ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, May 16, 1996                 TAG: 9605160144
SECTION: BUSINESS                 PAGE: B-8  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: WASHINGTON 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS 


MUTUAL FUND BILL GETS OK MEASURE WILL LOOSEN CONTROLS

With strong bipartisan support, the House Commerce Committee on Wednesday approved a bill to modernize mutual fund regulations and scale back the role of states in reviewing fund and stock sales.

The measure is expected to be the main bill in Congress this year to affect Wall Street and the financial markets. Senate Banking Chairman Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., is drafting related legislation, which increases the likelihood that the changes would pass Congress this year.

The bill's thrust is to trim duplicative state and federal regulations to make it cheaper for mutual funds to conduct business nationwide and for businesses to raise money in the stock market.

``It is designed to help small business find the money it needs to create new jobs, and increase the returns to pension funds, mutual funds and other savings vehicles in which our citizens are saving for retirement,'' said Commerce Committee Chairman Thomas Bliley, R-Va.

Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass, said the bill ``includes the first significant proposals to affect the regulation of the mutual fund industry in more than a generation.''

In its original form, Democrats bitterly opposed the bill, sponsored by Rep. Jack Fields, R-Texas, as anti-consumer. In March, Fields and Markey reached a compromise that stripped out the most controversial provisions, and cinched strong bipartisan support.

The Commerce Committee's ranking Democrat, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., said the bill ``strikes a reasonable balance on all of the principal issues.''

Trade groups for mutual funds, Wall Street firms and bond dealers also support it, as does Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt.

The full Commerce Committee approved the bill by a unanimous voice vote and sent it to the House floor for a vote, which hasn't been scheduled.

The Securities Amendments of 1996 would remove state regulators from reviewing mutual fund offerings and sales documents, a dramatic simplification of mutual fund regulations. Instead, the SEC and the National Association of Securities Dealers Inc. will perform the reviews.

But state regulators would continue to regulate stock offerings by companies with less than $10 million and will retain much of their power to police fraud.

Dingell said further refinements are needed, including a clear statement that states can continue to police sales practices by brokers.

``No less is at stake than investor confidence and the integrity and efficiency of our capital markets,'' Dingell said.

Markey wants refinements in a provision that gives stockbrokers more leeway to execute limited trades in states in which they're registered. The provision is supposed to shield brokers from penalties if they conduct business with a client, who because of travel or vacation, is temporarily residing in a state in which the broker isn't licensed.

Neal Sullivan, executive director of the North American Securities Administrators Association, said his group of state regulators believes the current wording is flawed.

``I'm certain that they did not try to create a boiler room loophole, but I think they created the potential for one,'' Sullivan said.

Brokerage firms stand to reap large savings because the bill will let firms borrow from insurance companies, pension funds and other lenders instead of just banks.


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by CNB