Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox on Monday announced
the launch of a new Internet Web page that enables investors to more easily
read, analyze, and compare the information provided by mutual funds related
to fund cost, risk, and past performance.
The Mutual Fund Reader — available on the SEC’s Web site — follows on the Commission’s new rules, which permit mutual funds
to voluntarily provide information to the SEC and investors using interactive
data.
Now, according to Cox, investors can review the interactive information provided by mutual
funds, including a fund’s cost, risk, investment objectives and strategies,
and historical performance.
“The Mutual Fund Reader is an important, time-saving step to help investors
compare various mutual funds at the click of a mouse,” observed Chairman Cox, continuing:
“It will help ordinary investors use mutual fund information quickly
to make the best decisions in investing for retirement, college education, health
care, and other financial needs.”
Andrew J. Donohue, Director of the SEC’s Division of Investment Management,
added:
“We commend the mutual funds that are demonstrating their commitment
to investors by volunteering to help lead this movement to interactive data.
The new viewer will enable investors to use the interactive information that
these mutual funds have stepped forward to provide.”
The SEC approved rule amendments in June 2007 to enable mutual funds to submit
risk/return summary information from their prospectuses using interactive data.
Already, 20 mutual funds have voluntarily submitted their information in interactive
data format since August 20th, 2007.
Additional filers are expected to participate in the coming months.
The interactive data tool is powered by XBRL, a computer software language that labels
companies’ financial and other data so that investors and analysts can
more easily find what they’re looking for, and use the information for
comparisons and analysis.