Rachel is an agent registered with a broker dealer in this state it would prohibited for her to

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Report to the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives:

April 2005:

Mutual Fund Trading Abuses:

Lessons Can Be Learned from SEC Not Having Detected Violations at an 
Earlier Stage:

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-313]:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-05-313, a report to the Committee on the Judiciary, 
House of Representatives:

Why GAO Did This Study:

Recent violations uncovered in the mutual fund industry raised 
questions about the ethical practices of the industry and the quality 
of its oversight. A widespread abuse involved mutual fund companies� 
investment advisers (firms that provide management and other services 
to funds) entering into undisclosed arrangements with favored customers 
to permit market timing (frequent trading to profit from short-term 
pricing discrepancies) in contravention of stated trading limits. These 
arrangements harmed long-term mutual fund shareholders by increasing 
transaction costs and lowering fund returns. Questions have also been 
raised as to why the New York State Attorney General�s Office disclosed 
the trading abuses in September 2003 before the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (SEC), which is the mutual fund industry�s primary 
regulator. Accordingly, this report (1) identifies the reasons that SEC 
did not detect the abuses at an earlier stage and the lessons learned 
in not doing so, and (2) assesses the steps that SEC has taken to 
strengthen its mutual fund oversight program and improve mutual fund 
company operations.

What GAO Found:

Prior to September 2003, SEC did not examine for market timing abuses 
because agency officials viewed other activities as representing higher 
risks and believed that companies had financial incentives to control 
frequent trading because it could lower fund returns. While SEC faced 
competing examination priorities prior to September 2003 and made good 
faith efforts to mitigate the known risks associated with market 
timing, lessons can be learned from the agency not having detected the 
abuses earlier. First, without independent assessments during 
examinations of controls over areas such as market timing (through 
interviews, reviews of exception reports, reviews of independent audit 
reports, or transaction testing as necessary) the risk increases that 
violations may go undetected. Second, SEC can strengthen its capacity 
to identify and assess evidence of potential risks. Articles in the 
financial press and academic studies that were available prior to 
September 2003 stated that market timing posed significant risks to 
mutual fund company shareholders. Finally, GAO found that fund company 
compliance staff often detected evidence of undisclosed market timing 
arrangements with favored customers but lacked sufficient independence 
within their organizations to correct identified deficiencies. Ensuring 
compliance staff independence is critical, and SEC could potentially 
benefit from their work. 

SEC has taken several steps to strengthen its mutual fund oversight 
program and the operations of mutual fund companies, but it is too soon 
to assess the effectiveness of certain initiatives. To improve its 
examination program, SEC staff recently instructed agency staff to 
conduct more independent assessments of fund company controls. To 
improve its risk assessment capabilities, SEC also has created and is 
currently staffing a new office to better anticipate, identify, and 
manage emerging risks and market trends. To better ensure company 
compliance staff independence, SEC recently adopted a rule that 
requires compliance officers to report directly to funds� boards of 
directors. While this rule has the potential to improve fund company 
operations and is intended to increase compliance officers� 
independence, certain compliance officers may still face organizational 
conflicts of interest. Under the rule, compliance officers may not work 
directly for mutual fund companies, but rather, for investment advisers 
whose interests may not necessarily be fully aligned with mutual fund 
customers. The rule also requires compliance officers to prepare annual 
reports on their companies� compliance with laws and regulations, but 
SEC has not developed a plan to routinely receive and review the annual 
compliance reports. Without such a plan, SEC cannot be assured that it 
is in the best position to detect abusive industry practices and 
emerging trends.

What GAO Recommends:

GAO recommends that SEC routinely assess the effectiveness of 
compliance officers and plan to review compliance reports on an ongoing 
basis. SEC agreed with these recommendations.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-05-313.

To view the full product, including the scope
and methodology, click on the link above.
For more information, contact Richard J. Hillman, 202-512-8678, 
.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

Lessons Can be Drawn from SEC Not Having Detected Market Timing 
Arrangements:

SEC Has Taken Steps to Strengthen Its Mutual Fund Oversight Program, 
but It Is Too Soon to Assess the Effectiveness of Several Key 
Initiatives:

Conclusions:

Recommendations:

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

Appendix II: Mutual Fund Trade Processing and Recordkeeping:

Appendix III: SEC Proposed Rule to Prevent Late Trading:

Appendix IV: Comments from the Securities and Exchange Commission:

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Staff Acknowledgments:

Tables:

Table 1: Staff Positions for SEC Divisions and Offices with 
Responsibilities for Mutual Fund Regulation, Oversight, and 
Enforcement, as of February 2005:

Table 2: SEC Mutual Fund-related Rules, Adopted after September 2003:

Figures:

Figure 1: SEC Settled Enforcement Actions against Investment Advisers 
Related to Market Timing Violations as of February 28, 2005 (dollars in 
thousands):

Figure 2: Processing Paths of Mutual Fund Transactions:

Abbreviations:

1940 Act: Investment Company Act of 1940:

Advisers Act: Investment Advisers Act of 1940:

CCO: chief compliance officer:

ICI: Investment Company Institute:

Investment Management: Division of Investment Management:

NASD: National Association of Securities Dealers:

NAV: net asset value:

NSCC: National Securities Clearing Corporation:

NYSOAG: New York State Office of the Attorney General:

NYSE: New York Stock Exchange:

OCIE: Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations:

ORA: Office of Risk Assessment:

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission:

SRO: self-regulatory organization:

Letter April 20, 2005:

The Honorable F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr.:
Chairman:
Committee on the Judiciary:
House of Representatives:

The Honorable John Conyers, Jr.:
Ranking Minority Member:
Committee on the Judiciary:
House of Representatives:

Recent trading abuses uncovered among some of the most well-known 
companies in the mutual fund industry identified significant lapses in 
the ethical standards of the industry and raised concerns about the 
quality of its oversight. A widespread type of violation engaged in by 
mutual fund companies involved market timing.[Footnote 1] Market timing 
typically involves the frequent buying and selling of mutual fund 
shares by sophisticated investors, such as hedge funds, that seek 
opportunities to make profits on the differences in prices between 
overseas markets and U.S. markets or for other purposes.[Footnote 2] 
Although market timing is not itself illegal, frequent trading can harm 
mutual fund shareholders because it lowers fund returns and increases 
transaction costs. However, market timing can constitute illegal 
conduct if, for example, it takes place as a result of undisclosed 
agreements between investment advisers (firms that may manage mutual 
fund companies) and favored customers such as hedge funds who are 
permitted to trade frequently and in contravention of stated fund 
trading limits. Market timing may also constitute illegal conduct, if 
as happened in some cases, investment adviser officials engage in 
frequent trading of fund shares in violation of fund policies and 
disclosures. Another type of violation commonly referred to as late 
trading was significant but less widespread than market timing 
violations. Late trading typically involved intermediaries, such as 
broker-dealers or pension plans that offer mutual funds, that permitted 
certain customers to place trades after the 4 p.m. Eastern Time close 
of the financial markets.[Footnote 3] Investors who are permitted to 
engage in late trading can profit on knowledge of events in the 
financial markets that take place after 4 p.m., an opportunity that 
other fund shareholders do not have.

Questions have also been raised as to why securities industry 
regulators, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and 
the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), did not detect 
the undisclosed market timing arrangements and late trading abuses. 
Instead, the New York State Office of the Attorney General (NYSOAG) 
uncovered the abuses in the summer of 2003 after following up on a tip 
provided by a hedge fund insider. SEC, which has direct supervisory 
oversight responsibility for mutual fund companies, did not detect the 
undisclosed arrangements through its routine examination program. NASD, 
which regulates broker-dealers that may sell mutual funds as part of 
their overall business, also did not detect undisclosed market timing 
or late trading abuses through its examinations.[Footnote 4] However, 
once early indications of undisclosed market timing arrangements and 
late trading surfaced, SEC surveyed mutual fund companies and initiated 
a series of examinations, as did NASD regarding broker-dealers, to 
determine the extent of the problem. By November 2003, SEC estimated 
that 50 percent of the 80 largest mutual fund companies had entered 
into undisclosed arrangements permitting certain shareholders to engage 
in market timing practices that appeared to be inconsistent with the 
funds' policies, prospectus disclosures, or fiduciary obligations. 
Additionally, SEC and NASD investigated and pursued companies and 
individuals found to have responsibility for market timing and late 
trading abuses through filing and settling enforcement actions, which 
have generated substantial fines and penalties. Nevertheless, the 
regulators' failure to identify the abuses at an earlier stage has 
generated concern about the effectiveness of their examination and 
other oversight procedures.

This report responds to your requests that we review issues relating to 
regulatory oversight of the mutual fund industry. Because undisclosed 
market timing arrangements were more widespread than late trading 
violations and SEC is the mutual fund industry's frontline regulator, 
the report primarily focuses on SEC's oversight of the market timing 
area. The report also addresses NASD's oversight of broker-dealers that 
failed to prevent customers' late trading and market timing activities 
but does not discuss late trading at pension plans and plan 
administrators, which are subject to oversight by the Department of 
Labor. Accordingly, the report (1) identifies the reasons that SEC did 
not detect the abusive market timing agreements at an earlier stage and 
lessons learned from the agency's failure to do so; and (2) assesses 
steps that SEC has taken to strengthen its mutual fund oversight, deter 
abusive trading, and improve mutual fund company operations.

To accomplish our reporting objectives, we interviewed SEC staff at 
headquarters and at a judgmental sample of six regional and district 
offices located nationwide; NASD officials; and officials from the 
Investment Company Institute (ICI), which is the trade group that 
represents the mutual fund industry, a judgmental sample of large 
mutual fund companies; broker-dealers; pension plans; the National 
Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC), which plays a role in 
processing certain mutual fund transactions; the Securities Industry 
Association; and other industry participants. At the six SEC offices, 
we also reviewed enforcement actions and examination reports for 11 
large mutual fund companies that regulators identified as having 
entered into undisclosed market timing arrangements or where late 
trading violations took place. Each of these companies was among the 
100 largest mutual fund companies in the United States as measured by 
assets under management on August 1, 2003. We also reviewed general 
financial regulation and auditing standards pertaining to the oversight 
of regulated entities and federal agencies as well as relevant academic 
and other studies. We reviewed relevant documentation and discussed the 
cases with knowledgeable SEC staff to provide a basis for understanding 
the reasons that the agency did not detect abuses at an earlier stage. 
Our work was performed in Atlanta, Ga; Boston, Mass; Chicago, Ill; 
Denver, Colo; New York, N.Y; Philadelphia, Pa; and Washington, D.C. We 
conducted our work between May 2004 and April 2005 in accordance with 
generally accepted government audit standards. Appendix I provides a 
detailed description of our scope and methodology.

Results in Brief:

Prior to September 2003, SEC staff did not examine for market timing 
abuses or assess company controls over that activity because agency 
staff (1) viewed market timing as a relatively low-risk area that did 
not involve per se violations; (2) determined that mutual fund 
companies had financial incentives to establish effective controls over 
frequent trading because such trading can reduce fund returns resulting 
in a loss of business; and (3) were told by company officials that they 
had designated compliance staff to monitor and control market timing. 
We recognize that SEC staff faced competing examination priorities and 
that detecting fraudulent activities, particularly previously unknown 
frauds such as the undisclosed arrangements between investment advisers 
and favored investors, is challenging. Further, SEC staff made good 
faith efforts to control the known risks associated with market timing 
through the regulatory process, such as by issuing guidance on "fair 
value" pricing.[Footnote 5] Nevertheless, lessons can be learned to 
strengthen SEC's mutual fund company oversight program going forward 
from the agency not having detected the undisclosed market timing 
arrangements at an earlier stage. In particular, conducting independent 
assessments of controls (through a variety of means including 
interviews, reviews of exception reports, reviews of internal audit or 
other company reports, and transaction testing as necessary) over 
various activities within a mutual fund company, including areas 
perceived to represent relatively low risks at a sample of companies, 
is, at a minimum, an essential means to verify assessments about risks 
and the adequacy of controls in place to mitigate those risks. Without 
such independent assessments, the potential increases that violations 
will go undetected. Further, our review identified information that was 
available prior to September 2003 that was inconsistent with SEC 
staff's views that market timing was a low risk area and that companies 
would necessarily act to protect fund returns from the harmful 
consequences of frequent trading. For example, academic studies 
indicated that market timing by sophisticated investors, while legal, 
remained a persistent risk prior to September 2003 that by one estimate 
was costing mutual fund shareholders approximately $5 billion annually 
in certain funds and that companies were not acting aggressively to 
control these risks through fair value pricing, despite SEC's guidance 
that they do so. The author of a 2002 study raised the possibility that 
certain investment advisers were not implementing fair value pricing 
because such advisers benefited financially from permitting frequent 
trading, which turned out to be the case.[Footnote 6] Moreover, a 
mutual fund insider provided information to an SEC district office in 
early 2003 that indicated a company had poor market timing controls but 
the office did not act promptly on this information. SEC must develop 
the institutional capacity to identify and evaluate such evidence of 
potential risks and deploy examiners as necessary to assess company 
controls in such areas and help identify potential violations. Finally, 
our review found that company compliance staff in the majority of cases 
that we reviewed identified evidence of market timing arrangements with 
favored customers as early as 1998 but lacked sufficient independence 
within their organizations to correct identified deficiencies. Ensuring 
compliance staff independence is critical, and SEC staff could 
potentially better assess company risks and controls through routine 
interactions with such staff and reviewing relevant documentation.

