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2013 Regulatory Challenges and Trends Facing Global Funds
By Dan Waters
December 28, 2012
ICI Global launched last autumn with 12 members and a mission to serve as a voice for global investment funds and their investors. It’s been quite a ride since: we now have 31 members who manage more than $1 trillion in registered fund assets in North America, Europe, and Asia. As 2012 draws to a close, we’re taking stock of our progress and looking ahead to the agenda we’ve formulated for 2013.
The Role of Funds in Financial Stability
Founded in the wake of the international financial crisis, ICI Global has made informing regulators and policymakers about the role of funds and fund managers in financial stability one of its top priorities. Much of the activity in this area has focused on the Financial Stability Board (FSB) and the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and their initiatives addressing nonbank financial intermediation conducted through the capital markets. This activity, which includes the operation of money market funds and securities lending, is sometimes pejoratively (and incorrectly) labelled “shadow banking.”
ICI Global has reached out vigorously to regulators and policymakers to emphasize the importance of market-based financing to the resilience and growth of national, regional, and global economies—and to ensure that they fully grasp the role and activities of funds in capital markets.
In particular, ICI Global has endeavoured to ensure that policymakers appreciate how money market funds work, the economic benefits that these funds bring, the reforms already implemented in different jurisdictions after the financial crisis, and the lack of justification for further bank-like regulations. In October 2012, ICI Global joined ICI, the European Fund and Asset Management Association, the Institutional Money Market Funds Association, and the Investment Funds Institute of Canada in convening an international summit on money market funds in Brussels to promote understanding among policymakers and market participants alike.
In the context of securities lending and repo, ICI Global recruited representatives of the FSB, New York Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission and the UK Financial Services Authority to participate in a securities lending and repo webinar to discuss in detail the proposed framework of reform.
In 2013, ICI Global will continue to focus on the role of funds in financial stability, particularly money market fund regulation and securities lending and repo proposals.
Transnational Regulatory Developments
The cross-border impact of regulations—extraterritoriality—has become an acute problem for regulated funds. Extraterritoriality is the creation of policy by one governmental authority that, wittingly or unwittingly, affects an activity spanning national boundaries or an organisation operating in more than one jurisdiction. ICI Global has focused on several transnational developments that we expect to remain key areas in the year ahead.
- European directives: European authorities are pursuing a number of initiatives with transnational impact, including the fifth and sixth iterations of UCITS, the finalisation of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD), and the reform of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II). Accordingly, ICI Global has maintained its engagement with officials at the European Commission, the European Parliament, and with national regulators on these and other policy efforts.
- The Volcker Rule: Through discussions with regulators and members around the world, ICI Global has worked to ensure that U.S. regulators and the international community understand the potential detrimental impact that the Volcker Rule, if adopted as proposed, will have on regulated funds outside the U.S. and on global securities markets.
- Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA): FATCA might serve as a model for tax compliance laws of other countries, so ICI Global has submitted comment letters, testified, and met extensively with responsible U.S. government officials to urge regulators to create workable rules. To help the international community understand FATCA and the model intergovernmental agreements that the U.S. Treasury developed to facilitate FATCA, ICI Global met with members, policymakers, and media in 10 leading fund jurisdictions in Europe, Africa, South America, and Asia. In addition, ICI Global recruited U.S. Treasury and OECD representatives to participate in a FATCA webinar.
Trading and Market Structure
Jurisdictions around the world face difficult questions about the rapidly evolving structure of their markets—most significantly, the impact of advancements in technology on trading. These and other questions demand continual close attention from the buyside.
ICI Global has undertaken to provide that focus on behalf of regulated funds and their long-term investors. One critical objective is to ensure that major jurisdictions take a consistent approach to regulation, because many global managers operate closely linked trading operations in multiple jurisdictions. This past year ICI Global commented on numerous proposals emanating from IOSCO and policymakers in Europe and Asia, including key aspects of MiFID II in Europe; IOSCO’s consultation on market surveillance; and the proposal concerning electronic trading from the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission. ICI Global also hosted its inaugural market structure conference in London during December.
As ICI Global advances its work on market issues, we hope in particular to expand the dialogue to include fund managers from all regions of the world.
Role of Funds in Pensions and Long-Term Savings
As fiscal and demographic pressures increase, many countries are studying ways to enhance retirement security. ICI Global is working to highlight the effectiveness of defined contribution retirement savings plans and to demonstrate that regulated funds are uniquely positioned to serve investors in such plans.
To further its advocacy for funds as an important component of retirement savings, ICI Global is conducting comparative research on the pension systems from nine countries, examining significant aspects such as coverage, fee‑reduction programs, participant financial education, changes to retirement ages, and more. Our research will help inform an ICI Global event—the Global Retirement Savings Conference: The Role of Investment Funds—scheduled for 26–27 June 2013 in Hong Kong.
Giving Funds a Global Voice
Thanks to the active involvement of members and the support of leaders in the global fund community, ICI Global has emerged as a respected voice for funds on the international stage. In the years ahead, we look forward to continuing our work on behalf of regulated funds, their investors, and sponsors around the world.
Dan Waters is the managing director of ICI Global.
