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Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance and Government 
Sponsored Enterprises, Committee on Financial Services, House of 
Representatives:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EST:

Wednesday, June 18, 2003:

Mutual Funds:

Additional Disclosures Could Increase Transparency of Fees and Other 
Practices:

Statement of Richard J. Hillman, Director,

Financial Markets and Community Investment:

GAO-03-909T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-909T, a testimony to the Chairman, Subcommittee 
on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Sponsored Enterprises, 
Committee on Financial Services, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Concerns have been raised over whether the disclosures of mutual fund 
fees and other fund practices are sufficiently transparent and fair to 
investors. GAO’s testimony discusses (1) mutual fund fee disclosures, 
(2) the extent to which various corporate governance reforms are in 
place in the mutual fund industry, (3) the potential conflicts that 
arise when mutual fund advisers pay broker-dealers to sell fund 
shares, and (4) the benefits and concerns over fund advisers' use of 
soft dollars. 

What GAO Found:

The work that GAO has conducted at the request of this Committee 
addresses several of the areas that are included in the recently 
introduced Mutual Funds Integrity and Fee Transparency Act of 2003 
(H.R. 2420). Mutual funds disclose considerable information about 
their costs to investors, but unlike many other financial products and 
services, they do not disclose to each investor the specific dollar 
amount of fees that are paid on their fund shares. Consistent with 
H.R. 2420, our report recommends that SEC consider requiring mutual 
funds to make additional disclosures to investors, including 
considering requiring funds to specifically disclose fees in dollars 
to each investor in quarterly account statements, which we estimate 
may result in minimal increases in fund expenses. Our report also 
discusses other alternatives that could also prove beneficial to 
investors and spur increased competition among mutual funds on the 
basis of fees but be even less costly to the industry overall.  

U.S. mutual funds have boards of directors who are charged with 
overseeing the interests of fund shareholders. Various corporate 
governance reforms have been proposed to improve the effectiveness 
of mutual fund boards. As a result of SEC requirements or industry 
best practice recommendations, many of these practices were already in 
place at many funds, but not all such practices were mandatory. H.R. 
2420 would ensure that all mutual funds implement these practices. 

Mutual fund advisers have been increasingly making additional payments 
out of their own profits to the broker-dealers that sell their fund 
shares. Although allowed under current rules, these revenue sharing 
payments can create conflicts between the interests of broker-dealers 
and their customers that could limit the choices of funds that 
investors are offered. Under current disclosure requirements, however, 
investors may not always be explicitly informed that their broker-
dealer, who is obligated to recommend only suitable investments based 
on the investor’s financial condition, is also receiving payments to 
sell particular funds. Consistent with H.R. 2420, our report also 
recommended that more disclosure be made to investors about any 
revenue sharing payments their broker-dealers are receiving. 

Under a practice known as soft dollars, a mutual fund adviser uses 
fund assets to pay commissions to broker-dealers for executing trades 
in securities for the mutual fund’s portfolio but also receives 
research or other brokerage services as part of the transaction. 
Although this research and other services can benefit fund investors, 
these arrangements could result in increased expenses for fund 
shareholders if fund advisers trade excessively to obtain additional 
soft dollar research. SEC has addressed soft dollar practices in the 
past and recommended actions could provide additional information to 
fund directors and investors, but has not yet acted on all of its own 
recommendations. Consistent with H.R. 2420, our report recommended 
that more disclosure be made to mutual fund directors and investors. 

What GAO Recommends:

GAO’s report recommends that SEC consider requiring additional 
disclosure by mutual funds of

* the fees that investors pay in account statements,

* revenue sharing payments that broker-dealers receive; and fund 
adviser’s use of soft dollars.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-909T.

To view the full report, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Richard Hillman at (202) 
512-8678 or hillmanr@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here to discuss GAO's work on the disclosure of 
mutual fund fees and the need for other related mutual fund disclosures 
to investors. The fees and other costs that mutual fund investors pay 
as part of owning fund shares can significantly affect their investment 
returns. As a result, it is appropriate to debate whether the 
disclosures of mutual fund fees and fund marketing practices are 
sufficiently transparent and fair to investors.