SEC has taken several steps to strengthen its mutual fund oversight 
program and the operations of mutual fund companies over the past 2 
years, but it is too soon to assess the effectiveness of several key 
initiatives. To improve its examination program, SEC has instructed 
examiners to make additional assessments of mutual fund company 
controls. For example, SEC staff has identified a range of areas that 
potentially represent high-risk compliance problems, such as personal 
trading by mutual fund company officials, and examiners have initiated 
independent examinations of these areas, as well as obtaining more 
internal documentation, such as e-mails about these control areas. In a 
forthcoming report, we assess SEC staff's implementation of these 
revised examination guidelines. To improve its capacity to anticipate, 
identify, and manage emerging risks and market trends in the securities 
industry, SEC has created a new office that reports directly to the 
agency's chairman. However, it is too soon to assess the effectiveness 
of the new office as it had only 5 of 15 planned employees as of 
February 2005 and was still defining its role within the agency. 
Additionally, SEC has adopted rules designed to improve mutual fund 
company operations, including rules that require registered investment 
companies (mutual funds) and investment advisers to each designate a 
chief compliance officer (CCO). The CCO of the investment company 
reports directly to the company's board of directors and is responsible 
for preparing annual reports on company compliance with federal laws 
and regulations. By requiring the CCO to report directly to the board 
of directors, SEC helped ensure the independence of the compliance 
function, with one potentially important exception. Because many 
investment companies do not have any employees, SEC provided that an 
investment company's CCO could be an employee of an investment adviser. 
As described in this report, investment adviser staff frequently 
entered into undisclosed market timing arrangements with favored 
customers at the expense of mutual fund shareholders. Although the rule 
provides safeguards to ensure the independence of CCOs, it is too soon 
to reach definitive judgments on their effectiveness.[Footnote 7] 
Moreover, SEC has not developed a plan to ensure that agency staff 
receive and can review the annual compliance reports on an ongoing 
basis. Without such a plan, SEC cannot ensure that it has taken full 
advantage of opportunities to enhance its mutual fund oversight program 
and detect potential violations on a timely basis.

Among other steps, this report recommends that SEC, through the 
examination process, ensure that investment company CCOs operate 
independently and are effective in carrying out their responsibilities 
and that SEC develop a plan to assess the feasibility of receiving and 
reviewing annual compliance report findings on an ongoing basis. SEC 
provided written comments on a draft of this report that are reprinted 
in appendix IV. SEC commented that the agency has taken several steps 
to strengthen its mutual fund oversight program and agreed with these 
recommendations. SEC's comments are discussed in more detail at the end 
of this report. NASD provided technical comments as did SEC, which have 
been incorporated where appropriate.

Background:

Although it is typically organized as a corporation, a mutual fund's 
structure and operation differ from that of a traditional corporation. 
In a typical corporation, the firm's employees operate and manage the 
firm, and the corporation's board of directors, elected by the 
corporation's stockholders, oversees its operations.[Footnote 8] Mutual 
funds also have a board of directors that is responsible for overseeing 
the activities of the fund and negotiating and approving contracts with 
an adviser and other service providers. Unlike a typical corporation, a 
typical mutual fund has no employees; another party, the adviser, which 
contracts with the fund for a fee, administers fund operations. The 
adviser is an investment adviser/management company that manages the 
fund's portfolio according to the objectives and policies described in 
the fund's prospectus.[Footnote 9] Advisers may also perform various 
administrative services for the funds they operate, although they also 
frequently subcontract with other firms to provide these services. 
Functions that a fund adviser or other firms may perform for a fund 
include the following:

* Custodian: A custodian holds the fund assets, maintaining them 
separately to protect shareholder interests.

* Transfer agent: A transfer agent processes orders to buy and redeem 
fund shares and has customer recordkeeping responsibilities.

* Distributor: A distributor sells fund shares through a variety of 
distribution channels, including directly through telephone or mail 
solicitations handled by dedicated sale forces, or through third-party 
intermediaries' sales forces.

Mutual funds are also structured so that each investor in the fund owns 
shares, which represent a percentage of the fund's investment 
portfolio, and investors share in the fund's gains, losses, and costs. 
Mutual fund families offer investors multiple funds from which to 
choose, each with varying investment objectives and levels of risk. 
Investors may exchange assets between funds within a fund family at any 
time. Investors also may purchase shares directly from their mutual 
fund company or through intermediaries such as broker-dealers or 
pension plans that offer mutual fund company products to their 
customers. Intermediaries typically aggregate customer mutual fund 
orders and submit them to mutual fund companies at one time on a daily 
basis and may perform certain customer recordkeeping functions on 
behalf of mutual fund companies. NSCC, a SEC-registered clearing 
agency, is responsible for processing and clearing most of the mutual 
fund transactions that take place between broker-dealer intermediaries 
and mutual fund companies. Appendix II provides detailed information on 
mutual fund trade processing and recordkeeping.

Mutual fund companies are subject to SEC registration and regulation 
(unless an exemption from registration applies), and numerous 
requirements established for the protection of investors. Mutual fund 
companies are regulated primarily under the Investment Company Act of 
1940 (1940 Act) and the rules adopted under that act. For example, 
mutual fund company boards are required to have members who are 
independent of the company's investment advisers to help ensure that 
fund companies act in the best interest of their shareholders. SEC has 
authority under the 1940 Act to promulgate rules to address the 
changing financial services industry environment in which mutual funds 
and other investment companies operate. The advisory firms that manage 
mutual funds are regulated under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 
(Advisers Act), which among other provisions requires certain 
investment advisers to register with SEC and conform to regulations 
designed to protect investors. Subject to SEC oversight, NASD, which is 
a self-regulatory organization (SRO), is responsible for regulation of 
its member broker-dealers that sell various investment products, 
including mutual funds. NASD, however, has no jurisdiction over 
investment companies or their advisers. NASD carries out its oversight 
responsibilities by issuing rules, conducting examinations, and 
pursuing enforcement actions as necessary. However, certain other 
intermediaries that may offer mutual fund products to their customers 
are outside of SEC's regulatory jurisdiction. For example, the 
Department of Labor is responsible for regulating pension plans and 
their administrators.

In addition to its rulemaking authority, SEC carries out its mutual 
fund oversight responsibilities through examinations. SEC's Office of 
Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) establishes examination 
policies and procedures and has primary responsibility for conducting 
mutual fund company and adviser examinations. Between 1998 and 2003, 
OCIE and its regional and district staff typically conducted routine 
examinations, which were scheduled on a regular basis (such as every 2 
to 5 years), depending on their size or SEC's assessments of the risks 
that they represented to shareholders.[Footnote 10] SEC may also 
conduct "sweep" examinations, which involve reviewing particular 
issues--such as securities valuation procedures--at a number of mutual 
fund companies or advisers to determine whether deficiencies or 
violations exist industrywide for a particular issue. Additionally, SEC 
may conduct "cause" examinations, which are based on indications, 
allegations, or tips regarding wrongdoing or inappropriate conduct at a 
firm. The goal of a cause examination is to quickly determine whether 
there is a problem at a particular entity. SEC's Division of 
Enforcement is responsible for pursuing civil enforcement actions for 
violations of securities laws or regulations that are identified 
through SEC examinations, referrals from other regulatory organizations 
such as NASD, tips from fund insiders or the public, and other sources. 
SEC may also refer cases to criminal authorities, such as the 
Department of Justice, for violations that appear to indicate criminal 
activity.

Market timing, although not illegal per se, can be unfair to long-term 
fund investors because it provides the opportunity for selected fund 
investors to profit from fund assets at the expense of long-term 
investors. Typically, sophisticated investors may engage in market 
timing to take advantage of differences in prices between stocks in 
overseas markets--particularly Asia--and U.S. markets and for other 
reasons. Mutual funds that fail to update their share prices are 
particularly vulnerable to sophisticated market timing. SEC examiners 
identified this phenomenon in 1997 after the Asian markets crisis when 
some funds "fair valued" their holdings and were not subject to market 
timing by shareholders while other funds that did not "fair value" 
their holdings were subject to market timing. Market timing may require 
fund managers to hold additional cash to redeem frequent trading 
orders, which lowers long-term investors' overall returns since the 
fund may hold fewer securities than would be the case in the absence of 
market timing. In addition, market timing increases transaction costs-
-such as trading fees--further lowering shareholder returns. 
Consequently, many mutual funds have established limits on the number 
of trades that individual customers may place per year--such as four 
trades--and disclose these limits in fund prospectuses. However, prior 
to September 2003, certain investment advisers entered into undisclosed 
arrangements with favored customers, including hedge funds, allowing 
the customers to circumvent the established limits. These undisclosed 
agreements sometimes allowed favored customers to place hundreds of 
trades annually at the expense of long-term shareholders, who were 
subject to established trading limits. In exchange for market timing 
privileges, favored customers often secretly agreed to make investments 
in certain mutual funds or other investment vehicles that were managed 
by that company (commonly referred to as "sticky assets" arrangements).

Unlike market timing, late trading is illegal under all circumstances. 
Under SEC rules, mutual fund companies accept orders to purchase and 
redeem fund shares at a price based on the current net asset value 
(NAV), which most funds calculate once a day at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time. 
As previously discussed, intermediaries--such as broker-dealers and 
pension funds--typically aggregate orders received from investors and 
submit a single purchase or redemption order that nets all the 
individual shares their customers are seeking to buy or sell. Because 
processing takes time, SEC rules permit these intermediaries to forward 
the order information to funds after 4:00 p.m. However, late trading 
occurs when some investors submit orders to purchase or sell mutual 
fund shares after the 4:00 p.m. close of U.S. securities markets (or 
the mutual fund's pricing time) and receive that same day pricing for 
the orders. Although late trading can involve mutual fund company 
personnel, late trading violations have typically occurred at 
intermediaries, before these institutions submitted their daily 
aggregate orders to mutual fund companies for final settlement. An 
investor permitted to engage in late trading could be buying or selling 
shares at the current day's 4:00 p.m. price with knowledge of 
developments in the financial markets that occurred after 4:00 p.m. 
Such investors thus have unfair access to opportunities for profit that 
are not provided to other fund shareholders.

Lessons Can Be Drawn from SEC Not Having Detected Market Timing 
Arrangements:

Prior to September 2003, SEC did not examine for market timing abuses 
because agency staff viewed market timing as a relatively low-risk area 
and believed that companies had financial incentives to establish 
effective controls, that is, by maximizing fund returns in order to 
sell fund shares. SEC staff also said that agency examiners were told 
by company officials that they had established "market timing police" 
to control frequent trading. In retrospect, SEC staff's inability to 
detect the widespread market timing violations demonstrates the 
importance of (1) conducting independent assessments of the adequacy of 
controls over areas such as market timing, (2) developing the 
institutional capability to identify and analyze evidence of potential 
risks, and (3) ensuring the independence and effectiveness of company 
compliance staff and potentially using their work to benefit the 
agency's oversight program.

