Asset Management Firms Dipping into Social Media

Corporate Insight recently found that 45% of the asset management firms it tracks are employing social media in some way.

While the majority of these firms use social media to connect to consumers, a few use Facebook and Twitter to reach out to financial advisers as well, the company said.  

In 2008, Corporate Insight found that asset management firms were less likely to use social media than banks, credit card issuers and brokerage firms. At the time, just 13% of mutual fund firms and 17% of annuity issuers had a corporate-sponsored Facebook profile. However, of the 41 asset management firms tracked, 17 now feature company-sponsored pages on Facebook and 16 are now on Twitter. In addition, four firms have launched blogs.  

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Corporate Insight said that FINRA’s Regulatory Notice 10-06, helping to clarify a firm’s responsibilities with regard to social media tools, has inspired some firms to begin to use Facebook, Twitter, blogs and other interactive features.   

James McGovern, Vice President of consulting services at Corporate Insight, said in a press release that even as asset management firms are dipping into social media, “many of the firms we track do not appear to have a clear strategy for gathering fans and followers and leveraging these social media efforts.”  

Of the 16 firms Corporate Insight tracks that are using Twitter, roughly one-third are using their profiles to interact with their followers on a regular basis. Despite the growing number of banks, brokerages and credit card issuers who now use Twitter as a customer service channel, only two asset management firms have used their accounts to provide customer assistance, and even these firms have done so in a very limited capacity. The majority employ a single, general interest profile on Twitter and Facebook to drive traffic to their websites via links to market commentaries, educational articles and tools, according to the press release.  

SEC Say-on-Pay Rules Coming Soon

The Securities and Exchange Commission plans to introduce rules "in the next few weeks" that would give shareholders in 2011 a vote on the pay packages of top executives at U.S. corporations, Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said in testimony before the Senate Banking Committee.

 

U.S. regulators updated a Senate Banking panel Thursday on the progress their agencies have made to enact new laws ushered in with the Dodd-Frank Act (see Companies Need to Prepare for Pay and Governance Rules). The SEC has 100 rules and 20 studies on its plate, CNN Money reports (see Advisers Should Take Note of Financial Reform Bill Provisions).   

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The SEC also plans to introduce rules in the fourth quarter requiring hedge fund managers to register with the agency and open their books to periodic inspections.   

According to the news report, the Federal Reserve has 50 new rules to write, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has 44 new rules to write, and Treasury has two new agencies and an oversight council to set up under the reform bill. 

The testimony presented to the Committee is available here.

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