Ex-SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro
lost her fight to require money market mutual funds to disclose their net asset value (NAV) fluctuations. Yet at least one big money fund shop is belatedly heeding Schapiro's call. Kirsten Grind of the
Wall Street Journal reports that
Goldman Sachs [
profile] will start disclosing daily shadow NAVs for its money funds.
Citing
Crane Data, the
WSJ says Goldman's $133 billion in money fund assets make it the eighth-largest U.S. money fund shop. The daily shadow NAV disclosures will start online today for Goldman's three U.S. commercial paper funds, the paper reports, with the six U.S. government and tax-exempt funds following suit next week and the six offshore funds following suit before 2014.
Money funds normally report a stable $1 NAV, and they're allowed to fluctuate from $0.9950 to $1.0050. Among other reform ideas, Schapiro had proposed requiring money funds to disclose those fluctuations. That shadow NAV disclosure idea met
fierce resistance from the money fund industry.
iMoneyNet managing editor
Mike Krasner talked to the
WSJ for the article. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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