SEC Did Not Examine for Mutual Fund Company Market Timing Abuses:

OCIE staff have stated that given the number of mutual fund companies, 
the breadth of their operations, and limited examination resources, 
SEC's examinations were limited in scope and examiners focused on 
discrete areas that staff viewed as representing the highest risks of 
presenting compliance problems that could impact investors. OCIE staff 
stated that prior to September 2003, they considered funds' portfolio 
trading (i.e., the fund's purchases and sales of securities on behalf 
of investors) and other areas as representing higher risks than 
potential market timing abuses. For example, examiners focused on 
whether funds were trying to inflate the returns of the fund, or taking 
on undisclosed risk. SEC's staff's concern was that in attempting to 
produce strong investment returns to attract and maintain shareholders, 
fund portfolio managers had an incentive to engage in misconduct in the 
management of the fund. As a result, SEC examination protocols 
instructed that significant attention be focused on portfolio 
management, order execution, allocation of investment opportunities, 
pricing and calculation of NAV, advertising returns, and safeguarding 
fund assets from theft. SEC staff stated that examinations and 
enforcement cases in these areas revealed many deficiencies and 
violations. Our discussions with SEC staff nationwide, review of 
selected examination reports, and discussions with officials of mutual 
fund companies verified that the agency did not review market timing 
controls prior to September 2003.

OCIE and SEC district staff we contacted said that the agency also did 
not review mutual fund market timing controls because market timing is 
not illegal per se, and they viewed fund companies as having financial 
incentives to control frequent trading. That is, since frequent trading 
can reduce shareholder returns, fund companies had incentives to 
establish controls that would prevent market timing. Failure to 
establish such controls could result in a loss of new sales and assets 
under management, which would harm investment advisers because they are 
compensated based on the amount of assets under management. Thus, SEC 
staff concluded the advisers had a financial incentive to grow or 
maintain assets under management in order to receive higher fees. SEC 
staff also said that mutual fund company officials told agency 
examiners that they had appointed "market timing police" to enforce 
compliance with the funds' trading limit policies.

SEC staff also stated that they were surprised when the NYSOAG 
identified abusive market timing and late trading violations in 
September 2003. SEC staff said that they did not anticipate that mutual 
fund companies would enter into market timing arrangements that were 
detrimental to fund performance because poor performance could impact 
sales and have a negative effect on the fee received by the adviser. 
After the abusive practices were identified, SEC moved aggressively to 
assess the scope and seriousness of the problem. For example, SEC 
surveyed about 80 large mutual fund companies and determined that 
nearly 50 percent had some form of undisclosed market timing 
arrangement with certain customers that appeared to be inconsistent 
with internal policies, prospectus disclosure, or fiduciary duties. SEC 
also initiated immediate "cause" examinations and investigations at 
many of these mutual fund companies to further review potential 
violations. As described in a later section, SEC also initiated 
numerous enforcement actions to penalize violators and deter the 
abusive mutual fund trading practices.

NASD in its examinations of broker-dealers also did not discover market 
timing arrangements involving broker-dealers before September 2003. 
According to an NASD official, this was because market timing was not 
illegal per se and, to the extent a mutual fund company had stated 
customer trading limits, broker-dealers may not have perceived 
themselves as being responsible for the enforcement of such policies. 
Regarding late trading, NASD officials said that the organization did 
not have specific examination guidance to detect the violation prior to 
September 2003. NASD officials also said that some broker-dealers 
created fictitious accounts or otherwise falsified documents, which 
made the detection of late trading violations difficult.

Independent Assessments of Controls are Essential:

We recognize that SEC faces competing examination priorities and had 
limited examination resources prior to September 2003. In a 2002 
report, we noted that over the previous decade the size and complexity 
of financial markets had increased substantially, whereas SEC's staff 
size had remained essentially flat, which significantly increased the 
agency's workload.[Footnote 11] In particular, our report noted the 
large increase in investment company and investment adviser assets 
under management over a 10-year period, relative to the growth in 
examination staff. As discussed later in this report, in recent years, 
Congress has provided SEC with substantial budgetary increases to 
assist in overseeing the securities markets. Some of these new 
resources were allocated to oversight of mutual funds. We also 
recognize that SEC examiners cannot anticipate every potential fraud, 
particularly novel frauds such as the undisclosed market timing 
arrangements between investment advisers and favored customers, such as 
hedge funds.

Although we recognize that SEC faced competing priorities, the fact 
that the agency subsequently found that about half of the largest 
mutual fund companies had entered into undisclosed arrangements with 
certain shareholders, demonstrates the importance of examination and 
auditing standards that call for independent assessments of the 
adequacy of controls to prevent or detect abusive practices. SEC's 
examination standards acknowledge the importance of independent control 
testing. For example, SEC examination guidance in effect since 1997 
states:

A primary task and responsibility of the SEC inspection staff is to 
review a fund's control environment and underlying internal control or 
compliance system(s). By applying certain examination procedures and 
techniques, examiners should be able to evaluate the control 
environment and determine the effectiveness of each system in ensuring 
compliance.

In addition, commonly accepted examination and auditing guidelines call 
for a degree of professional skepticism in assessing controls (such as 
mutual fund company market timing controls) and independent 
verification of their adequacy to confirm other assessments of 
potential risks or statements by company officials. Conducting 
independent testing of controls at a sample of companies, at a minimum, 
could serve to verify that areas, such as market timing, do in fact 
represent low risks and that effective controls are in place. 
Independent control assessments can be accomplished through a variety 
of means including interviewing officials responsible for the control, 
assessing organizational structure to ensure that compliance staff have 
adequate independence to carry out their responsibilities, reviewing 
internal and external audit reports, reviewing exceptions to stated 
policies, and testing transactions as necessary. If examiners or 
auditors detect indications of noncompliance with stated policies or 
requirements, they are expected to expand the scope of their work to 
determine the extent of identified deficiencies.

We also note that SEC examination guidance potentially limited 
examiners' capacity to develop overall assessments of mutual fund 
company risks and controls and identify potential violations---such as 
market timing abuses--outside of identified or perceived high-risk 
areas. Specifically, SEC examination guidance of March 2002 generally 
instructed examiners to request only a sample of selected internal 
audit reports when reviewing a registrant's internal control or 
supervisory systems or as part of a review of a particular problem, 
rather than instructing examiners to routinely request all internal 
audit and compliance reports or listings thereof. According to SEC 
staff, SEC has the legal authority to request and obtain access to all 
investment adviser and transfer agent books and records--including 
internal audit reports. Although restrictions exist on SEC's access to 
investment company books and records, SEC staff said that the agency 
can generally obtain needed documents through investment advisers or 
transfer agents, which typically keep documents similar to investment 
companies.[Footnote 12] However, SEC staff said that routinely 
requesting all internal audit reports in planning for examinations 
could have unintended negative consequences. For example, SEC staff 
said that routinely requesting all audit reports may discourage 
companies from establishing effective internal audit departments out of 
concern that findings in internal audit reports could result in SEC 
investigations. In a May 2004 report that addressed SEC's oversight of 
SRO listing standards, SEC staff made similar arguments regarding the 
"chilling effect" of requesting internal audit reports.[Footnote 
13]However, we pointed out that it is standard practice among financial 
regulators to request a range of internal audit reports in planning 
examinations and that SRO internal audit reports contained information 
relevant to SEC's listing oversight responsibilities. Accordingly, we 
recommended that SEC review SRO internal audit reports as part of its 
examinations and the agency agreed to do so. Moreover, SEC staff's 
assertion of a "chilling effect" is based on a questionable premise. In 
fact, companies may have the opposite incentive knowing that SEC staff 
will not routinely review all of their internal audit reports. As 
described later in this report, internal staff at two mutual fund 
companies produced internal compliance reports in 2002 that documented 
evidence of undisclosed market timing arrangements and their negative 
consequences for shareholders.[Footnote 14] SEC staff has revised its 
policy on requesting internal reports and this is also described later 
in this report.

In contrast, federal bank regulators had implemented procedures that 
directed examiners to use a range of information sources to help 
develop an overall and independent perspective on bank risks and the 
adequacy of their controls. The Federal Reserve System and the Office 
of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), typically assign on-site 
examiners to large institutions on an ongoing basis but may conduct 
examinations of smaller institutions every 12 to 18 months or more (SEC 
also has typically examined mutual funds on a regular schedule). Under 
the Federal Reserve System's commercial bank examination guidelines 
dated May 2000, examiners were required to make an evaluation of the 
overall risks facing large and small banks and the controls that were 
in place to manage those risks, including the adequacy of internal 
audit and compliance departments. (As discussed later in this report, 
SEC adopted a revised risk-based examination approach in 
2002.)[Footnote 15] Among the potential range of steps specified in 
such standards, examiners could assess controls by interviewing 
compliance or audit staff and reviewing internal audit or other 
relevant internal reports without restrictions. While we recognize that 
there are important differences between the safety and soundness focus 
of bank examinations and the traditional compliance and enforcement 
focus of SEC examinations, as well as staffing of the various agencies, 
bank regulator approaches to carrying out their responsibilities 
provided a practical means for examiners to verify control adequacy and 
identify potential deficiencies.

SEC Can Strengthen Its Capacity to Identify and Evaluate Potential 
Risks:

We also identified information that was available prior to September 
2003--including academic studies and a tip from an industry insider--
that was inconsistent with SEC examination staff's rationale for not 
independently assessing mutual fund company market timing controls. 
That is, the staff viewed market timing as a relatively low risk area, 
had been told by company officials that they had established effective 
controls, and believed that fund companies had financial incentives to 
establish such controls to ensure high fund returns. Although the 
available information did not directly identify evidence of undisclosed 
arrangements between investment advisers and favored customers, it did 
identify significant and persistent risks associated with market timing 
by sophisticated investors and suggested that mutual fund companies 
were not always acting aggressively to control these risks potentially 
due to conflicts of interest. We note that SEC staff in the Division of 
Investment Management (Investment Management) were also aware of these 
market timing risks and had attempted to mitigate them through the 
regulatory process, with limited success according to academic 
studies.[Footnote 16] In retrospect, the information suggested that 
market timing was an area that might have merited the focus of the 
agency's examination function and that the agency needed to strengthen 
its capacity to identify and evaluate evidence of potential risks. As 
described later in this report, SEC has established a new risk 
assessment office.

Articles in the financial press and academic studies that were 
available prior to September 2003 stated that market timing posed 
significant risks to mutual fund company shareholders.[Footnote 17] For 
example, a 2002 academic study estimated that mutual fund company 
shareholders were losing nearly $5 billion per year in certain 
international and other funds due to such market timing 
activity.[Footnote 18] In 2001 and 2002, a senior Investment Management 
staff member also made public statements that market timing posed risks 
to mutual fund company shareholders by requiring companies to, among 
other things, hold excess cash. These articles and the statements of 
the SEC staff member focused on the hesitant approach of many mutual 
fund companies to meet their legal obligations under the 1940 Act to 
adopt "fair value" pricing of their securities despite SEC guidance 
that they do so.[Footnote 19] Establishing fair value prices in 
international and other funds was viewed, including by SEC staff, as an 
essential means to minimize arbitrage opportunities for sophisticated 
investors and thereby minimize the negative consequences for fund 
performance. In 1999, 2001, and 2002, SEC staff wrote "interpretive" 
letters to the mutual fund industry reminding industry officials of 
their obligations to adopt fair value pricing and providing guidance 
and regulatory assistance in controlling market timing.[Footnote 20] 
For example, in November 2002, SEC staff wrote to ICI--the trade group 
that represents the mutual fund industry--to state that a fund company 
may, consistent with the 1940 Act provisions, make an exchange on a 
specified delayed basis, so long as the offer is fully and clearly 
disclosed in the fund's prospectus.[Footnote 21] Several reasons have 
been advanced for mutual fund companies' failure to adopt fair value 
pricing and thereby help avoid losses due to market timers. Among other 
reasons, a 2002 article suggested that mutual fund company boards with 
a higher percentage of directors who are independent of their 
investment advisers were more likely than boards with fewer independent 
directors to adopt fair value pricing. [Footnote 22] The article also 
suggested that investment advisers may face conflicts of interest 
regarding fund shareholders and may benefit from permitting arbitrage. 
According to the author, he believed the potential existed that market 
timers were investing assets in mutual funds, which allowed investment 
advisers to increase their fees for assets under management, in 
exchange for market timing privileges. As discussed previously, SEC 
later determined that many investment advisers did benefit from such 
"sticky assets." Senior SEC staff cited other reasons for the 
industry's slow implementation of fair value pricing. For example, the 
staff said the companies were concerned about the lack of objectivity 
in using estimated prices and due to concerns about lawsuits from 
market timers whose trading strategies would be negatively affected. 
Nevertheless, the study suggested that companies were not always acting 
aggressively to ensure optimal performance, as SEC staff assumed they 
would do, and that conflicts of interest may have compromised 
companies' willingness to adopt corrective measures.