Today, I will summarize the results from our recently issued report 
entitled Mutual Funds: Greater Transparency Needed in Disclosures to 
Investors, GAO-03-763 (Washington, D.C.: June 9, 2003) and describe how 
the results of this work relates to certain provisions of the proposed 
Mutual Funds Integrity and Fee Transparency Act of 2003 (H.R. 2420). 
Specifically, I will discuss (1) mutual fund fee disclosures and 
opportunities for improving these disclosures, (2) the extent to which 
various corporate governance reforms are in place in the mutual fund 
industry, (3) the potential conflicts that arise when mutual fund 
advisers pay broker-dealers to sell fund shares, and (4) the benefits 
and concerns over fund advisers' use of soft dollars.

In summary:

The study that we have conducted at the request of this Committee 
directly supports several of the key provisions of H.R. 2420. In 
particular, it addresses the need to consider ways to increase the 
transparency of mutual fund fees and other disclosures. Mutual funds 
disclose considerable information about their costs to investors, 
including presenting the operating expense fees that they charge 
investors as a percentage of fund assets and providing hypothetical 
examples of the amount of fees that an investor can expect to pay over 
various time periods. However, unlike many other financial products and 
services, mutual funds do not disclose to individual investors the 
specific dollar amount of fees that are paid on their fund shares. The 
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has proposed that mutual funds 
make additional disclosures to investors that would provide more 
information that investors could use to compare fees across funds. 
However, SEC is not proposing that funds disclose the specific dollar 
amount of fees paid by each investor nor is it proposing to require 
that any fee disclosures be made in the account statements that inform 
investors of the number and value of the mutual fund shares they own. 
Consistent with H.R. 2420, our report recommends that SEC consider 
requiring mutual funds to make additional disclosures to investors, 
including considering requiring funds to specifically disclose fees in 
dollars to each investor in quarterly account statements. SEC has 
agreed to consider requiring such disclosures but was unsure that the 
benefits of implementing specific dollar disclosures outweighed the 
costs to produce such disclosures. However, we estimate that spreading 
these implementation costs across all investor accounts may result in 
minimal increases in fund expenses. Our report also discusses less 
costly alternatives that could also prove beneficial to investors and 
spur increased competition among mutual funds on the basis of fees.

Each mutual fund in the United States is required to have a board of 
directors that is charged with overseeing the interests of fund 
shareholders. These boards also must include directors that are not 
employed or affiliated with the fund's adviser, and these independent 
directors have specific duties to oversee the fees their fund's charge. 
However, some industry critics have questioned whether fund directors 
are adequately performing their duties and various corporate governance 
reforms have been proposed to improve the effectiveness of mutual fund 
boards. We found that many of the corporate governance reforms are 
already being practiced by many funds as a result of either recent SEC 
actions or because they are recommended as best practices by the mutual 
fund industry body, the Investment Company Institute. By amending the 
Investment Company Act of 1940 to require these and other corporate 
governance practices, H.R. 2420 would further strengthen certain 
corporate governance practices and ensure that all mutual funds 
implement these practices.

The work that we conducted for our report also found that mutual fund 
advisers have been increasingly engaged in a practice known as revenue 
sharing under which they make additional payments to the broker-dealers 
that sell their fund shares. Although we found that the impact of these 
payments on the expenses to fund investors was uncertain, these 
payments can create conflicts between the interests of broker-dealers 
and their customers that could limit the choices of funds that these 
broker-dealers offer investors. However, under current disclosure 
requirements investors may not always be explicitly informed that their 
broker-dealer, who is obligated to recommend only suitable investments 
based on the investor's financial condition, is also receiving payments 
to sell particular funds. Consistent with H.R. 2420, our report also 
recommended that more disclosure be made to investors about any revenue 
sharing payments their broker-dealers are receiving.

Finally, we also reviewed a practice known as soft dollars, in which a 
mutual fund adviser uses fund assets to pay commissions to broker-
dealers for executing trades in securities for the mutual fund's 
portfolio but also receives research or other brokerage services as 
part of the transaction. These soft dollar arrangements can result in 
mutual fund advisers obtaining research or other services, including 
from third party independent research firms, that can benefit the 
investors in their funds. However, these arrangements also create a 
conflict of interest that could result in increased expenses to fund 
shareholders if a fund adviser trades excessively to obtain additional 
soft dollar research or chooses broker-dealers more on the basis of 
their soft dollar offerings than their ability to execute trades 
efficiently. SEC has addressed soft dollar practices in the past and 
recommended actions could provide additional information to fund 
directors and investors, but has not yet acted on some of its own 
recommendations. Consistent with H.R. 2420, our report recommended that 
more disclosure be made to mutual fund directors and investors to allow 
them to better evaluate the benefits and potential disadvantages of 
their fund adviser's use of soft dollars.