TOPICS: ICI Global
In Case You Missed It: “Don't Enact Financial Transaction Taxes”
By Ianthé Zabel
December 21, 2012
The Hill has just posted a commentary from ICI President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens in which he discusses financial transaction taxes (FTTs) and why U.S. policymakers would be well-advised to avoid enacting them.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial MarketsGovernment Affairs
Fund Industry Leaders Urge “Sustainable Course” for U.S. Finances
By Mike McNamee
December 18, 2012
For the good of investors and all Americans, leaders across the fund industry have been outspoken about the necessity of the U.S. government taking a sound and sustainable approach to its finances.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial Markets
One Step Forward for Cross-Border OTC Derivative Regulatory Reform
By Giles Swan
December 6, 2012
International regulators recently published a statement updating the discussions amongst the main global financial centers about the framework that should regulate cross-border over-the-counter (OTC) derivative transactions.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsICI Global
Witnessing Asia’s Potential for Asset Managers
By Dan Waters and Giles Swan
December 3, 2012
Since our launch just over a year ago, ICI Global has made six trips to Asia to meet with regulators, members, and prospective members.
TOPICS: ICI Global
ICI Supports Legislation to Shield U.S. Investors from Foreign Financial Taxes
By Ianthé Zabel
November 30, 2012
ICI issued the following statement in support of H.R. 6616, a bill introduced by Representative Tom Price (R-GA) and designed to protect American investors from the application of extraterritorial financial transaction taxes.
On Money Market Funds, False Promises and Faulty Premises from The Wall Street Journal
By Paul Schott Stevens
November 20, 2012
The Wall Street Journal continues its efforts to tar money market funds with the stigma of “bailout” and to impose a solution that will destroy a product that plays a key role in financing the economy (“Liberating Money Funds,” Review & Outlook, November 19).
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Beware Recurring Misstatements on Money Market Funds
By Mike McNamee
November 16, 2012
With the recent action from the Financial Stability Oversight Council, money market funds are receiving extra attention these days from the news media.
Unfortunately, we still see instances where the coverage falls short. Stories and commentary continue to repeat myths and misconceptions about money market funds.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
An Operations Issue to Watch: Shortening the Settlement Cycle
By Martin A. Burns
November 15, 2012
Should the time between the execution of securities trades and settling payment be reduced in U.S. markets? The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC)—the financial industry utility that processes securities transactions, including those for the fund industry—has recently delved into this question, aided by a study from the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). The study examines the costs of moving to a shortened settlement cycle and the time it would take to pay off those costs given the potential savings from operational and efficiency gains.
TOPICS: Operations and Technology
Do U.S. Banks Rely Heavily on Money Market Funds? No.
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
November 14, 2012
Money market funds provide important short-term funding for the U.S. economy: these funds hold a total of $2.5 trillion in Treasury and agency securities, repurchase agreements, and other financial instruments.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
The FSOC Fails to Advance the Debate
By Mike McNamee
November 13, 2012
ICI President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens issued the following response to today’s meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC):
Regrettably, today’s action by the FSOC fails to advance the debate over how to make money market funds more resilient in the face of financial crisis. The Council apparently is proposing to send back to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) the very same concepts that a majority of the Commission’s members declined to issue for public comment in August.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
FATCA Must Not Undercut the Advantages That U.S. ETFs Offer Global Investors
By Keith Lawson and Ryan Lovin
November 6, 2012
In recent months, ICI has continued to engage closely with regulators to share our concerns and suggestions for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
More Time Is Needed to Ensure Effective FATCA Implementation
By Keith Lawson
November 6, 2012
On January 1, 2013, various rules implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) begin to take effect.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Paper Concludes Amortized Cost Is Appropriate for Money Market Funds
By Gregory Smith
November 2, 2012
A recently released paper examines the use of amortized cost by money market funds and concludes that its use is appropriate given the short-term, high-quality nature of these funds’ investments. The paper also discusses how use of amortized cost is well supported by more than 30 years of regulatory and accounting standard-setting consideration. Author Dennis R. Beresford is the Ernst & Young executive professor of accounting at the J. M. Tull School of Accounting, Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia. Beresford served as chairman of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) for more than ten years.
TOPICS: Money Market FundsOperations and Technology
Sticking to the Facts of Money Market Fund Regulation
By Dan Waters
October 25, 2012
In a recent column, the Evening Standard’s Anthony Hilton includes money market funds as part of a network he suggests forms “an unregulated zone” with “no oversight.”
IDC Paper Assists Boards in Oversight of ETFs
By Annette Capretta
October 19, 2012
The Independent Directors Council (IDC) has issued a new paper, Board Oversight of Exchange-Traded Funds in order to assist directors of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in performing their oversight responsibilities. The demand for ETFs has grown markedly as investors—both institutional and retail—increasingly turn to ETFs as investment options in their portfolios. With the increase in demand, sponsors have offered more ETFs with a greater variety of investment objectives. Our paper also may be useful for directors who do not currently oversee ETFs but wish to be more familiar with a board’s oversight role, including those whose fund groups may currently invest in ETFs or intend to launch ETFs in the future.
TOPICS: Fund GovernanceExchange-Traded Funds
The Facts and Principles That Must Guide Money Market Fund Reform
By Dan Waters
October 3, 2012
In Madrid this week, the board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions will choose their course of action on money market funds.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
Transparency and Inclusiveness Are Key to Addressing FATCA Challenges
By Keith Lawson
October 3, 2012
U.S. officials, their counterparts overseas, and representatives from the private sector continue to make impressive headway in implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
The Wall Street Journal’s Blind Spot on Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
October 3, 2012
The Wall Street Journal editors’ Sisyphean labors on money market fund regulation apparently have rendered them incapable of understanding the plain facts of the case.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
How to Build on the Success of 401(k)s
By Paul Schott Stevens
October 1, 2012
The trend toward 401(k) plans has strengthened Americans’ prospects for secure retirement, as I discussed recently in a speech before the Commonwealth Club of California.
TOPICS: NONE
Avoiding Disclosure Overload in Fund Financial Statements
By Gregory Smith
September 28, 2012
Shareholders of SEC-registered investment companies regularly receive detailed financial statements, a key part of the disclosure regime that produces transparency for fund investors.
