held back” or restricted would continue to be considered ERISA plan
assets. It is not clear that an ERISA fiduciary could allow the plan’s assets
to be invested under these conditions consistent with regulatory requirements
associated with the management of plan assets under ERISA.
Recordkeeping
and administration complications could arise, the groups pointed out. Financial
intermediaries are often responsible for the applicable recordkeeping,
communications, tax reporting, and other operational and servicing functions
associated with retirement plans. To implement floating values or redemption
restrictions, intermediaries would need to change thousands of systems that
support broker/dealers, banks, insurance companies, trusts, 401(k)
recordkeepers, or other institutions tasked with processing money market fund
transactions for their clients.