Additional Disclosure of Mutual Fund Costs Might Benefit Investors:

Although mutual funds already disclose considerable information about 
the fees they charge, our report recommended that SEC consider 
requiring that mutual funds make additional disclosures to investors 
about fees in the account statements that investors receive. Mutual 
funds currently provide information about the fees they charge 
investors as an operating expense ratio that shows as a percentage of 
fund assets all the fees and other expenses that the fund adviser 
deducts from the assets of the fund. Mutual funds also are required to 
present a hypothetical example that shows in dollar terms what an 
investor could expect to pay if they invested $10,000 in a fund and 
held it for various periods.

Unlike many other financial products, mutual funds do not provide 
investors with information about the specific dollar amounts of the 
fees that have been deducted from the value of their shares. Table 1 
shows that many other financial products do present their costs in 
specific dollar amounts.

Table 1: Fee Disclosure Practices for Selected Financial Services or 
Products:

Type of product or service: Mutual funds; Disclosure requirement: 
Mutual funds show the operating expenses as percentages of fund assets 
and dollar amounts for hypothetical investment amounts based on 
estimated future expenses in the prospectus.

Type of product or service: Deposit accounts; Disclosure requirement: 
Depository institutions are required to disclose itemized fees, in 
dollar amounts, on periodic statements.

Type of product or service: Bank trust services; Disclosure 
requirement: Although covered by varying state laws, regulatory and 
association officials for banks indicated that trust service charges 
are generally shown as specific dollar amounts.

Type of product or service: Investment services provided to individual 
investment accounts (such as those managed by a financial planner); 
Disclosure requirement: When the provider has the right to deduct fees 
and other charges directly from the investor's account, the dollar 
amounts of such charges are required to be disclosed to the investor.

Type of product or service: Wrap accounts[A]; Disclosure requirement: 
Provider is required to disclose dollar amount of fees on investors' 
statements.

Type of product or service: Stock purchases; Disclosure requirement: 
Broker-dealers are required to report specific dollar amounts charged 
as commissions to investors.

Type of product or service: Mortgage financing; Disclosure requirement: 
Mortgage lenders are required to provide at time of settlement a 
statement containing information on the annual percentage rate paid on 
the outstanding balance, and the total dollar amount of any finance 
charges, the amount financed, and the total of all payments required.

Type of product or service: Credit cards; Disclosure requirement: 
Lenders are required to disclose the annual percentage rate paid for 
purchases and cash advances, and the dollar amounts of these charges 
appear on cardholder statements.

Source: GAO analysis of applicable disclosure regulations, rules, and 
industry practices.

[A] In a wrap account, a customer receives investment advisory and 
brokerage execution services from a broker-dealer or other financial 
intermediary for a "wrapped" fee that is not based on transactions in 
the customer's account.

[End of table]

Although mutual funds do not disclose their costs to each individual 
investor in specific dollars, the disclosures that they make do exceed 
those of many products. For example, purchasers of fixed annuities are 
not told of the expenses associated with investing in such products. 
Some industry participants and others including SEC also cite the 
example of bank savings accounts, which pay stated interest rates to 
their holders but do not explain how much profit or expenses the bank 
incurs to offer such products. While this is true, we do not believe 
this is an analogous comparison to mutual fund fees because the 
operating expenses of the bank are not paid using the funds of the 
savings account holder and are therefore not explicit costs to the 
investor like the fees on a mutual fund.

