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Pax Admits Market Timing Problem
Pax World funds Chairman Laurence Shadek and President Thomas Grant said an internal investigation in response to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) inquiries found that Pax World hadn’t kept investors from market timing its High Yield Fund during 2003, the Chicago Tribune reported.
Grant maintained during a Tribune interview that the Pax
World funds issue was different than those affecting a
number of other fund families caught up in the mutual fund
trading scandal because Pax did not solicit the business in
exchange for large investments from the market timers.
Although critics say the market-timing transactions raise
expenses for long-term investors, a Pax shareholder letter
from Shadek and Grant said the activity in the Pax World
fund did not incur significant costs. “While we regret this
situation, we believe that our shareholders did not suffer
any material losses due to this activity,” the letter said.
Some funds linked to market timing and late trading have
seen large shareholder pullouts, but Grant said the fund
has seen no significant redemptions since the market timing
was disclosed.
Market timers were able to park and switch money from other
Pax funds by taking advantage of Pax rules allowing
shareowners to shift assets among its funds without
incurring the redemption fee intended to prevent market
timing by making it prohibitively expensive, according to
the company. Pax is in the process of restricting
these “round trips” within its funds to once every 120
days.
“The difficulty in discovering and stopping this
form of activity resulted, we believe, from a combination
of our outside vendors’ systems limitations and a failure
on our part to promptly recognize the significance of
what was occurring,” the shareholder letter said.
The issue came to light in a call from the SEC Division
of Investment Management alerting Pax to heavy trading
trends in the fund. The SEC asked Pax to investigate the
matter and provide a written explanation.
Shadek said he is confident that Pax will be able to put
this unfortunate development behind it. “We’ve had no
market timer trading, as far as we can tell, for over a
year,” Shadek told SRI.com. “We believe, after our own
internal investigation, that our shareholders were not
materially damaged, but that’s our opinion. There’s a
school of thought that rapid trading in and out of a
fund, even if it’s of a legal variety, does hurt the
long-term shareholder. If the SEC deems that there has
been damage to the shareholders, we’re prepared to make
restitution and pay fines and move on, but we hope it
doesn’t come to that.”
An ongoing federal/state mutual fund industry probe has focused on market timing and late trading practices as well as certain sales techniques.