The
U.S. Chamber of Commerce is telling U.S. Treasury Secretary
Tim Geithner to back off of money market mutual fund reform.
Yesterday
David Hirschmann, president and CEO of the Chamber's
Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness,
sent a letter to Geithner, accusing him of making a "mad dash to a predetermined outcome" on the subject and worrying that Geithner's
FSOC (Financial Stability Oversight Council) could end up "endangering rather than promoting the safety and soundness of the financial markets."
"Such action would create uncertainty, weaken financial regulation, harm investors, and damage the capital formation process needed for businesses to grow and create jobs," the letter reads.
The Chamber called on Geithner to withdraw his
request to have the FSOC step in, allowing "the SEC to complete the long-delayed review and engage in a deliberative decision making process." The letter also had some choice words for the SEC approach backed and then
abandoned by SEC chairman
Mary Schapiro.
"The SEC failed to do any of the necessary work to study the impact of prior money market mutual fund reforms and identify any additional needed changes," the letter reads. "The process you [Geither] recommend in your letter to the FSOC members would only repeat or exacerbate the flawed approach the SEC has taken over the past year."
Last month the Chamber
held a roundtable discussion on the future of money funds. 
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