TOPICS: Operations and Technology
Washington Post Column Repeats Money Market Fund Myths
By Ianthé Zabel
September 28, 2012
A recent column published by the Washington Post unfortunately repeats misperceptions and falsehoods about money market funds.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
ICI Responds to Geithner Letter to FSOC on Money Market Funds
By Ianthe Zabel
September 27, 2012
Today, ICI President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens made the following comment in response to a letter from U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to the members of the Financial Stability Oversight Council about proposed money market fund regulations.
TOPICS: Money Market FundsFund Regulation
U.S. Prime Money Market Funds Remain Cautious with Respect to Eurozone Holdings
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
September 21, 2012
Over the summer, prime money market funds marginally increased their holdings of eurozone issuers: from 12.2 percent of assets in June (chart) to 14.0 percent of assets in August. This increase was driven primarily by a rise in holdings of French assets (up to 5.1 percent from 4.3 percent in June) and in holdings of German assets (up to 5.1 percent from 4.1 percent in June).
Achieving Real Consensus on Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
September 21, 2012
We are disappointed to see Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary L. Schapiro (“In the Money-Market for More Oversight,” Wall Street Journal, Sept. 20) recycling the same arguments already rejected by the majority of her Commission colleagues as a basis for imposing so-called structural changes on money market funds. A “substantial consensus” exists, she argues, in favor of these changes—a consensus of bank regulators, pundits, and journalists.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
401(k) Plans: Key in Helping Americans Achieve Secure Retirement
By Paul Schott Stevens
September 19, 2012
I submitted the following letter to the New York Times in response to a recent column on 401(k) plans:
The recent article, “Should the 401(k) be Reformed or Replaced” (Business Day, September 11), asks the wrong question.
401(k) plans play a key role in helping Americans achieve a secure retirement. 401(k)s have a remarkable track record of success in providing Americans incentives to save, invest, and think long-term. As of March 2012, Americans held $3.4 trillion in 401(k) plans.
TOPICS: Retirement Policy401(k)
Ensuring Effective and Reasonable Data Collection on 529 Plans
By Tamara K. Salmon
September 17, 2012
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) has proposed a regulation that would increase the amount of information it collects on 529 educational savings plans. ICI supports the MSRB’s goal of having the information it needs to carry out its oversight responsibilities. However, we have serious concerns about this particular proposal. The MSRB must strike a careful balance to ensure that it receives meaningful information without imposing unreasonable requirements on those complying with the rules. We’ve recently expressed this view, along with several recommendations for the proposal, in a letter to the MSRB.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
Clearing Away the Misconceptions About Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
September 10, 2012
A recent New York Times column contains a slew of mischaracterizations regarding recent developments around money market funds.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Creating Derivatives Rules That Work Globally
By Jennifer S. Choi and Giles Swan
September 5, 2012
Derivatives—which include instruments such as options, futures, and swaps—are important portfolio management tools for funds worldwide, providing options and flexibility to fund managers as they carry out investment strategies and manage risks.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
Regulators and Industry Exchange FATCA Insights at ICI and ICI Global Webinar
By Keith Lawson
August 30, 2012
Senior officials from the U.S. Treasury Department and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), along with industry experts, recently engaged in a very informative webinar discussion regarding a model intergovernmental agreement (IGA) for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). The model IGA, as discussed in an earlier ICI Viewpoints post, was developed by the Treasury Department with the active cooperation of senior tax officials from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
The Public Deserves Accurate Reporting of the Debate over Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
August 30, 2012
The Financial Times has recently published a story that significantly distorts recent developments around U.S. money market funds and the actions of the U.S. fund industry. Let’s correct the record.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
JOBS Act Proposal Fails on Investor Protection
By Paul Schott Stevens
August 29, 2012
Today, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a proposal to implement an important part of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, or JOBS Act.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
Money Market Funds Work for Retirement Savers
By David Abbey
August 22, 2012
As they’ve examined possible changes for money market funds, regulators have heard from an extraordinary number of businesses, individuals, and organizations who have expressed their support for preserving the key characteristics of these funds.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Correcting the Record: The Power of the SEC’s 2010 Money Market Fund Reforms
By Mike McNamee
August 16, 2012
We’ve spent several days pointing out the myths and misstatements that regulators have put forward in their campaign to impose structural changes on money market funds.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Correcting the Record: Investor Protections in the SEC’s 2010 Money Market Fund Reforms
By Mike McNamee
August 15, 2012
We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: One of the most puzzling aspects of regulators’ campaign for changes to money market funds is their ability to ignore the dramatic improvements in these funds resulting from the regulatory reforms that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) enacted in 2010.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Correcting the Record: What Money Market Fund Investors Know
By Mike McNamee
August 14, 2012
U.S. money market funds are one of the most transparent financial products on the planet.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Correcting the Record: Uncovering Regulators’ False Narrative of 2008
By Mike McNamee
August 13, 2012
The regulators who are campaigning for structural changes in money market funds are building their case in part on distortions, exaggerations, and misunderstandings about money market funds, their investors, and their role in the financial markets.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Correcting the Record on Money Market Funds
By Mike McNamee
August 12, 2012
Bad information can’t give rise to good policy. Unfortunately, the regulators who are campaigning for structural changes in money market funds are building their case on information that is deeply flawed at best.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
The SEC’s Data Dump on Money Market Funds Is Misleading
By Paul Schott Stevens
August 10, 2012
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has finally delivered on Chairman Mary Schapiro’s June promise to give Congress data to back up her claim that money market fund sponsors “have voluntarily provided support to money market funds on more than 300 occasions.”
