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Home >  Events >  Series >  Is There a Better Way to Regulate Mutual Funds? Event Series
Is There a Better Way to Regulate Mutual Funds? Event Series
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In September 2005, Peter J. Wallison of AEI and Robert E. Litan of the Brookings Institution began a study to evaluate the current regulatory framework for mutual funds.  At the close of the study, the scholars will publish their findings and recommendations for change if any seem warranted.  Ultimately, the purpose of the study will be to determine whether there is a better way to bring collective investment to American investors.

When Congress passed the Investment Company Act of 1940—under which the Securities and Exchange Commission regulates mutual funds and other investment companies—mutual funds were a rarity, the industry was a fraction of its current size, and most investment companies were managed by corporate boards instead of outside investment advisers.  Today, however, the mutual fund industry manages over $9 trillion in assets spread across nearly 8,000 funds.  It would not be surprising, then, to discover that a law passed sixty-five years ago is now out of date, and that the 92 million individual investors in mutual funds and other investment companies are paying the price for outdated regulation.

Over the course of this study, Wallison and Litan will host a series of approximately fifteen conferences dealing with various economic and regulatory issues surrounding the mutual fund industry.  Panelists and other particpants will include current and former SEC officials, economists, fund managers and directors, lawyers, industry analysts, and experts in the regulation of collective investment vehicles in other countries.  Some of the questions to be addressed include:

  • What are the strengths of the current structure, in which mutual funds are corporations with outside investment advisers? What are its weaknesses?
  • If there were no board of directors, how could conflicts of interest be addressed?
  • Are independent directors capable of judging the value of an adviser’s services and thus the fee that should be charged?
  • Does the industry have the flexibility under ’40 Act regulation to respond to competitive challenges?
  • Can regulatory changes improve investors’ understanding of mutual fund performance and the yield on their investments, and how might this be done?
  • How are collective investment vehicles regulated in other developed countries?

For more information, please contact Daniel Geary at dgeary@aei.org.
For media inquiries, please contact Veronique Rodman at vrodman@aei.org.

Events in this series
Past Events
Is There a Better Way to Regulate Mutual Funds?
BOOK FORUM
Monday, April 9, 2007
This is the final event in a continuing series on mutual fund regulation entitled “Is There a Better Way to Regulate Mutual Funds?”
The Regulation and Structure of Collective Investment Vehicles outside the United States
Thursday, May 18, 2006
This conference looks at non-U.S. collective investment structures and how they address such issues as conflicts of interest in the governance of collective investment vehicles.
The Bogle Critique of the Mutual Fund Industry
Tuesday, May 9, 2006
Bogle, a mutual fund pioneer, has argued that the costs imposed by fund managers are excessive, reducing the yield that investors should expect from their mutual fund investments.
[List All Past Events]
Related Links
Competitive Equity: A Better Way to Organize Mutual Funds


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