Finally, by not acting promptly on information suggesting that a large 
mutual fund company had not established effective market timing 
controls, an SEC office may have missed an opportunity to detect 
violations. In early 2003, an insider at a Boston-based fund company 
provided information and documentation to SEC's Boston district office 
suggesting that company management failed to control widespread abusive 
market timing by fund customers. According to SEC district staff, they 
reviewed the information provided by the insider but did not act on it 
because they did not view the alleged activity as representing a 
violation of federal securities laws or regulations. For example, the 
district staff said that the fund company's disclosures to investors 
were vague and that they could not conclusively demonstrate that the 
company had violated its prospectus disclosures. Subsequently, the 
insider turned the information over to the Massachusetts Securities 
Division, which settled state charges against the fund company related 
to the insider's allegations. Although SEC staff subsequently began a 
review of the fund company in response to a separate tip in September 
2003 and initiated a related enforcement action in October, this action 
was related to market timing by fund insiders rather than fund 
customers as alleged earlier by the fund insider. SEC district staff 
said the fact that SEC did not bring an enforcement action against the 
mutual fund company for the actions alleged by the insider 
substantiated their original position not to act on the initial tip. 
While we do not dispute SEC's contention that the insider's allegations 
did not necessarily involve violations of federal laws or regulations, 
they did indicate a failure by the company's management to establish 
effective controls against market timing as SEC staff assumed was in 
the company's interests to do. If the district office had pursued this 
information in early 2003, the potential exists that examiners would 
have identified other weaknesses, such as the market timing abuses by 
company insiders sooner than they did in late 2003.

Independent and Effective Company Compliance Staff Are Essential to 
Detecting and Preventing Trading Abuses:

In the majority of the 11 SEC enforcement cases that we reviewed, 
company compliance staff--the first line of defense in ensuring company 
adherence to laws, regulations, and internal policies--lacked the 
independence necessary to carry out their responsibilities. According 
to SEC examination reports, enforcement actions, and discussions with 
SEC staff, the compliance staff--in some cases referred to as "market 
timing police"--were often successful in identifying and controlling 
market timing by certain customers, typically those who did not have 
special arrangements with the companies. The compliance staff reviewed 
trading data in funds considered vulnerable to market timing--such as 
international funds--and notified customers who exceeded specified 
limits on the number of trades placed within a specified period that 
their trading privileges would be suspended if the violations 
continued. When customers continued to violate company restrictions, 
SEC staff and related documents indicated that the companies would 
suspend their trading. However, contrary to established financial and 
corporate standards regarding the proper role of compliance staff, the 
compliance staff at these firms did not have sufficient independence to 
ensure that corrective actions always were taken to address 
violations.[Footnote 23] Consequently, when the compliance staff 
identified violations of company trading standards by favored 
customers, other company officials would routinely overrule their 
efforts to limit the customers' trading. In some cases, the compliance 
staff kept separate lists of customers who were permitted to exceed the 
companies' specified trading limits.

Although the companies' compliance staff were generally ineffective in 
controlling market timing by favored customers, our review suggests 
that routine communications with such compliance staff could 
potentially enhance SEC's capacity to detect potential violations at an 
earlier stage, if compliance staff are forthcoming about the problems 
they detect. At these companies, the compliance staff obviously were 
aware of violations of company policies for several years and, in some 
cases, had documented their findings in internal reports. In one case, 
the sales staff at the mutual fund company overrode the compliance 
staffs' efforts to control hundreds of market timing transactions 
between 1998 and 2003. In another case dating from 2002, the company's 
compliance officer sent a memorandum to the company's chief executive 
officer complaining about the long-term effects of market timing 
arrangements on long-term shareholders. In a January 2003 memorandum, 
the compliance officer notified the chief executive officer that the 
company was a "timer-friendly complex" and had granted numerous 
exceptions to company trading restrictions, which was not consistent 
with protecting customer interests. In another case, an internal 
company study from the fall of 2002--that was widely circulated among 
company executives--found similar abuses and recommended that the 
company terminate market timing arrangements, but the company did not 
do so until the summer of 2003.

In cases we reviewed, company compliance staff or other officials had 
taken action against company officials for failure to comply with 
market timing policies, but their actions did not always deter this 
behavior. In 2000, compliance staff at one company found that the 
chairman had engaged in market timing contrary to shareholder interests 
and warned him to stop the practice. However, the chairman continued to 
engage in market timing until SEC identified his abusive practices in 
2003. Compliance staff of another investment adviser to a large fund 
identified a senior fund manager who engaged in market timing in 
violation of internal policies in 2000. Officials warned the fund 
manager to stop the practice, but he resisted and continued the market 
timing until 2003.

SEC Has Taken Steps to Strengthen Its Mutual Fund Oversight Program, 
but It Is Too Soon to Assess the Effectiveness of Several Key 
Initiatives:

Over the past 2 years, SEC staff has taken steps to better detect 
abusive practices in the mutual fund industry and plans significant 
changes to its overall examination program. For example, SEC staff has 
implemented guidance instructing examiners to conduct expanded reviews 
of company controls and make increased use of internal company reports 
in doing so, although examiners still are not expected to request 
listings of all relevant reports. SEC has also established the Office 
of Risk Assessment (ORA) to help the agency better anticipate, 
identify, and manage emerging risks and market trends. However, it is 
too soon to assess ORA's effectiveness. SEC and NASD have also brought 
numerous enforcement actions for mutual fund violations, and SEC has 
hired additional staff and established new procedures for handling 
tips. In addition, SEC has amended existing rules and adopted new rules 
to help improve fund operations and better protect investors, including 
a requirement that in order for mutual funds to rely on certain 
exemptive rules, the chairperson and at least 75 percent of a mutual 
fund's board be independent of the mutual fund's investment 
adviser.[Footnote 24] SEC also adopted a compliance rule that requires 
mutual fund company boards to designate CCOs whose duties include 
preparing annual reports on the adequacy of the company's policies and 
procedures to ensure compliance with the federal securities laws. 
Although the compliance rule has the potential to strengthen mutual 
fund company operations, certain CCOs may still face organizational 
conflicts of interest in carrying out their duties, of which SEC must 
be cognizant in its oversight responsibilities. Moreover, SEC has not 
developed a plan to ensure that its staff receive and review the annual 
reports prepared by CCOs on an ongoing basis to detect potential 
violations and identify emerging trends in the mutual fund industry.

SEC's Examination-Related Initiatives Were Designed to Strengthen 
Mutual Fund Oversight:

SEC staff has issued guidance designed to provide examiners with an 
overall perspective on the risks facing mutual fund companies and the 
adequacy of controls to mitigate those risks. For example, in November 
2003, SEC staff directed its examination staff to request in planning 
examinations that mutual fund company officials provide written 
summaries of any compliance problems or violations, or repeated 
compliance problems, that occurred after the company's last 
examination. According to SEC staff, this information previously had 
been requested orally but SEC staff were not confident that fund 
companies were providing all information orally, and thus formalized 
this process. According to testimony by OCIE's director on March 10, 
2004, the agency has also begun to make increased use of interviews of 
company officials in conducting mutual fund examinations. The director 
stated that interviews had begun to play an increased role in assessing 
companies' critical risks and control environments.

In late 2002, nearly a year before the NYSOAG identified the market 
timing and late trading violations, SEC staff revised its guidance for 
mutual fund examinations, including expanded requests for internal 
company documents, but it is not clear that the revised guidance is 
sufficient to fully assist in identifying abusive practices. Under the 
revised risk-based guidelines, SEC examiners are expected to complete 
"scorecards" during routine examinations for specific areas, such as 
personal trading by company insiders, which SEC staff has identified as 
presenting possible risks to mutual fund companies.[Footnote 25] In 
general, each scorecard requires SEC examiners to perform several steps 
to assess the adequacy of company controls for each risk area. For 
example, examiners are expected to identify the company official 
responsible for establishing controls for each risk area and identify 
the documentation reviewed to assess the adequacy of identified 
controls. Additionally, the scorecards direct SEC examiners to record 
their overall observations about the adequacy of company controls for 
each of the risk areas. As part of the examination planning process, 
SEC staff also now request that mutual fund companies provide copies of 
management reports, self-assessments, exception reports, and internal 
audit and other reports relevant to the 13 risk areas. Although 
requesting these internal reports should enhance SEC's capacity to 
oversee mutual fund companies, we note that other areas that the agency 
has not considered could pose significant risks. To illustrate, prior 
to the detection of the mutual fund trading abuses in September 2003, 
SEC staff did not anticipate that investment advisers would enter into 
undisclosed market timing arrangements with favored customers. 
Therefore, it is not clear that SEC's expanded procedures for 
collecting internal audit and other reports would have resulted in 
companies producing any reports that addressed this activity.

SEC staff has also implemented examination procedures designed to 
detect market timing abuses. More specifically, SEC staff now instruct 
examiners to review (1) fund sales and redemption (shareholder 
turnover) data to detect patterns of market timing; (2) a sample of 
internal e-mails of fund executives to detect misconduct not reflected 
in the fund's books and records, such as agreements to allow certain 
investors to market time; and (3) the personal trading of fund 
executives. In addition, SEC staff directs examiners to speak with 
company compliance officials regarding their efforts to control market 
timing.

SEC staff also plan to significantly revise its approach to mutual fund 
examinations and are evaluating the development of a surveillance 
system to monitor the industry. (We review both initiatives in a 
forthcoming report.) Traditionally, SEC has relied on routine 
examinations of all mutual funds over a specified cycle to carry out 
its oversight responsibilities. Between 1998 and 2003, SEC established 
an examination cycle that would ensure that each investment company and 
its advisers would be examined once every 5 years. In mid-2004, SEC 
staff told us that they planned to move from scheduled examinations of 
all mutual fund companies to a system where they focused examination 
resources on the largest and riskiest companies and advisers (200 fund 
groups and 600 advisers). To focus on the largest entities, SEC staff 
is creating monitoring teams of two or three examiners to review the 
companies' operations on an ongoing basis. According to OCIE staff, 
they have not yet determined the specific roles and responsibilities of 
the monitoring teams but generally expect the teams also would monitor 
their assigned fund company by periodically contacting fund compliance 
staff and conducting a program of continuous inspections. According to 
the staff, they would also continue to examine advisers and funds with 
higher risk profiles every 2 to 3 years, and conduct random inspections 
of some portion of the remaining firms. We note that SEC's planned 
approach for large mutual fund companies is similar to the bank 
regulators' approach to bank supervision, in which examiners are 
permanent members of a monitoring team assigned to monitor the largest 
institutions. Concerning the surveillance system, an SEC task force is 
currently considering the development of an automated system that would 
allow agency staff to monitor the industry by reviewing company 
financial and other data that may indicate systemic risks or potential 
problems at individual companies. According to SEC staff, such 
information could help target examination resources toward the highest 
potential risks. SEC staff also said that the task force has been 
making progress but has not set a time frame for providing SEC with its 
proposal.

According to NASD officials, in response to the recent mutual fund 
scandals, NASD has also changed its examination modules to detect 
market timing and late trading abuses at broker-dealers, making these 
issues more prominent in broker-dealer examinations. NASD examiners ask 
a series of questions and review documentation of broker-dealers to 
help determine if inappropriate activity is taking place. NASD also 
employs a risk-assessment strategy to rate the level of risk associated 
with a broker-dealer and determines how often it will be examined.

