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Prudent man rule

 
Investment Dictionary: Prudent-Person Rule

A legal maxim restricting the discretion in a client's account to investments that a prudent person seeking reasonable income and preservation of capital might buy for his or her own portfolio. Also called the Prudent Man Rule.

Investopedia Says:
This rule is intended to protect investors using the services of an investment advisor from shady, risky, or otherwise poor investments, such as penny stocks.

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Financial & Investment Dictionary: Prudent-Man Rule
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Standard adopted by some U.S. States to guide those with responsibility for investing the money of others. Such fiduciaries (executors of wills, trustees, bank trust departments, and administrators of estates) must act as a prudent man or woman would be expected to act, with discretion and intelligence, to seek reasonable income, preserve capital, and, in general, avoid speculative investments. States not using the prudent-man system use the Legal List system, allowing fiduciaries to invest only in a restricted list of securities, called the legal list.

Banking Dictionary: Prudent Man Rule
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Investment standard for trusts and fiduciary investments. The rule, also called the "American rule," originated in an 1830 court case. It states that trustees are free to make investment decisions, applying the same standards-reasonable income and preservation of capital-that a prudent man would use. The rule has been accepted in some states as a guide for trustees. Other states have more formal rules, limiting fiduciaries and bank trust departments to a so-called Legal List of approved investments.

Law Encyclopedia: Prudent Person Rule
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This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

A standard that requires that a fiduciary entrusted with funds for investment may invest such funds only in securities that any reasonable individual interested in receiving a good return of income while preserving his or her capital would purchase.

Historically known as the prudent or reasonable man rule, this standard does not mandate an individual to possess exceptional or uncanny investment skill. It requires only that a fiduciary exercise discretion and average intelligence in making investments that would be generally acceptable as sound.

Wikipedia: Prudent man rule
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The Prudent Man Rule is based on common law stemming from the 1830 Massachusetts court decision, Harvard College v. Armory 9 Pick (26 Mass) 446, 461 (1830). The prudent man rule directs trustees "to observe how men of prudence, discretion and intelligence manage their own affairs, not in regard to speculation, but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable income, as well as the probable safety of the capital to be invested". A copy of the Prudent Man Rule is also known as the Restatement of Trusts 2d.

Contents

Description

Under the Prudent Man Rule, when the governing trust instrument, state law is silent concerning the types of investments permitted. The fiduciary is required to invest trust assets as a "prudent man" would invest his own property with the following factors in mind: the needs of beneficiaries, the need to preserve the estate (or corpus of the trust) and the amount and regularity of income. The application of these general principles depends on the type of account administered. The Prudent Man Rule continues to be the prevailing statute in a small number of states.

Investment Choices

The Prudent Man Rule requires that each investment be judged on its own merits. Isolated investments in a portfolio may have been imprudent at the time of acquisition. However, as a part of a portfolio designed under a strategy, e.g. a hedge fund, the investment could be prudent. Thus, a fiduciary may not be held liable for a loss in one investment.

Under the Prudent Man Rule, speculative or risky investments must be avoided. Certain types of investments, such as second mortgages or new business ventures, are viewed as intrinsically speculative and therefore prohibited as fiduciary investments. As with any fiduciary relationship, margin accounts and short selling of uncovered securities are also prohibited.

Trend

Since the Prudent Man Rule was last revised in 1959, numerous investment products have been introduced or have come into the mainstream. For example, in 1959, there were 155 mutual funds with nearly $16 billion in assets. By year-end 2000, mutual funds had grown to 10,725, with $6.9 trillion in assets (as reported by CDA/Wiesenberger). In addition, investors have become more sophisticated and are more attuned to investments since the last revision of the Rule. As these two concepts converged, the Prudent Man Rule became less relevant.This discounting of the relevance of the prudent man rule is more the result of market forces than it is of the needs of individuals for "safety of capital". The 10,000+ mutual funds of 2000 have grown to over 15,000 mutual funds in 2006. Does any advisor claim to be expert on all of these funds? Does any one of the rating agencies promise that the funds they rate highly will perform better than those they don't? The Prudent Man Rule is even more important today than it was in 1830 if for no other reason than that the market has become so complex and no individual advisor or advisory firm can claim to be fully informed about the investments they recommend.

The modern interpretation of the "Prudent Man Rule" goes beyond the assessment of each asset individually to include the concept of diversification. This is referred to as the “Prudent Investor Rule”. The logic is this: an asset may be too risky to put all your money in (thus failing the Prudent Man Rule) but may still be very diversifying and therefore beneficial in a small proportion of the total portfolio.

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Copyrights:

Investment Dictionary. Copyright ©2000, Investopedia.com - Owned and Operated by Investopedia Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Financial & Investment Dictionary. Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms. Copyright © 2006 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Banking Dictionary. Dictionary of Banking Terms. Copyright © 2006 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Law Encyclopedia. West's Encyclopedia of American Law. Copyright © 1998 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Prudent man rule" Read more