Legislation would allow BDs to publish ETF research without fear of breaking securities laws
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Transcript of Legislation would allow BDs to publish ETF research without fear of breaking securities laws
Legislation would allow B-Ds to publish ETF
research without fear of breaking securities laws
Legislation approved this week by the House Financial Services Committee would
allow broker-dealers to publish ETF research reports without the reports being
considered offers to buy shares in the ETF.
The measure was co-authored by Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., and Rep. John Carney,
D-Del.
A freshman legislator who came to Capitol Hill after working as a broker , Mr. Hill
said most broker-dealers do not publish ETF research for fear of violating
securities laws.
“This is a commonsense proposal,” Mr. Hill said at a May 20 committee hearing
before the panel passed the bill. “With close to six million U.S. households holding
and using ETFs, investors need access to this research.”
DOUBLE-DIGIT GROWTH
The ETF market has experienced double-digit annual growth over the past few
years and, as of the end of April, included 1,496 funds with $2.1 trillion in assets,
according to figures from Morningstar Inc.
As ETFs occupy a greater share of both retail and institutional investor portfolios,
there's a growing demand for insight about the vehicles, said Ben Johnson, director
of global ETF research at Morningstar.
“There is a clear need for more research, more analysis across a very wide swath of
the U.S. investor base,” Mr. Johnson said.
He said Mr. Hill's bill is a good idea because investors would benefit from ETF
research in the same way that they now can find research on individual securities
and mutual funds.
The Investment Company Institute, the mutual fund industry's main trade
organization, also supports Mr. Hill’s legislation.
“ICI is a leading advocate for expanding investor education and communication,”
ICI spokesman Matthew Beck said in a statement. “We hope any resulting research
will strengthen public awareness and education about ETFs.”
If brokers issue their own ETF research, it could encroach on Morningstar's turf.
Morningstar can disseminate research through a so-called publisher's exemption
that applies to research organizations that aren't regulated as securities firms.
“Any time there's competition in the research space, that's good for investors,” Mr.
Johnson said. “It forces everyone to up their game.”
The measure was one of 13 bills the House Financial Services Committee
approved that are designed to ease capital-raising rules for small businesses. They
will go to the House floor next for a vote by the full chamber.