Fiduciary Management Associates (FMA) has added two senior investment professionals, John Nelson and Xiaoling Wang, to its investment research and analysis staff.
Nelson and Wang both join FMA as research analysts. Nelson
will have analytical responsibility for the financial services sector, and Wang
will be responsible for analyzing the basic materials and utility
sectors.
FMA manages institutional small cap value and small-mid cap
value separate account portfolios for a client base that includes public funds,
Taft-Hartley funds, corporate retirement plans and not-for-profit clients. The
firm is also the sole sub-adviser for the John Hancock Small Company Fund.
Nelson has 14 years of industry experience, including eight years
as a financial services research analyst. Prior to joining FMA, he was an
equity research analyst and portfolio manager at Gofen and Glossberg and an
equity research analyst at William Blair.
Wang also has 14 years of industry experience, including four
years as an investment analyst with responsibility for the materials, energy
and industrial sectors at Ohio Public Employees Retirement System. Prior to
that, she was a financial analyst at Citigroup and an associate at
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
SEC Adopts Reforms to Increase Transparency of Investments
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted
revisions to rules governing the disclosure, reporting, and offering process
for asset-backed securities (ABS), as well as new requirements for credit
rating agencies.
The agency said the ABS regulations are to enhance
transparency, better protect investors and facilitate efficient capital
formation in the securitization market. The new rules, among other things,
require loan-level disclosure for certain assets, such as residential and
commercial mortgages and automobile loans. The rules also provide more time for
investors to review and consider a securitization offering, revise the
eligibility criteria for using an expedited offering process known as “shelf
offerings,” and make important revisions to reporting requirements.
The SEC also adopted requirements for issuers, underwriters,
and third-party due diligence services to promote the transparency of the
findings and conclusions of third-party due diligence regarding asset-backed
securities.
“These are strong reforms to protect America’s investors by
enhancing the disclosure requirements for asset-backed securities and by making
it easier for investors to review and access the information they need to make
informed investment decisions,” says SEC Chair Mary Jo White. “Unlike during
the financial crisis, investors will now be able to independently conduct due
diligence to better assess the credit risk of asset-backed securities.”
The new rules and amendments regarding credit rating
agencies, which implement 14 rulemaking requirements under the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, apply to credit rating agencies
registered with the Commission as nationally recognized statistical rating
organizations (NRSROs).
The
new requirements for NRSROs address internal controls, conflicts of interest,
disclosure of credit rating performance statistics, procedures to protect the
integrity and transparency of rating methodologies, disclosures to promote the
transparency of credit ratings, and standards for training and competence of
credit analysts. The requirements provide for an annual certification by the
CEO as to the effectiveness of internal controls and additional certifications
to accompany credit ratings attesting that the rating was not influenced by
other business activities.
“This expansive package of reforms will strengthen the
overall quality of credit ratings, enhance the transparency of credit rating
agencies and increase their accountability,” says White. “Today’s reforms will
help protect investors and markets against a repeat of the conduct and
practices that were central to the financial crisis.”
Asset-backed securities are created by buying and bundling
loans, such as residential loans, commercial mortgage loans, auto loans and
leases. Providers then create securities backed by those loan assets for sale
to investors. A bundle of loans is often divided into separate securities with
varying levels of risk and return potential. Payments made by the borrowers on
the underlying loans are passed on to investors in the ABS.
ABS holders, including pension funds, suffered significant losses during
the 2008 financial crisis, the SEC explained. The crisis revealed that many
investors in the securitization market were not fully aware of the risks
underlying the securitized assets. Investors tended to over-rely on
ratings assigned by credit rating agencies, which in many cases did not
appropriately evaluate the credit risk of the securities. The crisis also
exposed a lack of transparency and oversight by the principal officers in the
securitization transactions. The revised rules are designed to address these
problems and to enhance investor protection.