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Better Disclosure: Distinguishing 529 Plans from Traditional Municipal Bond Offerings
By Tamara K. Salmon
August 8, 2012
The fund industry strongly supports effective public disclosure to ensure that retail and institutional investors can get the information they need to make sound investments. For disclosure to be effective, however, it has to align with marketplace realities.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
How the Model Intergovernmental Agreement Reduces FATCA Burdens
By Keith Lawson
August 1, 2012
The U.S. Treasury Department has made significant progress with its July 26 release of a model intergovernmental agreement (IGA) for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). This model IGA—developed with the active cooperation of senior tax officials from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom—addresses many of the U.S. and global fund industries’ concerns with the substantial compliance burdens placed by FATCA on funds, their distributors, and their investors. ICI and ICI Global applaud this development and look forward to continuing our dialogue with these governments on the FATCA regulations and the IGAs they craft based on the model.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Financial Times Column Mischaracterizes the Debate over Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
August 1, 2012
We were disappointed to see how Gillian Tett’s recent Financial Times column (“The Achilles Heel of America’s Financial System”) mischaracterized the role of U.S. money market funds, the dramatic improvements resulting from the 2010 regulatory reforms, and the debate over further structural changes.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
A Look at Traditional IRA Investors’ Withdrawal Activity
By Sarah A. Holden
July 31, 2012
When and how do households take withdrawals from their traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs)? Shedding light on these questions is the goal of the latest installment of our IRA Investor Profile series, an ICI Research undertaking that analyzes account-level data of more than 7 million traditional IRAs.
TOPICS: Retirement Research
Summing Up Investors’ Strong Support for Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
July 26, 2012
In recent years, the discussion around money market funds has been as intense as it has been varied. Regulators have contemplated a wide range of reform proposals, in turn inspiring scores of citizens, organizations, businesses, and government officials to weigh in and share their views.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings Update—Eurozone Holdings Drop Close to December Levels
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
July 25, 2012
Prime money market funds reduced their holdings of eurozone issuers to 12.2 percent of assets in June from 15.5 percent of assets in May.
Three Gaps in the FSOC’s Account of Money Market Funds in the Financial Crisis
By Paul Schott Stevens
July 25, 2012
Given money market funds’ critical role in the economy and markets, the policy discussion around these funds should be precise and should demonstrate a clear understanding of the facts.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
The NY Fed’s Study: A Pretty Blueprint for an Unworkable Idea
By Paul Schott Stevens
July 23, 2012
The financial press last Friday was full of headlines like the following: “NY Fed Report Advocates Limiting Some Money-Market Fund Withdrawals.” I had to stop and ask myself, “Why is this news?”
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
New York Times Trips into the “Money Market Funds Are Banks” Trap
By Karrie McMillan
July 6, 2012
Floyd Norris’ column, “Money Market Funds and Their Allies Resist New Rules,” falls into the trap of concluding that money market mutual funds are banks. They’re not.
Preserving Money Market Funds Is Good for Corporate America
By Sean Collins and Mike McNamee
July 5, 2012
A recent DealBook column about money market funds distorts the truth and omits essential facts. We’d like to correct the record and review a few key points that the DealBook author, law professor Steven M. Davidoff, seems to have missed.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
UCITS V—Significant Changes for European Funds and Fund Managers
By Giles Swan
July 3, 2012
Today the European Commission adopted a proposal for revisions to the Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) framework, which governs cross-border retail investment funds in Europe.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalFund RegulationInternational
Fortune’s Assessment of Industry Stance on 401(k) Fees Is Misguided
By Sarah Holden and David Abbey
June 25, 2012
An article in the July 2 issue of Fortune about the 401(k) system mischaracterizes 401(k) fees and requires correction.
TOPICS: Retirement Policy401(k)
The Wall Street Journal Paints a False Picture of Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 22, 2012
No one with actual expertise in the money market could recognize the false picture of money market funds that the Wall Street Journal paints in a recent editorial (“A History of Money Funds,” June 22).
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Is SEC Data Misleading the Public on Sponsor Support of Money Market Funds?
By Sean Collins
June 21, 2012
In her testimony at a hearing today before the Senate Banking Committee, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Schapiro made this statement.
“Based on an SEC staff review, sponsors have voluntarily provided support to money market funds on more than 300 occasions since they were first offered in the 1970s.”
The SEC has not released its analysis, so we do not know precise dates or what exactly is being measured or counted. Nevertheless, we believe the estimate of 300 occasions is highly misleading.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
An Outcome for Money Market Funds That We Must Avoid
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 21, 2012
Today, I provided ICI’s views on the state of the money market fund industry at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee, “Perspectives on Money Market Mutual Fund Reforms.” My message to legislators was clear: Persistently viewing money market funds through the narrow prism of 2008, regulators are advancing plans for structural changes that would destroy money market funds, at great cost to investors, state and local governments, business, and the economy. We must avoid this outcome.
Money Market Fund Redemption Restrictions Would Drive Investors and Intermediaries Away from Money Market Funds
By Kathleen Joaquin
June 21, 2012
If you’re like most investors, money market funds mean stability, liquidity, and convenience.
Yet, some of these hallmark features could become a thing of the past if the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) imposes redemption restrictions on money market funds.
How would these redemption restrictions work?
The SEC’s contemplated redemption restrictions would essentially deny investors full use of their cash by escrowing a portion of a shareholder’s money market fund account on an ongoing basis. In the unlikely event that the fund breaks the dollar, the restricted shares would then be used to absorb first losses.
