Thanks to the
infamous collapse last month of the
Third Avenue Focused Credit Fund [
profile],
regulators are
scrutinizing the rest of the high-yield bond mutual fund marketplace.
Sarah Lynch of
Reuters reports that "within weeks of the Third Avenue event" SEC examiners reached out to ask mutual fund and ETF shops about the challenges of pricing less liquid securities. The wire service cites both unnamed sources and a copy of the SEC's letter.
| Norm Champ Harvard Law School Lecturer on Law | |
Barron's and
Wall Street Journal also reported on the news.
The SEC's examiners reportedly wanted: "daily internal illiquidity calculations" for August 31 through December 15, "a list of large fund shareholders, daily inflow and outflow data and any disclosures concerning 'liquidity, quality of portfolio composition and/or redemption activity for each fund.'" Fundsters had just one day to hand in more than half of the stuff and an extra week to gather and hand in the rest.
"I think that SEC examiners are better now at reacting quickly to these problem situations,"
Norm Champ tells
Reuters. Champ
stepped down a year ago as head of the SEC's investment management division.
News of the SEC's interest in liquidity issues at junk bond mutual funds and ETFs comes shortly after the regulatory agency
revealed that liquidity controls will be an examination priority this year for its office of compliance inspections and examinations. Also this week, mutual fund trade group
ICI expressed support for the SEC trying to formalize liquidity risk management programs at mutual funds while offering critiques on other pieces of the idea. The SEC
issued that proposal back in September. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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