01/17/2013 04:13:39 PM EST
Release of EU 'Implementing Regulations' Completes Chaotic Year for Hedge Fund Regulation
The US hedge fund industry faced a host of new US
regulatory challenges in 2012 - but the icing on the cake came in December with
the release of the EU's "Level 2″ Implementation Regulations for the Alternative Investment Fund
Manager Directive. The impact on many US hedge fund managers will be
palpable, if only because of the time and resources which will be required
to analyze this extremely complex set of requirements.
EU hedge fund regulations have been in the making in fits
and starts since the financial crisis. The basic thrust of these
pan-European regulations is to spread a net where all but the
smallest managers can not operate in, or market into, EU countries without a
"passport" which subjects the manager to disclosure obligations as well as
requirements around use of leverage, liquidity risk, capital requirements,
remuneration, liability standards, use of service providers and
custody.
Particularly interesting to US managers, the Implementing
Regulations released in December give guidance as to how EU-based
investment teams will be regarded, and whether the presence of such employees
will subject a US manager to the full brunt of the regulations. Another
aspect of this issue which US managers may need to explore relates to managed
account platforms, and to what extent a US-based platform that allocates to
EU-based alternative investment fund managers will be required to comply.
In a process that is not at all analgous to how a US law
gets passed, the legislative process in the EU can be somewhat daunting for
US-based managers to assess. While viewed by most of the US-based
industry as a regulatory scheme whose implementation was far off in the
distance, it is worth noting that the release of the Regulations in December moved
the EU regulations one step closer to finality, even containing an implementing
deadline for EU member states of July 22, 2013. This means that
EU members have a period of 3 months to object to these regulations
(which may be extended to 6 months), however, if there are no objections, the
July 22, 2013 date on which the rules will become effective will stand.
Implementation for non-EU managers are still subject to a
phase-in of applicability through 2018, however the availability of this
phase-in for any particular manager may be limited and should be carefully
assessed. Reporting requirements may apply immediately starting in
2013.
Read more articles about the hedge fund industry
and related legal issues at Hedge Rows, a blog by Judith Gross
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