TOPICS: Money Market FundsFund RegulationOperations and Technology
What a Difference a Year Makes—Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings Update
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
June 14, 2012
As the eurozone debt crisis began to intensify last summer, prime money market funds took steps to gradually reduce their overall holdings of eurozone issuers.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Yes, Your Fund’s Board Is Watching Out for You
Amy Lancellotta
June 12, 2012
A recent Wall Street Journal headline posed the question, “Is Your Fund’s Board Watching Out for You?” (June 10, 2012).
TOPICS: Fund Governance
Forcing Money Market Funds to “Float”: Hurting Investors, Increasing Risk
Paul Schott Stevens
June 11, 2012
It’s rare to see the Wall Street Journal editorializing in favor of regulation for regulation’s sake.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
The Future of Retirement and the Strengths of the 401(k) System
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 7, 2012
What is the future of retirement? In remarks today to Town Hall Los Angeles, I made the case that the 401(k) system will play a crucial role in building that future.
TOPICS: 401(k)Retirement Policy
Facts and Common Sense Undercut Distorted Demos View of 401(k)s
By Brian Reid
May 31, 2012
By many measures, the 401(k) system has been a tremendous success, helping millions of American workers prepare for retirement.
TOPICS: 401(k)Retirement Policy
The SEC Should Protect All Investors from Misleading Hedge Fund Ads
By Robert C. Grohowski
May 31, 2012
In early April, President Obama signed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, or JOBS Act, into law. Most of the JOBS Act has little to do with the fund industry, but one provision—the repeal of a long-standing ban on advertising private securities offerings—has the potential to open the door to misleading ads for private funds, such as hedge funds. To be clear, these won’t be mutual fund advertisements; nonetheless, we are concerned that misleading ads for any fund will harm investors, cause confusion, and damage the reputation of all funds in the marketplace.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
The Importance of Context in the Discussion Around Money Market Funds
By Karrie McMillan
May 31, 2012
In the debate around money market funds, we’ve seen too many instances of participants in the discussion taking positions or making assertions without properly putting things in context. This is troubling, because a poor sense of the big picture can increase the risk of bad policy outcomes for funds and investors.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
FATCA’s Challenges for Global Investment Funds
By Keith Lawson
May 30, 2012
The rules proposed to implement the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) pose a number of serious challenges for ICI Global members. ICI Global’s recent comment letter to the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) made several recommendations on how the FATCA rules should be amended so that ICI Global’s members—regulated funds that are publicly offered to investors in leading jurisdictions worldwide—can overcome these challenges without compromising the tax compliance benefits contemplated by FATCA.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Improving FATCA: Three Key Areas
By Keith Lawson
May 30, 2012
Congress enacted the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) in 2010 in response to efforts by certain U.S. taxpayers to hide assets and income subject to U.S. tax. To enhance tax compliance by U.S. taxpayers, FATCA imposes significant new customer identification, reporting, and withholding obligations on both U.S. and foreign financial institutions. Any foreign financial institution that fails to attain FATCA compliance will suffer 30 percent withholding tax on all payments from U.S. sources, including income receipts and sales proceeds.
TOPICS: Taxes
Prime Money Market Funds’ Eurozone Holdings Down 50 Percent over The Last Year
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
May 21, 2012
Securities of eurozone issuers accounted for 15.7 percent of assets of U.S. prime money market funds in April, up from 14.6 percent in March.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
MarketWatch Misunderstands Important Role of Mutual Fund Directors
By Amy Lancellotta
May 15, 2012
Shareholders deserve better than a recent MarketWatch column’s clear misunderstanding of a mutual fund director’s work. To correct just a few points:
TOPICS: Fund Governance
Investment Management in a Rapidly Changing World
By Jennifer Smith
May 11, 2012
Industry leaders exchanged views on developments in China, the ongoing European debt crisis, and how the United States is doing compared to other major economies in a lively and insightful session at ICI’s General Membership Meeting.
TOPICS: Events
Managing Chaos!
By Andrew Gillies
May 11, 2012
Actors dying on set, getting held up at a Chinese border crossings at cost of $500,000 per day, having filming disrupted by floods, sandstorms, snowstorms, and diarrhea outbreaks: George Lucas has seen it all.
“In the movie business,” he told the closing session of ICI’s 54th General Membership Meeting, “every day, something is going to go wrong.” Lucas, founder of Lucasfilm, Ltd., was interviewed by Ariel Investments President Mellody Hobson, ICI Governor and Chairman of ICI’s GMM Planning Committee.
TOPICS: Events
A Regulatory Update Featuring Mary Schapiro
By Rachel McTague
May 11, 2012
Restoring the reputation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), market volatility and market structure, financial literacy, and the SEC’s efforts to make further structural changes to money market funds took center stage as SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro fielded questions from Mellody Hobson, Chairman of the ICI General Membership Meeting and President of Ariel Investments, on May 11.
TOPICS: Events
Operations and Technology Leadership Roundtable
By Candice Gullett
May 10, 2012
At the Leadership Roundtable for the Operations and Technology Conference, leaders from the industry answered questions posed by the moderator, Barry Benjamin—U.S. and Global Asset Management Leader for PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP—as well as questions from the audience. The major issues the panel discussed were people, regulatory change, technology, and social media.
TOPICS: Events
Managing Global Funds in Challenging Times
By Andrew Gillies
May 10, 2012
Immense opportunities lie ahead for global fund managers, agreed panelists at a session at ICI’s 54th General Membership Meeting.
“We are only seeing the tip of the iceberg,” said Vijay C. Advani, Executive Vice President, Global Advisory Services at Franklin Resources, Inc. Advani, whose firm draws half of its flows from outside the United States, cited a recent survey predicting the population of individuals defined as middle class will increase from 1.5 billion currently to 5 billion by 2030.
