Vanguard Seeks SEC Approval to Expand Tax-Busting Fund Design

Vanguard Group Inc., the investment giant famous for low-cost index funds, is seeking regulatory approval to expand its signature tax-saving fund structure — as anticipation grows that the Securities and Exchange Commission under Paul Atkins will soon embrace the design en masse.

In a Wednesday filing with the regulator, the Jack Bogle-founded firm asked for permission to use its groundbreaking dual-share class design with actively managed strategies.

That would allow a mutual fund and an ETF to co-exist as distinct share classes of the same pool of assets, potentially giving mutual-fund holders some of the tax efficiency of ETFs. Vanguard pioneered the model more than two decades ago and has used it exclusively for index products under a special regulatory exemption, saving clients billions of dollars in tax liabilities in the process.

The SEC rejected Vanguard’s prior effort to apply the fund blueprint to actively managed strategies in 2015. The latest filing underscores the industry’s budding anticipation that the Trump administration’s SEC will soon allow for wider usage of the design.