SEC Established a New Office to Identify and Manage Emerging Risks:

SEC has established ORA to assist the agency in carrying out its 
overall oversight responsibilities, including mutual fund oversight. 
The office's director reports directly to the SEC chairman. According 
to SEC staff, ORA will enable agency staff to analyze risk across 
divisional boundaries, focusing on early identification of new or 
resurgent forms of fraudulent, illegal, or questionable behavior or 
products. ORA's duties include (1) gathering and maintaining data on 
new trends and risks from external experts, domestic and foreign 
agencies, surveys, focus groups, and other market data; (2) analyzing 
data to identify and assess new areas of concern across professions, 
companies, industries, and markets; and (3) preparing assessments and 
forecasts on the agency's risk environment. SEC staff said that ORA 
will seek to ensure that SEC will have the information necessary to 
make better, more informed decisions on regulation. This new office is 
to work in coordination with internal risk teams established in each of 
the agency's major program areas and a Risk Management Committee 
responsible for reviewing implications of identified risks and 
recommending appropriate courses of action. Working with other SEC 
offices, ORA staff expect to identify new technologies, such as data 
mining systems that can help agency staff detect and track risks. 
Although ORA may help SEC be more proactive and better identify 
emerging risks, it is too soon to assess its effectiveness. In this 
regard, we note that as of February 2005, ORA had established an 
executive team of 5 individuals but still planned to hire an additional 
10 staff to assist in carrying out its responsibilities.

SEC and NASD Have Taken a Number of Enforcement Actions for Abusive 
Market Timing and Late Trading:

Based on examination findings both SEC and NASD have taken enforcement 
actions against investment advisers to mutual fund companies, broker-
dealers, and other regulated persons and entities who have engaged in 
market timing and late trading. As of February 28, 2005, SEC had 
settled 14 enforcement actions against investment advisers generally 
for facilitating market in their own funds (see fig. 1). SEC has also 
brought 10 enforcement actions against broker-dealer, brokerage-
advisory, and financial services firms for market timing abuses and 
late trading and, as of February 28, 2005, settled five of these cases 
for about $17 million. SEC also has brought enforcement actions against 
individuals associated with investment advisers and other firms and has 
obtained significant penalties ($30 million in one case) and barred 
several officials from the securities industry for life. The penalties 
and disgorgements (which force firms to give up ill-gotten gains) SEC 
has obtained in all of the settlements total about $2 billion. In 
addition to penalties and disgorgements, SEC settlements contained 
undertakings that required companies to improve their corporate 
governance structure and practices. NASD has taken 12 actions against 
broker-dealers for late trading and market timing abuses with fines and 
restitutions totaling more than $6 million. NASD has also imposed 
restrictions on broker-dealers. A forthcoming GAO report will address 
all SEC enforcement actions related to the mutual fund trading abuses 
in greater detail.

Figure 1: SEC Settled Enforcement Actions against Investment Advisers 
Related to Market Timing Violations as of February 28, 2005 (dollars in 
thousands):

[See PDF for image]

[A] The entities named in this column are investment advisers 
associated with this cases. In some cases, SEC simultaneously charged 
other entities, such as an associated investment adviser, distributor, 
or broker-dealer for their role in the market timing abuses. The 
penalties and disgorgements shown for each case are the totals obtained 
in settlement from all the entities associated with the case.

[B] Bank of America settled charges involving both abusive market 
timing and late trading on the part of its investment adviser and 
broker-dealer subsidiaries, respectively.

[C] Fremont Investment Advisors, Inc. settled charges involving both 
abusive market timing and late trading.

[End of figure]

SEC Has Hired Additional Staff to Carry Out Its Oversight 
Responsibilities:

In recent years, Congress has given SEC substantial budgetary increases 
to assist it in overseeing the securities markets and increase the 
agency's effectiveness. SEC staff positions in the areas that pertain 
to the agency's regulation and oversight of the mutual fund industry 
are shown in table 1. Between 2002 and 2005, SEC increased the staffing 
for OCIE and the Division of Enforcement by 38 and 29 percent, 
respectively. SEC also increased staffing within Investment Management 
by 16 percent. SEC staff told us that many of the new personnel have 
been working on mutual fund issues. While the additional staff has the 
potential to enhance SEC's capacity to oversee key areas such as the 
mutual fund industry, we previously reported that the agency hired the 
staff without having updated its strategic plan.[Footnote 26] In the 
absence of a strategic plan that identified the agency's priorities and 
aligned those priorities with an effective human capital program, it is 
not clear that SEC's hiring decisions ensured that the right 
individuals were in place to do the most effective job possible. In 
August 2004, SEC revised its strategic plan. We are reviewing SEC's 
strategic workforce planning effort as part of a separate engagement.

Table 1: Staff Positions for SEC Divisions and Offices with 
Responsibilities for Mutual Fund Regulation, Oversight, and 
Enforcement, as of February 2005:

SEC Unit: Division of Investment Management[B];
Actual 2002[A]: 173;
Actual 2003[A]: 167;
Actual 2004[A]: 190; 
Estimated 2005[A]: 200; 
Percent change 2002-2005[A]: 16%.

SEC Unit: OCIE[C]; 
Actual 2002[A]: 397; 
Actual 2003[A]: 439; 
Actual 2004[A]: 513; 
Estimated 2005[A]: 547; 
Percent change 2002-2005[A]: 38%.

SEC Unit: Division of Enforcement[D]; 
Actual 2002[A]: 980; 
Actual 2003[A]: 1,016; 
Actual 2004[A]: 1,308; 
Estimated 2005[A]: 1,338; 
Percent change 2002-2005[A]: 37%.

Source: GAO analysis of SEC data.

[A] Fiscal years.

[B] Includes staff in the office that administers the Public Utility 
Holding Company Act of 1935.

[C] The amounts for OCIE include all staff in SEC's headquarters and 
regional offices who support or conduct examinations of mutual funds 
and investment advisers.

[D] The amounts for the Division of Enforcement include all staff in 
SEC's headquarters and regional offices who support or conduct 
enforcement activities over mutual funds, investment advisers, broker-
dealers, and all other entities that SEC regulates.

[End of table]

SEC Has Acted to Improve Its Tip Handling Processes:

Since the mutual fund trading abuses surfaced, SEC has acted to improve 
its processes for handling tips and complaints. SEC's Division of 
Enforcement, which receives enforcement-related tips and complaints, 
has centralized its process for receiving, analyzing, and responding to 
tips from the public. According to the head of the office that 
administers the division's tip handling process, before the abuses were 
detected the division had no process for regional and district office 
staff to refer complaints and tips to headquarters for review and no 
system by which management could review how staff handled complaints 
and tips. Under the new process, information concerning all enforcement-
related tips and complaints, whether received through telephone calls, 
correspondence, e-mails, or in-person, is reported to and maintained by 
a dedicated group within SEC headquarters. That group maintains a 
centralized log of all complaints and tips, which includes the date of 
the complaint or tip, the name, address, and telephone number of the 
complainant, and the nature of the complaint or tip. It also includes a 
summary of the action taken by staff in response to the complaint or 
tip--such as assigned to division staff for follow-up, referred to 
another SEC unit for further investigation, or referred to another 
agency. According to the office head, senior management within the 
division review the log regularly to confirm that each complaint or tip 
was appropriately handled by staff. Additionally, Investment Management 
and OCIE have taken recent steps to strengthen their collection and 
analysis of tips received from the public or referrals of potential 
violations received from other SEC offices or regulatory agencies.

SEC Has Adopted Rules Designed to Improve Mutual Fund Company 
Operations, but Questions Remain about the Implementation of the 
Compliance Rule:

Since late 2003, SEC has adopted seven new rules and 3 amendments 
designed to improve fund operations and to protect investors (see table 
2). Among the most significant initiatives, SEC adopted a series of 
amendments to its exemptive rules on July 27, 2004, that are intended 
to strengthen mutual fund company governance. In SEC's press release 
regarding these rule amendments, SEC stated that investment advisers 
may dominate mutual fund company boards and management and that the 
advisers have inherent conflicts of interest in carrying out their 
responsibilities. SEC further stated that independent board members can 
minimize these potential conflicts of interest and act to protect 
shareholder interests. Accordingly, SEC now requires that in order for 
a mutual fund company to rely on the exemptive rules, at least 75 
percent of the members of its board of directors must be independent 
and the board chair must also be independent. SEC also required fund 
directors to assess at least annually the performance of the fund board 
and its committees. This annual self-assessment requirement is intended 
to improve fund performance by strengthening directors' understanding 
of their role and fostering better communications and greater 
cohesiveness. Moreover, SEC believes that the annual review will assist 
fund boards in identifying potential weaknesses in the boards' 
performance.

Table 2: SEC Mutual Fund-related Rules, Adopted after September 2003:

Rule name: Compliance Rule; 
Date adopted: December 17, 2003; 
Description of rule: Requires each investment company and investment 
adviser registered with SEC to adopt and implement written policies and 
procedures reasonably designed to prevent violation of the federal 
securities laws and the Advisers Act, respectively, review those 
policies and procedures annually for their adequacy and the 
effectiveness of their implementation, and designate a chief compliance 
officer (CCO) to be responsible for administering the policies and 
procedures.

Rule name: Shareholder Reports and Quarterly Portfolio Disclosures of 
Registered Management Investment Companies; 
Date adopted: February 24, 2004; 
Description of rule: Requires a registered management investment 
company to include in its shareholder reports disclosure of fund 
expenses borne by shareholders during the reporting period. Also 
permits a registered management investment company to include a summary 
portfolio schedule of investments in its reports to shareholders, 
provided that the complete schedule is filed with SEC and is provided 
to shareholders upon request, free of charge.

Rule name: Disclosure Regarding Market Timing and Selective Disclosure 
of Portfolio Holdings; 
Date adopted: April 16, 2004; 
Description of rule: Requires open-ended management investment 
companies to disclose in their prospectuses both the risks to 
shareholders of frequent purchases and redemptions of investment 
company shares, and the investment company's policies and procedures 
with respect to such frequent purchases and redemptions.

Rule name: Disclosure Regarding Approval of Investment Advisory 
Contracts by Directors of Investment Companies; 
Date adopted: June 23, 2004; 
Description of rule: Requires a registered management investment 
company to provide disclosure in its reports to shareholders regarding 
the material factors and the conclusions with respect to those factors 
that formed the basis for the board's approval of advisory contracts 
during the most recent fiscal half-year.

Rule name: Investment Adviser Codes of Ethics; 
Date adopted: July 2, 2004; 
Description of rule: Requires that registered investment advisers adopt 
codes of ethics that sets forth standards of conduct expected of 
advisory personnel and address conflicts that arise from personal 
trading by advisory personnel. Among other things, the rule requires 
advisers' supervised persons to report their personal securities 
transactions, including transactions in any mutual fund managed by the 
adviser.

Rule name: Investment Company Governance; 
Date adopted: July 27, 2004; 
Description of rule: A series of amendments to certain exemptive rules 
under the 1940 Act that are designed to enhance the independence and 
effectiveness of fund boards and to improve their ability to protect 
the interests of the funds and fund shareholders they serve. The 
amended rules require that in order for mutual funds to rely on any of 
10 commonly used exemptive rules, the chairperson and at least 75 
percent of the members of mutual fund boards of directors be 
independent of the funds' investment advisory firms.

Rule name: Disclosure Regarding Portfolio Managers of Registered 
Management Investment Companies; 
Date adopted: August 23, 2004; 
Description of rule: A series of amendments to forms prescribed under 
the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, 
and the 1940 Act, which among other things extends the existing 
requirement that a registered management company provide basic 
information in its prospectus regarding its portfolio managers to 
include the members of management teams. The amendments also require a 
registered management investment company to disclose additional 
information about its portfolio managers, including other accounts they 
manage, compensation structure, and ownership of securities in the 
investment company.

Rule name: Prohibition on the Use of Brokerage Commissions to Finance 
Distribution; 
Date adopted: September 2, 2004; 
Description of rule: Amends rule under the 1940 Act that governs the 
use of assets of open-end management investment companies to 
distribute their shares. The amended rule prohibits funds from paying 
for the distribution of their shares with brokerage commissions. 
According to SEC, the amendments are designed to end a practice that 
poses significant conflict of interest and may be harmful to funds and 
fund shareholders.

Rule name: Registration Under the Advisers Act of Certain Hedge Fund 
Advisers; 
Date adopted: December 2, 2004; 
Description of rule: Requires advisers to certain private investment 
pools (hedge funds) to register with the SEC under the Advisers Act. 
The rule and amendments are designed to provide the protections 
afforded by the Advisers Act to investors in hedge funds.