A number of alternatives have been proposed for improving the 
disclosure of mutual fund fees, that could provide additional 
information to fund investors. In December 2002, SEC released proposed 
rule amendments, which include a requirement that mutual funds make 
additional disclosures about their expenses.[Footnote 1] This 
information would be presented to investors in the annual and 
semiannual reports prepared by mutual funds. Specifically, mutual funds 
would be required to disclose the cost in dollars associated with an 
investment of $10,000 that earned the fund's actual return and incurred 
the fund's actual expenses paid during the period. In addition, SEC 
also proposed that mutual funds be required to disclose the cost in 
dollars, based on the fund's actual expenses, of a $10,000 investment 
that earned a standardized return of 5 percent. If these disclosures 
become mandatory, investors will have additional information that could 
be directly compared across funds. By placing it in funds' annual and 
semiannual reports, SEC staff also indicate that it will facilitate 
prospective investors comparing funds' expenses before making a 
purchase decision.

However, SEC's proposal would not require mutual funds to disclose to 
each investor the specific amount of fees in dollars that are paid on 
the shares they own. As result, investors will not receive information 
on the costs of mutual fund investing in the same way they see the 
costs of many other financial products and services that they may use. 
In addition, SEC did not propose that mutual funds provide information 
relating to fees in the quarterly or even more frequent account 
statements that provide investors with the number and value of their 
mutual fund shares. In a 1997 survey of how investors obtain 
information about their funds, ICI indicated that to shareholders, the 
account statement is probably the most important communication that 
they receive from a mutual fund company and that nearly all 
shareholders use such statements to monitor their mutual funds.

SEC and industry participants have indicated that the total cost of 
providing specific dollar fee disclosures might be significant; 
however, we found that the cost might not represent a large outlay on a 
per investor basis. As we reported in our March 2003 statement, ICI 
commissioned a large accounting firm to survey mutual fund companies 
about the costs of producing such disclosures.[Footnote 2] Receiving 
responses from broker-dealers, mutual fund service providers, and fund 
companies representing approximately 77 percent of total industry 
assets as of June 30, 2000, this study estimated that the aggregated 
estimated costs for the survey respondents to implement specific dollar 
disclosures in shareholder account statements would exceed $200 
million, and the annual costs of compliance would be about $66 million. 
Although the ICI study included information from some broker-dealers 
and fund service providers, it did not include the reportedly 
significant costs that all broker-dealers and other third-party 
financial institutions that maintain accounts on behalf of individual 
mutual fund shareholders could incur. However, using available 
information on mutual fund assets and accounts from ICI and spreading 
such costs across all investor accounts indicates that the additional 
expenses to any one investor are minimal. Specifically, at end of 2001, 
ICI reported that mutual fund assets totaled $6.975 trillion. If mutual 
fund companies charged, for example, the entire $266 million cost of 
implementing the disclosures to investors in the first year, then 
dividing this additional cost by the total assets outstanding at the 
end of 2001 would increase the average fee by .000038 percent or about 
one-third of a basis point. In addition, ICI reported that the $6.975 
trillion in total assets was held in over 248 million mutual fund 
accounts, equating to an average account of just over $28,000. 
Therefore, implementing these disclosures would add $1.07 to the 
average $184 that these accounts would pay in total operating expense 
fees each year--an increase of six-tenths of a percent.[Footnote 3]

In addition, other less costly alternatives are also available that 
could increase investor awareness of the fees they are paying on their 
mutual funds by providing them with information on the fees they pay in 
the quarterly statements that provide information on an investor's 
share balance and account value. For example, one alternative that 
would not likely be overly expensive would be to require these 
quarterly statements to present the information--the dollar amount of a 
fund's fees based on a set investment amount--that SEC has proposed be 
added to mutual fund semiannual reports. Doing so would place this 
additional fee disclosure in the document generally considered to be of 
the most interest to investors. An even less costly alternative could 
be to require quarterly statements to also include a notice that 
reminds investors that they pay fees and to check their prospectus and 
with their financial adviser for more information.

Because SEC's current proposal, while offering some advantages, does 
not make mutual funds comparable to other products and provide 
information in the document that is most relevant to investors--the 
quarterly account statement--our report recommended that SEC consider 
requiring additional disclosures relating to fees be made to investors 
in these documents. In addition to specific dollar disclosures, we also 
noted that investors could be provided with other disclosures about the 
fees they pay on mutual funds that would have a range of implementation 
costs, including some that would have even less overall cost to the 
industry. H.R. 2420 also mandates that SEC require additional 
information about fees be disclosed to investors. Seeing the specific 
dollar amount paid on their shares could be the incentive that some 
investors need to take action to compare their fund's expenses to those 
of other funds and make more informed investment decisions on this 
basis. Such disclosures may also increasingly motivate fund companies 
to respond competitively by lowering fees. Because the disclosures that 
SEC is currently proposing be included in mutual fund annual and 
semiannual reports could also prove beneficial, it could choose to 
require disclosures in both these documents and account statements, 
which would provide both prospective and existing investors in mutual 
funds access to valuable information about the costs of investing in 
funds.