TOPICS: Events
GMM Leadership Panel: Lasting Values for Challenging Times
By Mike McNamee
May 10, 2012
Helping investors cope with economic risks in Europe and the United States, select products that best meet their financial goals, and manage expectations in a turbulent environment with rising interest rates are among the top challenges for fund advisers, a panel of industry leaders told ICI’s General Membership Meeting.
TOPICS: Events
Luncheon with Keynote Speaker Howard Schultz
By Andrew Gillies
May 10, 2012
“What is the role and responsibility of business leaders, corporations, CEOs, when you know that the path that the country is going down is not the right path, and people are being left behind?” That was the question posed to ICI’s 54th General Membership Meeting by Starbucks Chairman, President, and CEO Howard Schultz during his lunchtime keynote address.
TOPICS: Events
The Media, the Medium, and the Message
By Miriam Bridges
May 10, 2012
In a candid conversation exploring how the mutual fund industry must engage “old” and “new” media to communicate their messages, panelists Arianna Huffington, President and Editor in Chief of the Huffington Post Media Group, F. William McNabb III, Chairman and CEO of Vanguard, and Gillian Tett, U.S. Managing Editor of the Financial Times shared their perspectives on today’s media and messaging.
TOPICS: Events
Fund Distribution: Evolving Challenges and Complexities
By Candice Gullet
May 10, 2012
“Fund Distribution: Evolving Challenges and Complexities,” a joint session for the General Membership Meeting and the Operations and Technology Conference, explored the implications for the fund industry of the continuing transition to fee-based advisory programs, trends in product development, and the use of social media. Bob Cunha, Principal at Market Metrics, moderated the discussion, which focused significantly on the increasing use of the Rep as PM (representative as portfolio manager) platform. One of the main arguments against these models is portfolio turnover and the relatively large volume of trading.
TOPICS: Events
Serving Retirement Savers in a Changing Regulatory Environment
By Mike McNamee
May 10, 2012
The 401(k) and other defined contribution plans are evolving toward new structures and products to help participants solve their savings and investment challenges, and new regulations now under consideration need to be crafted to support that trend, a panel of retirement plan experts told ICI’s General Membership Meeting.
TOPICS: Events
At GMM Policy Forum, Secretary of Education Duncan Offers Steps to Address Education Crisis
By Miriam Bridges
May 9, 2012
America faces a skills crisis and other deep challenges in education, said U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan at the annual GMM policy forum, part of ICI’s 54th General Membership Meeting. In a conversation with ICI President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens, Secretary Duncan offered a range of ways to address these challenges, including specific recommendations for the fund industry.
TOPICS: EventsInvestment Education
Our Commitment to Advancing the Interests of Investors
By Paul Schott Stevens
May 9, 2012
This week, the fund industry gathers in Washington, DC, for ICI’s General Membership Meeting. This annual conference, which draws together several robust programs, offers us a chance to engage with colleagues across the industry landscape, to deepen our understanding of our businesses, and reaffirm the values that have made this industry one that serves more than 90 million shareholders.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsEvents
Independent Directors and Trustees Deeply Concerned About More Changes to Money Market Funds
By Amy Lancellotta
May 9, 2012
As the SEC continues to consider flawed proposals that would have far-reaching consequences for money market funds, two groups representing mutual fund independent directors and trustees released a joint statement registering their deep concerns about any further changes to the regulation of these funds.
TOPICS: Fund GovernanceMoney Market Funds
ICI Research Shows That Commodity Mutual Funds Are Not Driving Commodity Markets
By Paul Schott Stevens
May 9, 2012
Investors benefit greatly from funds that provide investors exposure to a broad basket of commodities—from energy to precious metals to agricultural products. These investments offer valuable portfolio diversification, because commodities prices historically have not been strongly correlated with stock or bond returns. And as raw materials for the goods that businesses and consumers buy, commodities offer investors an opportunity to protect themselves from inflation.
TOPICS: Commodity Investments
Rulemaking Must Reflect Realities of Funds’ Access to Shareholder Information
By Kathleen Joaquin and Tamara K. Salmon
April 30, 2012
We are seeing a troubling development in Washington. In high-profile areas such as money market funds and anti–money laundering measures, regulators continue to pursue rules premised on the notion that mutual funds know or can obtain detailed information on each of their underlying shareholders.
TOPICS: Money Market FundsFund RegulationOperations and Technology
Allegations Made in Indiana University Study Are Speculative and Dubious
By Robert C. Grohowski
April 27, 2012
Thanks to mutual funds’ structure and regulation, fund investors enjoy a number of protections. One among them is that advisers to funds, as well as directors on fund boards, have fiduciary duties. This means they have a fundamental, legal obligation to act in the best interests of the fund—and its shareholders—with undivided loyalty and utmost good faith.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
Article in The Week Misrepresents Americans’ View of 401(k)s
By Sarah Holden
April 26, 2012
Contrary to recent reporting by The Week (“401(k)s Are Failing Millions of Americans,” April 22, 2012), American workers both value their 401(k) retirement savings plans and are confident that 401(k)s will help them meet their retirement goals.
TOPICS: 401(k)Retirement Research
Data Update: Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
April 20, 2012
In October and December, we discussed how portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds have addressed the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone. In February, we responded to commentators’ suggestions that U.S. prime money market funds’ increase in eurozone holdings in January reflected a renewed appetite for risk.