Rule name: Mutual Fund Redemption Fees; 
Date adopted: March 11, 2005; 
Description of rule: Prohibits funds from redeeming shares within 7 
calendar days after purchase, unless (i) the fund's board has either 
approved a redemption fee or determined that a redemption fee is not 
necessary or appropriate; (ii) the fund (or its principal underwriter) 
has entered into a written agreement with each of its financial 
intermediary under which the intermediary agrees to provide certain 
shareholder transaction information to the fund and to execute the 
fund's instructions to restrict or prohibit future purchases or 
exchanges by any shareholder; and (iii) the fund maintains copies of 
such agreements with its financial intermediaries for at least six 
years. The rule authorizes funds that adopt a redemption fee to impose 
a redemption fee up to 2 percent of the amount redeemed.

Source: GAO analysis of the Federal Register.

[End of table]

Additionally, SEC adopted compliance rules on December 17, 2003, that 
required all investment companies and investment advisers that are 
registered or should be registered with SEC to adopt policies and 
procedures reasonably designed to prevent violation of federal 
securities laws and the Advisers Act, and designate a CCO to be 
responsible for administering the policies and procedures. The CCO 
should be in a position of authority to compel others to adhere to the 
compliance policies and procedures, and the investment company CCO must 
report directly to the company's board of directors. The rules further 
require that each investment company and investment adviser conduct at 
least annually reviews of their policies and procedures and that the 
CCOs submit a written report to the board regarding their policies and 
procedures. An investment company must also review and the CCO must 
report on the policies and procedures of its investment adviser and 
certain other service providers. Under the investment company 
compliance rule, these reports, at a minimum, must address (1) the 
operation of the policies and procedures of each fund and each 
investment adviser, principle underwriter, administrator, and transfer 
agent for the fund; (2) any material changes to those policies and 
procedures since the date of the last report; (3) any material changes 
to the policies and procedures recommended as a result of the annual 
review; and (4) each material compliance matter that occurred since the 
date of the last report. The rules require that investment companies 
and investment advisers maintain copies of all policies and procedures 
that are or were in effect in the previous 5 years and maintain records 
documenting annual reviews. Investment companies must retain copies of 
the written reports for 5 years. According to SEC staff, the compliance 
rule provides companies flexibility in carrying out provisions relating 
to the annual reviews. For example, SEC staff said that a CCO could use 
company internal audit departments to assess company compliance with 
laws and regulations rather than hiring separate staff. SEC staff also 
said that the companies may continue to use internal audit departments 
to carry out internal compliance and other reviews and that such 
departments will likely work closely with CCOs.[Footnote 27]

Although the compliance rules have the potential to improve mutual fund 
company operations and address compliance staff independence 
deficiencies, certain CCOs may face organizational conflicts of 
interest. By requiring a fund's CCO to report to the board of directors 
and to meet separately, at least annually, with the independent 
directors, the rule helps ensure that compliance findings would not be 
routinely overruled by the investment adviser or other officials. 
However, in the rule, SEC also contemplates that the CCO could be an 
employee of the investment adviser. SEC stated that permitting the CCO 
to be an employee of the adviser is necessary because many investment 
companies do not have any employees. SEC found that prohibiting CCOs 
from being employees of an investment adviser company would result in a 
situation where the investment company's CCO would be divorced from the 
day-to-day fund operations and totally dependent on information 
filtered through the adviser. SEC stated that the rule mitigates 
potential conflicts of interest by prohibiting removal of the fund 
company's CCO without the approval of the fund company's board of 
directors, including a majority of the independent directors. However, 
given that investment advisers typically entered into market timing 
arrangements to the detriment of mutual fund shareholders, the fact 
that a mutual fund's CCO could be employed by an investment adviser 
raises potential concerns about the effectiveness of such officers, a 
situation of which SEC must be cognizant when overseeing the rule's 
implementation. SEC staff said that they plan to review implementation 
of the compliance rules and requirements as part of the investment 
company and investment advisers examination process, as resources 
permit.

SEC staff also said that the agency plans to use the compliance reports 
as part of the examination planning process. An OCIE staff member said 
that by requesting the compliance reports and reviewing them prior to 
examinations, agency examiners may be able to identify problems at 
mutual fund companies and determine whether the companies have 
implemented corrective actions. However, the OCIE staff member said 
that the rule does not require mutual fund companies to submit the 
annual reports to the agency for its ongoing review.

By not establishing a process for SEC staff to receive the compliance 
reports on an ongoing basis, SEC may be missing an opportunity to 
enhance its mutual fund oversight program. Under the rule, CCOs are 
required to perform comprehensive assessments of mutual fund operations 
and report on their findings annually. As demonstrated in this report, 
compliance staff may be well aware of violations that SEC and other 
regulators had not even considered. Given that SEC has limited 
examination resources and certain companies may not be examined for 
extended periods, reviewing the compliance reports on an ongoing basis 
could provide valuable information to SEC by indicating emerging 
problems at mutual fund companies or unmitigated risks at individual 
companies. Further, reviewing the reports could provide insights to SEC 
as to how the compliance rule is being implemented within the mutual 
fund industry. With such information--potentially in conjunction with a 
surveillance system--the agency may be able to better target 
examinations towards high-risk areas and identify emerging trends in 
the mutual fund industry.

We also note that SEC has adopted two specific rules designed to 
address market timing and is working on a rule designed to prevent late 
trading. On March 11, 2005, SEC adopted a rule that allows mutual fund 
companies to establish redemption fees on a voluntary basis.[Footnote 
28] The rule prohibits funds from redeeming shares within 7 calendar 
days after they are purchased, unless, among other requirements, the 
fund's board has previously determined that the imposition of a 
redemption fee on shares redeemed within the 7-day holding period is 
either in the best interest of the fund or that such a fee is not 
necessary or appropriate.[Footnote 29] By imposing redemption fees on, 
for example, the proceeds of fund shares redeemed within 7 calendar 
days of a purchase, SEC believes that mutual fund companies may be able 
to increase the costs associated with frequent trading and the 
financial incentives to do so. Also, directly addressing the market 
timing issue, SEC adopted a rule on April 16, 2004, requiring funds to 
make disclosures regarding market timing and selective disclosure of 
portfolio holdings. To stop late trading, SEC in late 2003, proposed 
that all orders for fund transactions be received by mutual funds or 
designated processors, which are regulated by SEC, no later than the 
time the fund calculates its current day's price (usually 4:00 p.m.) in 
order to receive that day's price (the "hard 4" close 
proposal).[Footnote 30] However, due, in part, to industry concerns 
about the fairness and potential costs of the proposal, SEC has not yet 
adopted it and is assessing whether there are more cost-effective ways 
to achieve the same result. SEC is continuing to work with industry 
officials and considering alternative proposals that would address 
industry concerns while curtailing late trading. We discuss the 
proposed rule in more detail in appendix III.

Conclusions:

The undisclosed market timing arrangements and late trading abuses 
detected in September 2003 represented one of the most widespread and 
serious scandals in the history of the mutual fund industry. SEC has 
determined that undisclosed market timing arrangements, in particular, 
existed at many large mutual fund companies for as long as 5 years. 
However, prior to 2003, SEC did not identify the undisclosed 
arrangements between investment advisers and favored customers through 
the agency's oversight process. Although SEC staff faced competing 
examination priorities that may have affected its capacity to detect 
the abusive practices and has taken several recent steps intended to 
strengthen its mutual fund company oversight program and improve 
company operations, several lessons can be drawn from the experience.

* First, performing independent assessments of company controls is 
critical to confirm agency views regarding risks and the adequacy of 
controls in place to address those risks. Even where regulated entities 
may have a seeming interest in controlling a particular risk, abusive 
or fraudulent activity can take place. Over the past 2 years, SEC has 
hired additional examination staff and implemented a risk-based 
approach to mutual fund company examinations that provides for 
increased assessments of controls.[Footnote 31] SEC's staff's revised 
examination guidance also expands the types of written reports (such as 
internal audit reports) that examiners are to request in planning 
examinations, although SEC still does not direct examiners to request 
listings of all such reports. Requesting such listings could assist SEC 
staff in detecting potential violations at an earlier stage.

* Second, the agency must develop the institutional capacity to 
identify and evaluate evidence of potential risks and deploy 
examination staff as necessary to review controls and potentially 
detect violations in these areas. SEC has established ORA to help guide 
the agency in better assessing new or emerging risks, but the office is 
still hiring staff and establishing its position within the agency. SEC 
has also implemented revised tip handling procedures, which have the 
potential to enhance the agency's capacity to detect potential abuses. 
It remains to be seen how well these new procedures work.

* Third, ensuring the independence of the compliance function is 
central to preventing violations of the securities laws, regulations, 
and fund policies. Company compliance staff must have sufficient 
independence to carry out their responsibilities. By adopting the 
compliance rule, SEC created a system that has the potential to 
significantly improve mutual fund companies' compliance with laws and 
regulations and help ensure the independence of compliance staff. CCOs 
also may serve as valuable partners to SEC by reviewing and testing a 
variety of controls. However, in adopting the rule, SEC also made a 
conscious trade-off between the need to improve industry compliance and 
the costs that would be imposed on mutual fund companies. In permitting 
an investment company's designated CCO to be employed by the advisory 
firm, SEC recognized that CCOs might face organizational conflicts of 
interest in fulfilling their responsibilities. The fact that fund 
company boards, with the approval of a majority of the independent 
directors, have sole authority to remove fund company compliance 
officers may mitigate some of these risks. However, it is uncertain at 
this time how effectively CCOs faced with potential conflict of 
interests, including possibly conflicting financial incentives as 
illustrated in some of the cases we reviewed, will carry out their 
responsibilities. Given the widespread nature of the abuses identified 
at mutual fund companies, we believe that the failure of companies to 
comply with the rule's provisions would likely warrant a significant 
response by SEC through the agency's civil enforcement authority or 
referrals to criminal authorities as deemed necessary.

We also note that while SEC staff plans to request annual reports 
prepared by CCOs under the compliance rule during the examination 
planning process, SEC staff does not require fund companies to submit 
the annual reports to SEC on an ongoing basis. Obtaining access to the 
annual compliance reports and regularly reviewing them or their 
material findings is essential to assist SEC in monitoring mutual fund 
companies during the potentially long intervals between examinations of 
certain companies.

Recommendations:

To enhance the effectiveness of SEC's mutual fund oversight program and 
help strengthen company operations, we recommend that the Chairman, 
SEC, take the following three actions:

* Consistent with the agency's legal authority, request lists of all 
compliance-related internal company reports during the examination 
planning process and review such reports as necessary to obtain a broad 
perspective on the risks identified by individual companies and the 
adequacy of controls in place to monitor those risks;

* Ensure that examination staff assess the independence and 
effectiveness of mutual fund company CCOs as a component of all mutual 
fund company examinations; and:

* Develop a plan to receive and review mutual fund company and adviser 
annual compliance reports, or the material findings thereof, on an 
ongoing basis.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:

SEC provided written comments on a draft of this report, which are 
reprinted in appendix IV. SEC and NASD also provided technical 
comments, which were incorporated into the final report, as 
appropriate. SEC generally agreed with our recommendations. SEC noted 
the importance of its testing of internal controls, and that SEC 
examiners now review mutual fund controls for market timing and fair 
value pricing and that it anticipates providing additional guidance to 
assist funds and their advisers in adopting appropriate controls over 
the use of fair value pricing. SEC indicated that it had started 
assessing the role of CCOs and that it is preparing formal examination 
guidance for its examination staff to use in these assessments. 
Additionally, SEC noted that it is considering how to best utilize the 
new mutual fund annual compliance reports, of which any required filing 
with the agency may require further rulemaking.

SEC did not directly address our recommendation on requesting listings 
of all compliance-related internal reports, but suggested that such 
reviews would be included in its testing of internal controls. We 
continue to believe that requesting lists of all reports would be 
beneficial for SEC's oversight program by assisting staff in detecting 
potential violations.

SEC identified a number of steps it has taken to strengthen its mutual 
fund oversight program. Our assessment of some of these recent actions 
will be addressed in a forthcoming report.

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report 
until 30 days from the report date. At that time we will provide copies 
of this report to SEC, NASD, and interested congressional committees. 
We will also make copies available to others upon request. In addition, 
the report will be available at no cost on GAO's Web site at 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov].

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact Wesley M. Phillips, Assistant Director, or me at (202) 512-
8678. GAO staff who made major contributions to this report are listed 
in appendix V.