H.R. 2420 also mandates that SEC require mutual funds to disclose more 
information about portfolio transactions costs, including commissions 
paid with respect to the trading of portfolio securities. Although 
additional information about such costs could be beneficial to 
investors, we found that determining these costs in a way that allows 
them to be accurately and fairly compared across funds could prove 
difficult.

Mutual Fund Boards Follow Many Sound Corporate Governance Practices but 
Such Practices are Not Mandatory for All Funds:

Mutual funds implemented many sound practices concerning their boards 
of directors, but these practices are not mandatory for all funds. The 
law governing U.S. mutual funds promotes investor protection by 
requiring funds to have a board of directors to protect fund 
shareholder interests. As a group, the directors of a mutual fund have 
various statutory responsibilities to oversee fund operations. In 
particular, the directors independent of the fund's investment adviser 
have additional duties including approval of the contracts with the 
investment adviser. As a matter of practice, independent directors also 
review other arrangements such as transfer agency, custodial, or 
bookkeeping services.

As a result of recent scandals such as Enron and Worldcom, new 
legislative and regulatory reforms have been adopted or proposed to 
increase the effectiveness and accountability of public companies' 
boards of directors. In July 2002, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (Sarbanes-
Oxley) was enacted to address concerns related to corporate 
responsibility and governance.[Footnote 4] In addition to enhancing the 
financial reporting regulatory structure, Sarbanes-Oxley sought to 
increase corporate accountability by reforming the structure of 
corporate boards audit committees. Section 301 of Sarbanes-Oxley 
requires that directors who serve on a public company's audit committee 
be "independent" and select and oversee outside auditors. The New York 
Stock Exchange (NYSE) and NASDAQ have also proposed changes to the 
corporate governance listing standards for public companies. However, 
many of the proposed reforms for public companies are either already 
required or have been recommended as best practices for mutual fund 
boards. Table 2 shows how the current or recommended corporate 
governance practices for mutual fund boards compare to current and 
proposed NYSE and NASDAQ listing standards applicable to public company 
boards.

Table 2: Current and Proposed NYSE and NASDAQ Listing Standards 
Compared to Current or Recommended Mutual Fund Corporate Governance 
Requirements:

Governance requirement: Board must have a majority of independent 
directors; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Currently required: No; 
NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Proposed requirement: Yes; Mutual 
Funds: Required by statute or SEC rule[A]: Yes; Mutual Funds: ICI 
recommended best practice: Yes.

Governance requirement: Independent directors must be responsible for 
nominating new independent directors; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: 
Currently required: No; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Proposed 
requirement: Yes; Mutual Funds: Required by statute or SEC 
rule[A]: Yes; Mutual Funds: ICI recommended best practice: Yes.

Governance requirement: Audit committee must consist of only 
independent directors[B]; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Currently 
required: Yes; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Proposed requirement: 
Yes; Mutual Funds: Required by statute or SEC rule[A]: No; 
Mutual Funds: ICI recommended best practice: Yes.

Governance requirement: Standards that define who qualifies as an 
independent director[C]; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Currently 
required: Yes; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Proposed requirement: 
Yes; Mutual Funds: Required by statute or SEC rule[A]: Yes; Mutual 
Funds: ICI recommended best practice: Yes.

Governance requirement: Independent directors required to meet 
separately in executive sessions; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: 
Currently required: No; NYSE/NASDAQ listing standards: Proposed 
requirement: Yes; Mutual Funds: Required by statute or SEC 
rule[A]: No; Mutual Funds: ICI recommended best practice: Yes.

Source: GAO analysis of ICI Best Practices, SEC rules, and NYSE and 
NASDAQ rule proposals.