Washington Post Mischaracterizes the Strongest Federal Securities Law
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 20, 2012
Today I submitted the following letter to the editor of the Washington Post:
Without a doubt, our federal securities laws and the regulations that implement them may be improved and are worthy subjects for journalistic scrutiny. David Hilzenrath wasted an opportunity to advance that discussion with his recent article. Rather than focus on genuine weaknesses in the system, he mischaracterizes and criticizes the strongest law in the federal securities arsenal and a regulatory tool that has brought untold benefits to investors.
TOPICS: Fund Regulation
Key Data Undercut Critics’ Arguments on ETFs and Intraday Volatility
By Rochelle Antoniewicz
April 19, 2012
Over the past year, several news stories have focused on stock market volatility, particularly the price swings that occur in the hour prior to the U.S. market’s 4:00 p.m. close. “What’s Behind That Wild Final Hour of Trading?” asked CNNMoney last November.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded Funds
Commodity Price Trends: It’s Fundamentals, Not Funds
By Chris Plantier
April 17, 2012
As gasoline prices approach a national average of $4 per gallon, the role that financial investment flows into commodities markets play is once again in focus. In a forthcoming paper, I examine the relative importance of economic fundamentals and financial investment flows in explaining broad commodity price movements.
All Funds and Investors Have a Stake in Our Challenge to CFTC
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 17, 2012
ICI and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have joined together in a legal challenge to a rule by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). We are asking the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to vacate and set aside the CFTC’s recent amendments to its Rule 4.5.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsCommodity Investments
Money Market Funds and Financial Stability: Reason and the Facts Must Guide Regulators
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 4, 2012
We are pleased to see that the Financial Stability Oversight Council continues to take a thoughtful approach on the issue of designating “systemically important financial institutions.” That’s in stark contrast to some commentators, who would have regulators rush to put money market funds under that designation. As ICI has argued in a number of venues, a “SIFI” designation is inappropriate for these funds and plainly would run counter to facts and reason. Let’s review why.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Addressing the Economic and National Security Implications of Our Fiscal Crisis
By Paul Schott Stevens
March 30, 2012
As expressed forcefully by a group of fund industry leaders last November, America’s current budgetary overreach has clear and dire implications for the 90 million investors that ICI member companies serve. Today, I elaborated on those implications in a speech before a gathering of the National Strategy Forum in Chicago. What does our recent and unprecedented buildup of debt mean for our economy and our national security?
TOPICS: Financial Markets
What Happens If ‘Floating’ Funds Don’t Float?
By Jane Heinrichs and Greg Smith
March 29, 2012
Some recent coverage—including the CFOJournal blog of the Wall Street Journal—suggests that worries about the impact on investors of forcing money market funds to float their net asset value (NAV) may be overblown. The story goes like this: the mark-to-market prices of money market funds, and the experience of a few money market funds that already operate with a floating NAV, show that fluctuations in the “floating” value would be minuscule—rarely large enough to change the penny-rounded per-share price of the fund. So if floating funds don’t float, what’s the harm?
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
Bringing Money Market Funds’ European Investments into Focus
By Brian Reid
March 21, 2012
In his written testimony on Capitol Hill today, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke created a fuzzy and incomplete picture of money market funds and their investments in European-headquartered financial institutions. Whether by intent or not, the Fed testimony left the impression—magnified by media accounts—that these funds have a unique and substantial vulnerability to any future turmoil in overseas markets.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Money Market Funds: Let’s Stick to the Facts
By: Brian Reid
March 6, 2012
As a banking regulator who was in office during the worst banking crisis since the Great Depression, Sheila Bair knows that banks and money market funds are not the same. Yet in her recent Huffington Post piece, Bair blurs vital distinctions in an effort to convince the reader that money market funds are in fact extremely risky banks—and thus need a stiff dose of banking regulation.
CFTC Decision Imposes Inconsistent Requirements on Funds, Hurts Shareholders
By: Karrie McMillan
March 5, 2012
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) recently finalized a rule—known as Rule 4.5—that will require many advisers to mutual funds that invest in commodity futures, commodity options, and swaps to register with the agency. This development is deeply troubling for at least two reasons:
- It will impose duplicative and fundamentally inconsistent requirements on these funds.
- Shareholders will pay the ultimate price for this rule in the way of increased fees and fewer investment options.
TOPICS: Fund RegulationCommodity Investments
The Honest Truth About Forcing Money Market Funds to Float
By Brian Reid
February 29, 2012
Advocates for further regulation of money market funds string together a loose chain of arguments to create the impression that money market funds are bank products, rather than investment securities. From this, they conclude that these funds need bank-like regulation. Sallie Krawcheck’s commentary in today’s Wall Street Journal is the latest effort in this campaign.
TOPICS: Money Market FundsFund Regulation
The ‘Hue and Cry’ over Money Market Funds Is a Chorus of Many Voices
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 24, 2012
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro took aim at money market funds again today, this time lamenting “the hue and cry being raised by the industry” against the proposals that she champions.
Regulating Funds’ Use of Derivatives: Striking a Fine Balance
By Robert C. Grohowski and Mara L. Shreck
February 23, 2012
Much has been written about the dangers of derivatives, from Warren Buffett’s quote about “financial weapons of mass destruction” to media coverage of derivatives’ role in various aspects of the financial crisis, such as the downfall of AIG. Far less attention has been paid to the benefits that derivatives can provide for mutual funds and their investors—allowing funds to mitigate risks, manage portfolios more efficiently, and access new strategies.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
The (Dis)Connection Between ETFs and Market Volatility
By Rochelle Antoniewicz
February 23, 2012
In the past year, many commentators have charged that exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are responsible for driving stock market volatility to unprecedented extremes.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded Funds
Prime Money Market Funds’ Eurozone Holdings Remain Low
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
February 23, 2012
Securities of eurozone issuers accounted for 14.0 percent of assets of U.S. prime money market funds in January, up from 11.9 percent in December (chart). This increase was driven by a rise in French assets (up from 3.2 percent to 4.6 percent) and by a rise in asset holdings of other eurozone issuers (up from 8.7 percent to 9.4 percent).
