Fundsters from the
ICI,
BlackRock and other mutual fund shops are working with the SEC to get money fund reform done without being labeled systemically important by U.S. Treasury Secretary
Tim Geithner.
Bloomberg and
Dow Jones report that industry insiders and SEC regulators are meeting today to try to compromise before Geithner's
FSOC (Financial Stability Oversight Council) acts.
After SEC commissioner
failed to approve chairman
Mary Schapiro's money fund plan this summer, Geithner
asked the new FSOC, which he leads, to step in and tell the SEC to make reforms or explain why not, and to consider labeling money funds systemically important to allow the Federal Reserve to regulate them.
$140-billion money fund manager BlackRock has already been trying to find middle ground. On September 27, the same day Geithner stepped in, BlackRock
offered its own compromise proposal, urging the adoption of money fund "circuit breakers".
Bloomberg reports that giant bank
HSBC, which manages $13 billion in U.S. money fund assets, is also offering suggestions to regulators. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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