The Securities and Exchange Commission is examining
disclosures for
401(k) plans and is looking at ways to provide such information
using
interactive software, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox told the mutual fund
industry on Thursday, May 10.
“We’re interested in both the disclosures of the constituent
investments in the 401(k) and the aggregate disclosures by the plan,” including
overall expenses and performance of investments in the accounts, Cox told the
1,200 members of the fund industry gathered in Washington for the 49th general membership
meeting of the Investment Company Institute.
Disclosures concerning 401(k) plans currently range widely
from full
prospectuses and shareholder reports to “one-page charts that contain
extremely limited information,” Cox said.
The SEC is working with the Department of Labor on the
project.
The SEC wants to make it easier for 401(k) participants to
understand expenses as well as the after-tax, after-inflation returns
that they
are getting, compared to appropriate benchmark, Cox said.
“We’re confident that we can achieve a great deal in the
coming
months,” Cox said in his speech, in which he encouraged the mutual fund
industry to voluntarily file fund information using interactive
Extensible
Business Reporting Language software that allows easy
comparisons for fund
data.
In addition to using “XBRL” software for mutual fund
disclosures,
Cox said, “there will be a significant future role for interactive
data” for 401(k) information.
Filed by Sara Hansard of Investment News, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment,
e-mail
editors@workforce.com.