InvestmentNews has an
article yesterday on the possible implications that could arise should the proposal put forth by the
National Futures Association in June be approved.
The NFA wants mutual funds investing in futures contracts to register with the
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The funds are already
registered with the
SEC. Being registered with both agencies would help improve investor
disclosure, according to the NFA.
“I spoke to a fund company that estimated the additional costs would be $900,000 to $1 million a year for legal, compliance and accounting,” Dechert attorney
Matthew Kerfoot told InvestmentNews.
The fund company was not identified.
Others who weighed in on the issue are: Gemini Fund Services president
Andrew Rogers, who said the proposal could delay the process for rolling out new funds; and Vanguard Group principal
John Hollyer, who said the "overlap is going to be an additional
complicating factor." 
Edited by:
Armie Margaret Lee
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