[A] SEC requires the board of directors of any fund that takes 
advantage of various exemptive rules to meet these requirements and SEC 
staff indicated that, as a result, almost all funds must comply.

[B] Although fully independent audit committees is not a requirement 
for funds, SEC has adopted a rule to encourage fund boards to have 
audit committees consisting exclusively of independent directors by 
exempting such committees from having to seek shareholder approval of 
the fund's auditor.

[C] Both the NYSE and NASDAQ definitions of director independence 
currently apply only to members of the audit committee, but their rule 
proposals would extend this definition to the full board.

[End of table]

According to regulators and data from industry participants that we 
obtained, many mutual funds have implemented many of the practices that 
are being recommended for public companies. As shown in table 2 above, 
many of these practices are already required for many funds by SEC 
regulation or are recommended by ICI as a best practice. Officials of 
the fund companies and the independent directors that we interviewed 
told us that the majority of their boards consisted of independent 
directors, and, in many cases, had only one interested director. For 
public companies, some commenters have called for boards of directors 
to have supermajorities of independent directors as a means of ensuring 
that the voices of the independent directors are heard. ICI already 
advocates this practice in its best practice recommendations and one 
fund governance consulting official said that a 2002 survey conducted 
by his firm found that, in 75 percent of the mutual fund complexes they 
surveyed, over 70 percent of the directors were independent. An 
academic study we reviewed also found that funds' independent directors 
already comprised funds' nominating committees and most funds have 
self-nominating independent directors.

However, not all of these sound corporate governance practices are 
currently mandatory for mutual funds. For example, if a fund does not 
take advantage of any of the exemptive rules that SEC cited in 
requiring certain corporate governance practices, such a fund may not 
already be following these practices. In addition, some of the reforms 
advocated by ICI's best practices and by those advocating change for 
public companies are not currently required for mutual funds. H.R. 2420 
would make these and other practices mandatory for all funds, which 
would ensure consistent implementation of the practices across the 
industry.

Changes in Mutual Fund Distribution Practices Raise Potential Conflicts 
of Interest Between Broker-Dealers and Investors:

One mutual fund distribution practice--called revenue sharing--that has 
become increasingly common involves mutual fund investment advisers 
making additional payments beyond those made under 12b-1 plans to 
broker-dealers that sell fund shares. Approximately 80 percent of 
mutual fund purchases are made through broker-dealers or other 
financial professionals, such as financial planners and pension plan 
administrators. To be compensated for providing advice and ongoing 
assistance to investors, many of these financial professionals receive 
payments from the mutual fund either through the sales charges paid up 
front by the investor (called loads) or from ongoing fees that are 
deducted from the fund's assets. These fees are called 12b-1 fees after 
the rule that allows fund assets to be used to pay for fund marketing 
and distribution expenses. NASD, whose rules govern the distribution of 
fund shares by broker dealers, limits the annual rate at which 12b-1 
fees may be paid to broker-dealers to no more than 0.75 percent of a 
fund's average net assets per year. Funds are allowed to include an 
additional service fee of up to 0.25 percent of average net assets each 
year to compensate sales professionals for providing ongoing services 
to investors or for maintaining their accounts. Therefore, 12b-1 fees 
included in a fund's total expense ratio are limited to a maximum of 1 
percent per year.

However, broker-dealers, whose extensive distribution networks and 
large staffs of financial professionals who work directly with and make 
investment recommendations to investors, have increasingly required 
mutual funds to make additional payments to their firms beyond the 
sales loads and 12b-1 fees. These payments, called revenue sharing 
payments, come from the adviser's profits and may supplement 
distribution-related payments from fund assets. According to an article 
in one trade journal, revenue sharing payments made by major fund 
companies to broker-dealers may total as much as $2 billion per year. 
According to the officials of a mutual fund research organization, 
about 80 percent of fund companies that partner with major broker-
dealers make cash revenue sharing payments. For example, some broker-
dealers have narrowed their offerings of funds or created preferred 
lists that include the funds of just six or seven fund companies that 
then become the funds that receive the most marketing by these broker-
dealers. In order to be selected as one of the preferred fund families 
on these lists, the mutual fund adviser often is required to compensate 
the broker-dealer firms with revenue sharing payments.