Signed by:

Richard J. Hillman:
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment:

[End of section]

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

Because market timing violations were more widespread than late trading 
violations and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is the 
mutual fund industry's frontline regulator, the report primarily 
focuses on SEC's oversight of the market timing area. The report also 
addresses the National Association of Securities Dealers' (NASD) 
oversight of broker-dealers that failed to prevent customers' market 
timing and late trading activity but does not discuss late trading at 
pension plans and their administrators, which are subject to Department 
of Labor oversight. Accordingly, the report (1) identifies the reasons 
that SEC did not detect the abusive market timing agreements at an 
earlier stage and lessons learned from the agency's failure to do so; 
and (2) assesses steps that SEC has taken to strengthen its mutual fund 
oversight, deter abusive trading, and improve mutual fund company 
operations.

To determine why SEC did not detect the abusive market timing 
agreements at an earlier stage and what lessons can be learned from the 
agency not doing so, we interviewed SEC staff at a judgmental sample of 
six regional and district offices located nationwide, NASD officials; 
representatives from the New York State Office of the Attorney General, 
the Investment Company Institute (ICI), a judgmental sample of large 
mutual fund companies, and we contacted academic officials. We also 
reviewed relevant agency testimony, academic and other studies, and 
other documents. At the six SEC offices, we reviewed documentation 
pertaining to 11 mutual fund companies against which SEC had filed 
enforcement actions for market timing abuses and late trading 
violations. These mutual fund companies were among the largest 100 
mutual fund companies nationwide as measured by the size of customer 
assets under management as of August 1, 2003. We reviewed the 
enforcement actions pertaining to these companies, related 
documentation, and SEC examinations for each of these companies or 
their investment advisers dating back several years. In addition, we 
reviewed examination guidelines at the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation, the Federal Reserve System, and the Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency, and generally accepted government auditing 
standards, particularly the standards relating to internal control 
reviews. We then compared SEC staff's approach to reviewing mutual fund 
market timing controls with these general examinations and auditing 
standards. We also discussed with NASD the reasons that it did not 
detect mutual fund-related abuses at broker-dealers for which it has 
direct oversight responsibility.

To identify steps regulators had taken to strengthen mutual fund 
oversight programs and enhance controls at mutual fund companies and 
intermediaries, we interviewed SEC and NASD staff and reviewed relevant 
agency documents as well as GAO reports and testimonies. We determined 
what modifications the regulators had made to their examination 
programs or plan to make, reviewed various final rules adopted since 
September 2003 to improve mutual fund company operations and investor 
protection, reviewed a proposed rule regarding late trading, and 
reviewed regulators' enforcement actions for market timing and late 
trading. In addition, we reviewed SEC procedures for handling tips and 
complaints. Additionally, we interviewed officials of the National 
Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC), ICI, the Securities Industry 
Association, pension plans, broker-dealers, and mutual fund companies.

Our work was performed in Atlanta, Ga; Boston, Mass; Chicago, Ill., 
Denver, Colo; New York, N.Y; Philadelphia, Pa; and Washington, D.C. We 
conducted our work between May 2004 and April 2005 in accordance with 
generally accepted government audit standards. SEC provided written 
comments on a draft of this report, which are reprinted in appendix IV. 
SEC and NASD also provided technical comments, which were incorporated 
into the final report, as appropriate. Our evaluation of these comments 
is presented in the agency comments and our evaluation section.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Mutual Fund Trade Processing and Recordkeeping:

Individual investors generally can purchase, exchange, or sell fund 
shares through multiple channels either directly from fund companies or 
through various intermediaries such as broker-dealers, financial 
planners, banks, insurance companies, retirement plan sponsors, and 
fund "supermarkets." To simplify and reduce the costs of mutual fund 
transactions, intermediaries collect orders throughout the day and then 
aggregate all the transactions they receive for a particular fund. 
Those intermediaries that are licensed, such as broker-dealers, may 
net, or match, purchase and redemption orders for the same funds among 
their own clients. In a simplified example, if one investor were to 
purchase 15 shares of fund A, and another investor were to redeem 10 
shares of fund A, at the end of the day the intermediary could simply 
transmit one order to purchase 5 shares of fund A--the net result of 
the day's orders. Intermediaries then transmit the net results of 
aggregate transactions to the mutual fund companies, where the 
intermediaries hold omnibus accounts representing the collective shares 
of their clients. Mutual fund companies generally do not have 
information about the identities and specific transactions of the 
individual investors in intermediaries' omnibus accounts. 
Intermediaries have contact with their clients, such as defined 
contribution plan participants and other individual investors ("retail 
investors"), and control access to information about their trading 
activity. ICI officials told us that, presently about 80 percent of 
mutual fund orders are through intermediaries and most of these are 
processed through omnibus accounts.

Mutual fund intermediaries accept purchase and redemption orders 
throughout the day and are supposed to submit to funds only those 
orders received by 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time to receive that same day's 
net asset value (NAV), but an order received at 4:01 p.m. or later 
would be submitted to receive the next day's NAV. According to 
Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 22c-1 under the 1940 Act, 
mutual funds are required to calculate current NAV at least once every 
business day at a specific time (usually at 4:00 p.m.)[Footnote 32] 
However, intermediaries are allowed to aggregate the orders they 
receive prior to fund's designated price calculation time and submit 
them to mutual fund companies as omnibus account transactions later in 
the evening for settlement, either directly or through their transfer 
agents or NSCC.[Footnote 33] Figure 2 illustrates how orders for mutual 
fund transactions are transmitted from retail investors and plan 
participants to mutual fund companies, either directly or through 
intermediaries.

Figure 2: Processing Paths of Mutual Fund Transactions:

[See PDF for image]:

[End of figure]:

Most employers that sponsor defined contribution plans subcontract the 
various administrative tasks of plan recordkeeping to companies that 
have expertise in the administration of plans or investments. Pension 
plan record keepers are intermediaries that keep track of day-to-day 
transactions for each plan participant's account. The recordkeeper is 
responsible for transactions--such as crediting accounts with employee 
and employer contributions, processing changes in participant-directed 
investment allocations, updating account values (usually each business 
day) to reflect changes in the values of mutual fund shares held by 
each plan participant--and acting as a mutual fund intermediary when 
participants make exchanges between funds. In addition, recordkeepers 
may function as the primary source of plan information and customer 
service for plan participants.

[End of section]

Appendix III: SEC Proposed Rule to Prevent Late Trading:

Late in 2003, SEC proposed amending the rule that governs how mutual 
funds price and receive orders for share purchases or sales.[Footnote 
34] Since many of the cases of late trading involved orders submitted 
through intermediaries, including banks and pension plans not regulated 
by SEC, the proposed amendments would have required that orders to 
purchase or redeem mutual fund shares be received by a fund, its 
transfer agent, or a registered clearing agency--entities that are 
regulated by SEC--before the time of pricing (usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern 
Time). However, SEC has not yet acted on the "hard 4" close proposal 
due in part to industry concerns about the associated costs and other 
factors, and is assessing whether there are more cost effective ways to 
achieve the same result.

Many organizations that purchase mutual fund shares, particularly those 
that administer retirement savings plans have expressed concerns that 
such a "hard close" would unfairly prohibit some of their participants 
from receiving the same day's price on share purchases. Because 
intermediaries generally combine individual investor orders and submit 
single orders to funds to buy or sell, many officials at such firms are 
concerned that the time required to complete this processing will not 
allow them to meet the 4:00 p.m. deadline. In such cases, investors 
purchasing shares from western states or through intermediaries would 
either have to submit their trades earlier than other investors in 
order to receive the current day's price or receive the next day's 
price. Some plan sponsor organizations and plan recordkeepers have also 
argued that they would face significant administrative costs in 
adopting systems to accommodate the 4:00 p.m. hard close.[Footnote 35]

An alternative approach to control late trading, proposed by retirement 
plans and some broker-dealers, is referred to as the "smart 4" 
approach, which would require all companies that want to accept orders 
until the market close, and process them thereafter, to adopt a three-
part series of controls: (1) electronic time stamping of all 
transactions so all trades could be tracked from the initial customer 
to the mutual fund company; (2) annual certifications by senior 
executives that their companies have procedures to prevent or detect 
unlawful late trading and that those procedures are working as 
designed; and (3) annual, independent audits. Representatives of 
intermediaries told us that they should be given an opportunity to 
prove that they can comply with the same policies and procedures as 
mutual fund companies in accepting and processing fund orders. However, 
SEC staff have expressed concerns about the proposal. As previously 
noted, SEC does not have regulatory jurisdiction over all entities that 
process mutual fund share orders.

Another approach to prevent late trading, which has been suggested by 
some industry participants, is to establish a central clearinghouse for 
mutual fund trades. The clearinghouse proposal would require all mutual 
fund orders to be time-stamped electronically by an SEC-registered 
central clearing entity before the market close to receive that day's 
fund price. The clearing entity's time stamp would be considered the 
official time of receipt of an order for a mutual fund transaction. 
NSCC is currently the only SEC-registered clearing agency operating an 
automated processing system for mutual fund orders. The clearinghouse 
proposal would expand NSCC's role, capabilities, and capacity to handle 
all orders of mutual fund transactions. Each mutual fund company and 
fund intermediary would consider its technological capabilities and 
other factors in deciding how to meet the requirement of submitting 
orders to NSCC by 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time in order to receive same-day 
pricing. However, many intermediaries that do not use NSCC to process 
transactions oppose the clearinghouse proposal because, among other 
reasons, developing links to NSCC could be prohibitively expensive.

SEC is continuing to review alternatives to develop an acceptable 
solution to prevent late trading. SEC staff told us that staff have 
been meeting with industry participants and considering alternative 
proposals but were uncertain about when a rule to prevent late trading 
could be adopted.

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Comments from the Securities and Exchange Commission:

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION:
OFFICE OF COMPLIANCE INSPECTIONS AND EXAMINATIONS:
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549:

April l, 2005:

Richard J. Hillman:
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment:
United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Hillman:

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on your draft report 
concerning mutual fund market timing abuses. As your report describes, 
SEC examinations and enforcement investigations revealed that many 
mutual fund employees had entered into secret arrangements with favored 
customers to allow those customers to frequently trade fund shares, in 
contravention of the prospectus or other disclosures, or the internal 
policies of the fund. This frequent trading activity harmed other 
mutual fund shareholders. When this misconduct came to light the SEC 
took comprehensive action, including rule making, enforcement actions, 
and enhanced examination oversight.

The GAO report describes many of the steps taken by the SEC to improve 
compliance by funds and investment advisers, both generally and 
specifically with respect to deterring and detecting abusive market 
timing. As the report notes, the Commission adopted rules: requiring 
funds and advisers to have a Chief Compliance Officer, to adopt formal 
compliance programs, and to provide an annual compliance report to the 
fund's board of directors; requiring funds to provide enhanced 
disclosure of their policies with respect to the allowed frequency of 
trading in fund shares; requiring all investment advisers to adopt a 
Code of Ethics; requiring mutual funds to have a majority of 
independent directors and an independent chairman; and allowing funds 
to impose redemption fees to deter market timing.

The GAO report also describes many of the changes to the SEC's 
examination oversight of mutual funds and advisers. Specifically, the 
SEC's examination program has adopted a risk-based approach to 
oversight that emphasizes the prompt identification and investigation 
of emerging compliance risks. As the report notes, SEC has implemented 
a risk-assessment process, and has created an Office of Risk Assessment 
that is designed to identify emerging risks that face the securities 
markets and the SEC. Based on the risk-identification process, SEC 
examiners now conduct many stand-alone "risk targeted reviews" that are 
designed to quickly probe discrete areas of compliance risk. These 
examinations, along with comprehensive "wall-to-wall" examinations, 
complement routine examinations, as they may indicate risk areas that 
should be included in the routine examination protocol. SEC staff are 
also evaluating the type of data that may further assist in better 
targeting attention to firms and activities that pose the greatest risk 
of compliance problems.

In addition, as GAO notes, prior to the identification of market timing 
abuses, in mid-2001, SEC examiners adopted an approach for routine 
examinations that was designed to evaluate the quality of internal 
controls, including by testing controls in key operational areas. We 
fully agree with GAO's suggestion that testing of internal controls is 
critical to evaluate their effectiveness. Such testing takes a variety 
of forms-including reviews of exception reports, internal audit 
reports, reviewing email and other internal communications that might 
indicate collusive or other undisclosed arrangements, transaction 
testing and use of other forensic data. As the report notes, in light 
of the market timing abuses, SEC examiners now review mutual funds' 
controls for "fair value" pricing and market timing, including 
shareholder turnover rates, during routine examinations. To assist 
funds in adopting appropriate controls over the use of fair value, the 
SEC anticipates providing guidance for mutual funds and their advisers.

