Articles Posted in Bond Funds

A Financial Industry Regulatory Authority panel has ordered Morgan Keegan & Co. to pay investor Andrew Stein $2.5 million because the bond funds that he invested in had bet poorly on mortgage-related holdings. Panel members found Morgan Keegan liable for failure to supervise, negligence, and for selling investments that were unsuitable for Stein and his companies. The claimants, who sustained financial losses, had initially sought $12 million.

Stein’s arbitration claim is just one of over 400 securities claims that have been filed against Morgan Keegan over its bond funds that had invested in subprime-related securities, such as CDO’s (collateralized debt obligations). When the US housing market collapsed, the funds went down in value by up to 82%.

Stein contends that Morgan Keegan did not reveal the kinds of risks involved in investing in the bond funds. He and his companies claim that Morgan Keegan artificially increased the fund assets’ value so that the funds would appear more stable and investors wouldn’t be able to see the actual risks involved.

US News and World Report says that the first decade of the 21st Century for fund investors got worse after the dotcom bubble burst in 2000. The media publication picked its 10 worst fund disasters:

Reserve Primary Fund: Investors scrambled to cash in shares after the fund’s price sank to over $1/share on September 16, 2008. According to US News & World Report, the Reserve Primary Fund’s biggest mistake was relying too much on Lehman Brothers, which left the fund with $785 million in worthless bonds when Lehman collapsed. Meantime, other funds found themselves in trouble as panic spread. Three days later, the federal government said it would temporarily insure money market funds.

Market timing scandal of 2003: Funds were accused of illegal late trading and front running that showered favor on more influential investors-leaving ordinary retail investors in a state of mistrust toward the institutions they had turned to for securing their retirement savings. Bank of America, Janus, Putnam, and PBHG were just a few of the financial firms accused of market timing, though the practice appeared to have permeated the entire fund industry to some extent.

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