One of the concerns raised about revenue sharing payments is the effect 
on overall fund expenses. A 2001 research organization report on fund 
distribution practices noted that the extent to which revenue sharing 
might affect other fees that funds charge, such as 12b-1 fees or 
management fees, was uncertain. For example, the report noted that it 
was not clear whether the increase in revenue sharing payments 
increased any fund's fees, but also noted that by reducing fund adviser 
profits, revenue sharing would likely prevent advisers from lowering 
their fees. In addition, fund directors normally would not question 
revenue sharing arrangements paid from the adviser's profits. In the 
course of reviewing advisory contracts, fund directors consider the 
adviser's profits not taking into account marketing and distribution 
expenses, which also could prevent advisers from shifting these costs 
to the fund.

Revenue sharing payments may also create conflicts of interest between 
broker-dealers and their customers. By receiving compensation to 
emphasize the marketing of particular funds, broker-dealers and their 
sales representatives may have incentives to offer funds for reasons 
other than the needs of the investor. For example, revenue sharing 
arrangements might unduly focus the attention of broker-dealers on 
particular mutual funds, reducing the number of funds considered as 
part of an investment decision-potentially leading to inferior 
investment choices and potentially reducing fee competition among 
funds. Finally, concerns have been raised that revenue sharing 
arrangements might conflict with securities self-regulatory 
organization rules requiring that brokers recommend purchasing a 
security only after ensuring that the investment is suitable given the 
investor's financial situation and risk profile.

Although revenue sharing payments can create conflicts of interest 
between broker-dealers and their clients, the extent to which broker-
dealers disclose to their clients that their firms receive such 
payments from fund advisers is not clear. Rule 10b-10 under the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires, among other things, that 
broker-dealers provide customers with information about third-party 
compensation that broker-dealers receive in connection with securities 
transactions. While broker-dealers generally satisfy the 10b-10 
requirements by providing customers with written "confirmations," the 
rule does not specifically require broker-dealers to provide the 
required information about third-party compensation related to mutual 
fund purchases in any particular document. SEC staff told us that they 
interpret rule 10b-10 to permit broker-dealers to disclose third-party 
compensation related to mutual fund purchases through delivery of a 
fund prospectus that discusses the compensation. However, investors 
would not receive a confirmation and might not view a prospectus until 
after purchasing mutual fund shares.

As a result of these concerns, our report recommends that SEC evaluate 
ways to provide more information to investors about the revenue sharing 
payments that funds make to broker-dealers. Having additional 
disclosures made at the time that fund shares are recommended about the 
compensation that a broker-dealer receives from fund companies could 
provide investors with more complete information to consider when 
making their investment decision. This recommendation is consistent 
with the requirement in H.R. 2420 that mandates that SEC require mutual 
funds to further disclose revenue sharing payments and make annual or 
more frequent reports of such payments to fund boards of directors.

Soft Dollar Arrangements Provide Benefits, but Could Adversely Impact 
Investors:

Soft dollar arrangements allow fund investment advisers to obtain 
research and brokerage services that could potentially benefit fund 
investors but could also increase investors' costs. When investment 
advisers buy or sell securities for a fund, they may have to pay the 
broker-dealers that execute these trades a commission using fund 
assets.[Footnote 5] In return for these brokerage commissions, many 
broker-dealers provide advisers with a bundle of services, including 
trade execution, access to analysts and traders, and research products.

Some industry participants argue that the use of soft dollars benefits 
investors in various ways. The research that the fund adviser obtains 
can directly benefit a fund's investors if the adviser uses it to 
select securities for purchase or sale by the fund. The prevalence of 
soft dollar arrangements also allows specialized, independent research 
to flourish, thereby providing money managers a wider choice of 
investment ideas. As a result, this research could contribute to better 
fund performance. The proliferation of research available as a result 
of soft dollars might also have other benefits. For example, an 
investment adviser official told us that the research on smaller 
companies helps create a more efficient market for such companies' 
securities, resulting in greater market liquidity and lower spreads, 
which would benefit all investors including those in mutual funds.