The GAO report also recommends that examination staff assess the 
independence and effectiveness of the Chief Compliance Officers 
required under the new SEC rule. We agree with this recommendation, 
have been assessing their role since the rule became effective in 
October 2004, and are preparing formal examination guidance for SEC 
examination staff. We also recently initiated a program called 
"CCOutreach" designed to provide information to these new Chief 
Compliance Officers that might assist in them in their important 
responsibilities.

Finally, the GAO report recommends that SEC develop a plan to assess 
the feasibility of integrating the new mutual fund annual compliance 
reports (or material findings in those reports) into an SEC 
surveillance program. We are considering how best to utilize these 
reports and note that any required filing of the reports with the SEC 
would require rulemaking by the SEC.

We appreciate the GAO's attention to these issues.

Signed by:

Lori A. Richards:
Director: 

[End of section]

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Richard J. Hillman (202) 512-8678;
Wesley M. Phillips (202) 512-5660:

Staff Acknowledgments:

In addition to those named above, Fred Jimenez, Stefanie Jonkman, Marc 
Molino, Omyra Ramsingh, Barbara Roesmann, Rachel Seid, and David 
Tarosky made key contributions to this report.

(250200):

FOOTNOTES:

[1] For purposes of this report, the term "mutual fund companies" 
generally refers to mutual fund companies and their related investment 
advisers and service providers, such as transfer agents, unless 
otherwise specified. As described in this report, many mutual fund 
companies have no employees, although they typically have boards of 
directors, and rely on investment advisers to perform key functions 
such as providing management and administrative services. 

[2] The term "hedge fund" generally identifies an entity that holds a 
pool of securities and perhaps other assets that is not required to 
register its securities offerings under the Securities Act and is 
excluded from the definition of an investment company under the 
Investment Company Act of 1940. Hedge funds are also characterized by 
their fee structure, which compensates the adviser based upon a 
percentage of the hedge fund's capital gains and capital appreciation. 

[3] In this report, we assume for convenience that all funds choose to 
price their securities daily as of 4:00 p.m. Funds may, however, elect 
to price their securities more than once per day, and according to SEC, 
many funds price their securities earlier than 4:00 p.m.

[4] The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is also responsible for 
oversight of its member firms, but NASD typically conducts the sales 
practice portions of examinations for firms that are dually registered 
with it and NYSE. As a result, NYSE generally plays a lesser role in 
examining broker-dealers for matters involving mutual fund sales. We 
therefore did not include NYSE in the scope of this review.

[5] Fair value pricing involves mutual funds using the estimated market 
value of shares when market quotes are not readily available. As 
described in this report, fair value pricing of mutual fund shares can 
minimize discrepancies in pricing between foreign and U.S. financial 
markets and thereby minimize market timing opportunities. 

[6] Eric Zitzewitz "Who cares about shareholders? Arbitrage-proofing 
mutual funds," Stanford Graduate School of Business Research Paper No. 
1749 (October 2002). As described later in this report, some favored 
investors agreed to place assets in mutual funds in exchange for market 
timing privileges (referred to as "sticky assets"). Investment 
advisers' fees are often based on the size of assets under management.

[7] As described in this report, SEC also amended rules that require 
that in order for mutual funds to rely on any of 10 commonly used 
exemptive rules, the chairperson and at least 75 percent of the members 
of mutual fund boards of directors be independent of the funds' 
investment advisory firms. SEC believes the fact that mutual fund 
boards have sole authority to designate and remove compliance offices 
will help ensure the officers' independence. The exemptive rules (i) 
exempt mutual funds or their affiliated persons from provisions of the 
Investment Company Act of 1940 that can involve serious conflicts of 
interest and (ii) condition the exemptive relief on the approval or 
oversight of independent directors.

[8] Although the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, does not 
dictate a specific form of organization for mutual funds, most funds 
are organized either as corporations governed by a board of directors 
or as business trusts governed by trustees. When establishing 
requirements relating to the officials governing a fund, the act uses 
the term "directors" to refer to such persons, and this report also 
follows that convention.

[9] In some cases, the adviser may contract with other firms to provide 
investment advice, the latter firms becoming subadvisers to those funds.

[10] In 2004, SEC staff developed plans to revise its examination 
program so that teams of examiners monitored the largest mutual fund 
companies on an ongoing basis rather than on a regular schedule. We are 
assessing SEC's planned strategy as part of a separate engagement.

[11] GAO, SEC Operations: Increased Workload Creates Challenges, GAO-
02-302 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 5, 2002).

[12] Under the Advisers Act, SEC has the authority to examine all 
adviser books and records, whether the agency has enacted regulations 
requiring particular records to be maintained. However, under the 1940 
Act, SEC has the authority to examine those books and records of mutual 
fund companies that are required by statute or rule to be maintained. 
Although SEC has authority under the 1940 Act Section 31(b)(3) 
(codified at 15 U.S.C. � 80a-30(a)(2)) to prescribe recordkeeping rules 
it deems necessary or appropriate for investors, the statute directs 
SEC to "take steps to avoid unnecessary recordkeeping by, and minimize 
the compliance burden on" regulated entities. The 1940 Act Section 
31(b)(3) (codified at 15 U.S.C. � 80a-30(b)(3)) further directs SEC to 
exercise its examination authority with "due regard to the benefits of 
internal compliance departments and procedures and the effective 
implementation and operation thereof." 

[13] GAO, Securities Markets: Opportunities Exist to Enhance Investor 
Confidence and Improve Listing Program Oversight, GAO-04-75 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 8, 2004). Listing standards are the minimum 
financial and nonfinancial requirements that issuers must meet to 
become and remain listed for trading on a market. SROs, such as NASD 
and NYSE, have responsibility to regulate their members under the 
oversight of the SEC.

[14] We note that these reports were not produced by the companies' 
internal audit departments. However, SEC's March 2002 examination 
guidance defined a range of internal compliance reports and limited 
examiners' discretion to request such reports during examinations. 
Additionally, the responsible SEC district office staff did not examine 
the companies during the period in which the internal reports were 
produced. However, district office staff said they would have not 
requested any studies regarding market timing even if they had reviewed 
the companies because market timing was not perceived as a high-risk 
area.

[15] Our work did not include an analysis of whether bank regulators 
actually implement these standards during bank examinations. 

[16] The Division of Investment Management oversees and regulates the 
investment management industry and administers the securities laws 
affecting investment companies (including mutual funds) and investment 
advisers.

[17] Mercer Bullard, "Your International Fund May Have the Arbs Welcome 
Sign Out" The Street.com (June 10, 2000) and Mercer Bullard, 
"International Funds Still Sitting Ducks for Arbs" The Street.com (July 
1, 2000). Also, William Goetzmann with Zoran Ivkovic and K. Geert 
Rouwenhorst, "Day Trading International Mutual Funds: Evidence and 
Policy Solutions," Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 36 
(3) (September 2001): 287-309 and Zitzewitz (2002). 

[18] Zitzewitz (2002) estimated the total annualized loss at $4.9 
billion per year, $4.3 billion of which is in international equity 
funds. 

[19] The 1940 Act requires mutual funds to value their portfolio 
securities by using the market value of the securities when market 
quotations for the securities are not readily available. 

[20] Letter from Douglas Scheidt, Associate Director and Chief Counsel, 
SEC's Division of Investment Management, to Craig S. Tyle, General 
Counsel, ICI (Dec. 8, 1999); letter from Scheidt to Tyle on April 30, 
2001; and Division of Investment Management Letter to Investment 
Company Institute re: Delayed Exchange of Fund Shares, (Nov. 13, 2002).

[21] Under a delayed exchange policy, exchange transactions (in which 
proceeds from shares are redeemed in one fund are used to purchase 
shares in another fund) are executed on a delayed basis, such as the 
next business day. Delaying an exchange transaction can help deter 
market timing because market timing relies on effecting transactions on 
specific days to take advantage of perceived market conditions.

[22] Zitzewitz (2002).

[23] For example, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation revised 
compliance examination procedures state that a bank's "�board and 
senior management must grant a compliance officer sufficient authority 
and independence to�effect corrective action." The U.S. Sentencing 
Commission has established minimum standards for compliance and ethics 
programs for companies that seek reductions in their sentences for 
criminal convictions. Companies that establish effective compliance and 
ethics programs to detect and prevent criminal conduct can obtain 
reduced penalties. Among other requirements, the compliance and ethics 
program must, at a minimum, be promoted and enforced consistently 
throughout the organization.

[24] Section 10(a) of the 1940 Act, 15 U.S.C. � 80a-10(a), requires 
that at least 40 percent of the members of the mutual fund board of 
directors be independent directors. To enhance the independence and 
effectiveness of fund boards, in January 2001, the SEC adopted a fund 
governance requirement that required the board of directors of a fund 
seeking to rely on any of the SEC's commonly used exemptive rules to be 
comprised of a majority of independent directors. The exemptive rules 
allow funds to engage in transactions that would otherwise be 
prohibited under the 1940 Act and that present conflicts between the 
fund and its management company. In the wake of recent enforcement 
actions related to late trading, market timing and misuse of nonpublic 
information about fund portfolios, and in recognition of the fact that 
a simple majority of independent directors may not adequately ensure 
that independent directors dominate the decision-making process, SEC 
strengthened this fund governance requirement for 10 exemptive rules by 
adopting the 75 percent independence and independent board chair 
requirements in August 2004. 69 Fed. Reg. 46378-79 (August 2, 2004).

[25] Other areas assessed include portfolio management, brokerage 
arrangements and best execution, allocations of trades, pricing of 
clients' portfolios and calculation of net asset value, information 
processing and protection, performance advertising, marketing and fund 
distribution activities, safety of clients' funds and assets, fund 
shareholder order processing, anti-money laundering, and corporate 
governance.

[26] GAO, SEC Operations: Oversight of Mutual Fund Industry Presents 
Management Challenges, GAO04-584T (Washington, D.C.: April 20, 2004).

[27] See C.F.R. � 270.38-1 and 17 C.F.R. � 275.20b(4)-7.

[28] Securities and Exchange Commission, "Mutual Fund Redemption Fees," 
Release No. IC-26782 (Mar. 11, 2005).

[29] The rule permits a fund board that adopts a redemption fee to 
determine, in its judgment, whether a period longer than 7 calendar 
days is necessary or appropriate to protect fund shareholders.

[30] SEC also has proposed, but not yet acted on, rule changes that 
would require broker-dealers to disclose to investors prior to 
purchasing a mutual fund, at the point of sale and in order 
confirmations, whether the broker-dealer receives revenue sharing 
payments or portfolio commissions from that fund adviser as well as 
other cost-related information. 

[31] As previously discussed, we assess the revised program in a 
forthcoming report.

[32] In this discussion, we assume for convenience that all funds 
choose to price their securities daily as of 4:00 p.m. Funds may, 
however, elect to price their securities more than once per day, and 
according to SEC, many funds price their securities earlier than 4:00 
p.m.

[33] See Staff Interpretive Position Relating to Rule 22c-1, Investment 
Company Act Release No. 5569 (December 27, 1968). Mutual funds employ 
transfer agents to conduct recordkeeping and related functions. 
Transfer agents maintain records of shareholder accounts, calculate and 
disburse dividends, and prepare and mail shareholder account 
statements, federal income tax information, and other shareholder 
notices. NSCC is currently the only clearing agency registered with SEC 
that operates an automated system, called Fund/SERV, for processing 
orders for mutual funds and other securities. Fund/SERV provides a 
central processing system that collects order information from clearing 
brokers and others, sorts all the incoming order information according 
to fund, and transmits the order information to each fund's primary 
transfer agent. 

[34] Securities and Exchange Commission, "Proposed Rule: Amendments to 
Rules Governing Pricing of Mutual Fund Shares," Release No. IC-26288 
(Dec. 11, 2003).

[35] See GAO, Mutual Funds: SEC Should Modify Proposed Regulations to 
Address Some Pension Plan Concerns, GAO-04-799 (Washington, D.C.: July 
9, 2004) for a discussion of how the proposal could affect pension plan 
participants.

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