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This time, however, the SEC is under pressure from the Financial Stability Oversight Council, a group of high-level regulators that has backed both the floating-value requirement and calls for strict capital reserves. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew both sit on the panel. In a possible compromise, the SEC could limit the floating-value requirement to those money-market funds known as "prime." They attract mainly big institutional investors as opposed to retail customers and are considered more risk-prone because they invest in short-term corporate debt. Investors learned how risky mutual funds could be during the financial crisis. The Reserve Primary Fund, one of the largest money market funds, lost so much money that it "broke the buck." As a result, its value fell to just 97 cents per share. The decline stoked fears over the safety of money funds. In the ensuing week, investors pulled out around $300 billion from prime money funds, representing 14 percent of the assets in those funds. The government stepped in to temporarily guarantee assets of all money funds so investors could be assured they would be protected from losses. While some say the change is necessary, Robert Plaze, a former deputy director of the SEC's investment management division, acknowledged that a shift to a floating value should spark sharp debate.
[Associated
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