Subject: File No.
From: David Ion

October 27, 2010

File Number S7-15-10

I have been a licensed insurance professional and registered representative for over 6 years.

I support new SEC rule 12b-2, which would continue the 25 basis points fee that is used to ensure investors receive ongoing service and advice, and the SECs proposed use of the terms marketing and service fees and ongoing sales charge in place of 12b-1 fees to improve transparency in disclosure documents.

However, I strongly object to the SEC permitting mutual funds to issue a new class of shares at net asset value that would allow broker-dealers to set their own sales charge and commission amount.

Competition based on price and cost sounds good but will come at the expense of needed advice and service for middle market investors.

As broker-dealers lower their sales charges and fees in an effort to gain market share, it will no longer be financially feasible for registered representatives to continue to provide the level of individualized advice and ongoing service that we currently provide to our middle and lower market clients. In other words the clients with the least amount of money will get no service and become orphan accounts.

As a result, only upper-income investors who can afford assets-under-management arrangements or higher cost/higher service classes of shares will continue to receive personalized investment advice.

Investors with smaller fund account balances will be forced to self-direct their accounts if they wish to continue to own mutual funds because their advisors will no longer be able to afford to spend the time to guide and advise them, leaving discount brokerage fund platforms as the only affordable option for middle and lower market investors.

The people the SEC is trying to protect the most--middle and lower market investors—will be hurt the most, since they will be deprived of the guidance and service they need and deserve.

I also feel if the SEC had been doing their job and the Bernie Madoff scandal hadn't hit the papers and bank accounts of people this would all be a moot point that never would have come up.

If banks were not allowed to offer investments using priveleged account information a great deal of the meltdown would not have occurred.

Sincerely,

David Ion