Although the research and brokerage services that fund advisers obtain 
through the use of soft dollars could benefit a mutual fund investor, 
this practice also could increase investors' costs and create potential 
conflicts of interest that could harm fund investors. For example, soft 
dollars could cause investors to pay higher brokerage commissions than 
they otherwise would, because advisers might choose broker-dealers on 
the basis of soft dollar products and services, not trade execution 
quality. One academic study shows that trades executed by broker-
dealers that specialize in providing soft dollar products and services 
tend to be more expensive than those executed through other broker-
dealers, including full-service broker-dealers.[Footnote 6] Soft 
dollar arrangements could also encourage advisers to trade more in 
order to pay for more soft dollar products and services. Overtrading 
would cause investors to pay more in brokerage commissions than they 
otherwise would. These arrangements might also tempt advisers to "over-
consume" research because they are not paying for it directly. In turn, 
advisers might have less incentive to negotiate lower commissions, 
resulting in investors paying more for trades.

Under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, advisers must disclose 
details of their soft dollar arrangements in Part II of Form ADV, which 
investment advisers use to register with SEC and must send to their 
advisory clients. However, this form is not provided to the 
shareholders of a mutual fund, although the information about the soft 
dollar practices that the adviser uses for particular funds are 
required to be included in the Statement of Additional Information that 
funds prepare, which is available to investors upon request. 
Specifically, Form ADV requires advisers to describe the factors 
considered in selecting brokers and determining the reasonableness of 
their commissions. If the value of the products, research, and services 
given to the adviser affects the choice of brokers or the brokerage 
commission paid, the adviser must also describe the products, research 
and services and whether clients might pay commissions higher than 
those obtainable from other brokers in return for those products.

In a series of regulatory examinations performed in 1998, SEC staff 
found examples of problems relating to investment advisers' use of soft 
dollars, although far fewer problems were attributable to mutual fund 
advisers. In response, SEC staff issued a report that included 
proposals to address the potential conflicts created by these 
arrangements, including recommending that investment advisers keep 
better records and disclose more information about their use of soft 
dollars. Although the recommendations could increase the transparency 
of these arrangements and help fund directors and investors better 
evaluate advisers' use of soft dollars, SEC has yet to take action on 
some of these proposed recommendations.

As a result, our report recommends that SEC evaluate ways to provide 
additional information to fund directors and investors on their fund 
advisers' use of soft dollars. SEC relies on disclosure of information 
as a primary means of addressing potential conflicts between investors 
and financial professionals. However, because SEC has not acted to more 
fully address soft dollar-related concerns, investors and mutual fund 
directors have less complete and transparent information with which to 
evaluate the benefits and potential disadvantages of their fund 
adviser's use of soft dollars. If H.R. 2420 is enacted, investors and 
fund directors would get more information to allow them to make these 
evaluations. Also, the study that H.R. 2420 would require SEC to 
conduct of soft dollars would likely provide SEC with valuable 
information to allow it to best decide the form of these disclosures 
and whether any other changes to soft dollar practices are warranted.

This concludes my prepared statement and I would be happy to respond to 
questions.

FOOTNOTES

[1] "Shareholder Reports and Quarterly Portfolio Disclosure of 
Registered Management Investment Companies, Securities and Exchange 
Commission," Release Nos. 33-8164; 34-47023; IC-2587068 (Dec. 18, 
2002).

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Mutual Funds: Information on Trends 
in Fees and Their Related Disclosure, GAO-03-551T (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 12, 2003).

[3] To determine these amounts, we used the operating expense ratios 
that ICI has estimated in its September 2002 fee study--which reported 
average expense ratios of 0.88 percent for equity funds, 0.57 percent 
for bond funds, and 0.32 percent for money market funds. By weighting 
each of these by the total assets invested in each fund type, we 
calculated that the weighted average expense ratio for all funds was 
0.66 percent. Using this average expense ratio, the average account 
size of $28,000 would pay $184 in fees. The additional expense of 
implementing specific dollar disclosures of 0.000038 percent would 
therefore add $1.07 to this amount. 

[4] Pub. L. No. 107-204, 116 Stat. 745 (codified in scattered sections 
of 11, 15, 18, 28, and 29 U.S.C.A.).

[5] Instead of commissions, broker-dealers executing trades also could 
be compensated through markups or spreads.

[6] J.S. Conrad, K.M Johnson, and S. Wahal, "Institutional Trading and 
Soft Dollars" Journal of Finance, (February, 2001).