Proposal to Implement the Volcker Rule Raises Deep Concerns for U.S. Registered Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 14, 2012
Congress enacted the provision of the Dodd-Frank Act known as the Volcker Rule to restrict banks from using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients—something known as “proprietary trading.”
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded FundsFund Regulation
Proposal to Implement Volcker Rule Raises Significant Issues for Regulated Funds Globally
By Dan Waters
February 14, 2012
Congress enacted the provision of the Dodd-Frank Reform Act known as the Volcker Rule to restrict banks from sponsoring and investing in hedge funds (so-called covered funds) and using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients—something known as “proprietary trading.”
TOPICS: ICI GlobalFund RegulationInternational
A Bad Diagnosis Could Be Fatal for Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 13, 2012
Bad diagnosis leads to bad prescriptions—and the errors can be fatal. The Wall Street Journal’s lead editorial today, “Money Fund Make-Over,” falls into that trap.
The Rx of this editorial is premised on the notion that money market fund investors don’t understand that they’re just that—investors. Yet every fund’s prospectus provides a clear description of all risks and rewards associated with the fund. No fund offers any expectation of an explicit or implicit guarantee by the fund sponsor or the U.S. government. That message is repeated in virtually every communication from money market funds to investors.
Amended CFTC Rule 4.5 Appears to Impose Unnecessary Burdens on Many Mutual Fund Advisers
By: Rachel McTague
February 10, 2012
On February 8, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued amended Rule 4.5, a regulation governing commodity pool operators (CPOs), as well as a related rule proposal. Among other changes, the amendments to the rule significantly narrow the ability of registered investment advisers to rely on the rule’s exclusion from regulation as a CPO. As a result, many advisers will be required to register with the CFTC even though they are already regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
TOPICS: Fund RegulationCommodity Investments
Achieving the Proper Balance on FATCA
By Keith Lawson
February 8, 2012
ICI and ICI Global have engaged actively with Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) as they have crafted the proposed Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) regulations, which were issued today. Our message has been simple: ensure that the tax compliance benefits anticipated by FATCA, which we support strongly, justify the costs that will be imposed.
TOPICS: Taxes
The SEC’s Money Market Fund Plans—Scoring a Hat Trick Against Investors and the Economy
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 7, 2012
The Wall Street Journal reports today that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) continues to pursue regulatory changes for money market funds that will harm investors, damage financing for businesses and state and local governments, and jeopardize a still-fragile economic recovery. Quite a regulatory hat trick.
An Important Step in the Process of Enhancing 401(k) Fee Disclosure
By Ianthé Zabel
February 3, 2012
On February 2, the Department of Labor (DOL) issued final regulations concerning 401(k) disclosures. The rule requires companies that administer defined contribution plans to disclose administrative and investment costs to employers who sponsor the plans.
TOPICS: 401(k)Retirement Policy
Featured Chart: Americans Say Retirement Saving Incentives Should Be a National Priority
By Sarah A. Holden
January 26, 2012
Stresses on the U.S. government budget have resulted in a reexamination of national priorities with respect to taxes and government spending. Against that backdrop, our survey of 3,000 U.S. households for our recent research report—America’s Commitment to Retirement Security: Investor Attitudes and Action—contained a new question. Households were asked: “Do you agree that continuing to provide incentives to encourage retirement saving should be a national priority?”
TOPICS: Retirement Research
Fund Investment in Commodities Provides Opportunity and Diversification for Investors
By Karen Lau Gibian and Rachel H. Graham
January 26, 2012
On Capitol Hill, a hearing at the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI) raises questions about mutual fund investors’ ability to get commodity exposure in their portfolios and suggests the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) should no longer allow this type of investment.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial MarketsFund RegulationCommodity Investments
ETF Basics: The Creation and Redemption Process and Why It Matters
By Mara Shreck and Shelly Antoniewicz
January 19, 2012
One benefit of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) is that they give investors access to a range of strategies and indexes, with the flexibility of transacting throughout the trading day at prices that typically approximate the value of the fund’s underlying portfolio. To see how ETFs accomplish this, one must understand how ETF shares are created and redeemed.
TOPICS: Exchange-Traded Funds
ICI Registers Deep Concerns with the Volcker Rule Proposal
By Rachel H. Graham
January 18, 2012
The “Volcker Rule” provision in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was written to restrict banks from using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients. While the Volcker Rule was not directed at U.S. mutual funds and other registered investment companies, its proposed implementation raises deep concerns for the U.S. registered fund industry.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
Volcker Rule Implementation Threatens Global Investment Funds and Their Shareholders
By Dan Waters
January 18, 2012
The proposed implementation of the so-called Volcker Rule has serious implications for global investment funds and their shareholders. Like our U.S.-based ICI colleagues, ICI Global has today voiced concerns about this rule in a statement to the U.S. House subcommittees examining how the rule will impact markets and investors.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
Data Update: Money Market Funds and the Eurozone Debt Crisis
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
January 13, 2012
In October and December, we discussed how portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds have addressed the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone. Here is a look at the latest monthly data on these funds’ holdings by home country of issuer. Holdings of French issuers continued to fall in December, and almost 80 percent of these French holdings are either short-dated collateralized repurchase agreements or other instruments that mature in seven days or less.
Copyright © 2013 by the Investment Company Institute
