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SEC May Put the Squeeze on Pricey Index Funds
A recent Los Angeles Times article reported that the SEC has taken an interest in one of the mutual fund world's more vexing mysteries: Why do some index mutual funds cost so darn much? What's most remarkable about the SEC's heightened interest in this area is that it seems to signal a shift in the commission's rulemaking posture. Rewind two months to the Alliance Capital Management settlement--under which Alliance agreed to institute firmwide expense reductions at the behest of New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer--and you find the commission singing a very different, free-market tune. For example, consider the following statement--explaining the SEC's opposition to the fee-reduction provision of the Alliance settlement--which was included in the SEC press release announcing the settlement: "[The commission] see(s) no legitimate basis . . . to act as a 'rate-setter' and determine how much mutual fund customers should pay for the services they receive in the future . . . This decision is better left to informed consumers, independent and vigorous mutual fund boards, and the free market." In explaining their current interest in fees levied by index funds, SEC officials have reportedly said that their efforts are aimed at enforcing existing federal securities law rather than regulating expenses. Logic suggests that the federal laws in question are those governing a fund board's responsibility to negotiate fees with the advisor. If so, the SEC's heightened scrutiny of index funds could signal a reconsideration of whether fund boards have been sufficiently "vigorous" when negotiating fees on shareholders' behalf. A Commodity Conundrum However, you wouldn't know it judging from the diversity of fees levied on index funds tracking the same benchmark. Take the current crop of S&P 500 Index funds, for instance. The asset-weighted average expense ratio of S&P 500 Index funds remains a pleasingly low 0.22% (though that figure jumps to 0.28% when Vanguard 500 Index Fund (Nasdaq: VFINX - News ) is excluded). However, when one considers the arithmetic average (a far loftier 0.73%), median (0.60%), and range (from Vanguard 500 Index's 0.18% expense ratio to AAL Large Company Index's (Nasdaq: BLCIX - News ) 1.94% price tag), it becomes obvious that not everyone has gotten the message that this is a quintessential commodity business. 12b-1 Blues In aggregate, the impact of 12b-1 fees on retail S&P 500 Index fund expense ratios is stark: Offerings that levy a 12b-1 fee cost, on average, 57 basis points more than funds unburdened by such charges. In other, more odious cases, good ol' fashioned avarice might be the best explanation for high fees. For example, the B share class of Morgan Stanley S&P 500 Index (Nasdaq: SPIBX - News ) sports an absurd 1.50% expense ratio. An Explosive Debate Indeed, the stakes in the cost battle are enormous. Thus, the SEC is likely to meet resistance as it investigates the issue. While low costs greatly improve a fund's chance of outperforming peers while also moderating risk, the same high costs that have hampered fund performance have been an absolute boon to the fund industry. It's the collision of these opposing forces that has made the debate concerning fees so explosive. But the SEC has an unprecedented opportunity to rise above that rancor by making boards more accountable for the fees they levy. We urge the commission to seize it. Back to Original Article: Mortgage News You Can Use
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