Regulation of Investment Companies


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The price quoted for the work covers one year's worth of service. The upkeep price for the work is $147.00 (updated with revisions).




Investment Company Act Release


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Audit and Accounting Guide: Investment Companies, 2017


Book Description

Whether a financial statement preparer or auditor, it is critical to understand the complexities of the specialized accounting and regulatory requirements for investment companies. This guide supports practitioners in a constantly changing industry landscape. It provides authoritative how-to accounting and auditing advice, including implementation guidance and illustrative financial statements and disclosures. Packed with continuous regulatory developments, this guide has been updated to reflect certain changes necessary due to the issuance of authoritative guidance since the guide was originally issued, and other revisions as deemed appropriate. The updates for this 2017 edition include extensive changes to the illustrated financial statements for registered investment companies that result from SEC's issuance of the release Investment Company Reporting Modernization and related amendments to Regulation S-X. Other updates to the 2017 edition include changes to illustrated attestation reports that result from AICPA's issuance of Statement on Standards for Attestation Engagements (SSAE) No. 18, Attestation Standards: Clarification and Recodification. Further updates include: References to appropriate AICPA Technical Questions and Answers that address when to apply the liquidation basis of accounting Appendixes discussing the new standards for financial instruments, leases, and revenue recognition Appendixes discussing common or collective trusts and business development companies




Financial Crisis of 2008 in Fixed Income Markets


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Explores how a relatively small amount of heterogeneous securities created turmoil in financial markets in much of the world in 2007 and 2008. The drivers of the financial turmoil and the financial crisis of 2008 were heterogeneous securities that were hard to value. These securities created concerns about counterparty risk and ultimately created substantial uncertainty. The problems spread in ways that were hard to see in advance. The run on prime money market funds in September 2008 and the effects on commercial paper were an important aspect of the crisis itself and are discussed in some detail. Charts and tables.










Closed-End Investment Companies


Book Description

Closed-End Investment Companies (CEICs) were the dominant form of investment companies in the United States during the early part of this century, but interest in them declined after the 1929 stock market crash. Since 1985, however, there has been a significant revival of interest in CEICs. A substantial amount of academic research has focused on the nature of closed-end funds, discounts and premiums, and on the share price behavior of these firms, which often results in the prices differing from the net asset value of the shares. This book is designed for the academic researcher interested in CEICs and the practitioner interested in using CEICs as an investment vehicle. The authors summarize the evolution of CEICs, present the factors that cause CEIC shares to trade at different levels from their net asset values, provide a complete survey of the academic literature on this topic, and summarize the current state of research on CEICs.




Investment Company Determination Under the 1940 Act


Book Description

This is the first book to focus solely and comprehensively on the sections of the Investment Company Act of 1940 that deal with exemptions and exceptions, many of which were seriously impacted by recent Congressional changes. Written by an expert practitioner and former SEC Counsel, this reference devotes over 1,000 pages to examining all the significant changes to the Act, paying special attention to: the exception for private investment companies Newly authorized qualified purchaser funds Changes in the regulation of variable annuity and variable life insurance products and many more equally important, rapidly evolving, issues. INVESTMENT COMPANY DETERMINATION UNDER THE 1940 ACT: EXEMPTIONS AND EXCEPTIONS also addresses a number of important areas and is designed to help professionals at every level of expertise determine whether or not a particular company can be classified as an investment company. Numerous citations, pointers, and references allow users to find relevant information quickly, easily, confidently.




Mutual Fund Regulation


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