More on the Private Fund Transparency Act of 2009

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The full text of the Private Fund Transparency Act of 2009 has now been published (S. 1276). The press release from Senator Reed was nice, but I prefer to see the ink on the paper. So here is what I see n the Act:

Registration

The Act deletes the exemption from registration in Section 203 (b)(3) of the Investment Advisers Act and replaces it with an exemption for foreign investment advisers.  The (b)(3) exemption was for investment advisers with fewer than 15 clients and did hold themselves out as investment advisers. This was the exemption most often used by private investment funds.

Reporting:

“The Commission is authorized to require any investment adviser registered under this title to maintain such records and submit such reports as are necessary or appropriate in the public interest for the supervision of systemic risk by any Federal department or agency, and to provide or make available to such department or agency those reports or records or the information contained therein.”

This is a broad empowerment of the SEC to demand any report that they feel may be a systemic risk. The act fails to define “systemic risk.”

Identity of Clients

The Act would strike subsection (c) of Section 210 of the Investment Advisers Act.  That subsection prohibits the SEC from requiring the disclosure of an investment advisers clients (except in a SEC proceeding or enforcement action). So Senator Reed wants investment advisers to disclose their client lists and private investment funds to disclose their investors.

Defining Clients

The Act would all the SEC to “ascribe different meanings to terms (including the term ‘client’) used in different sections” of the Investment Advisers Act. I am not sure what this change would do. I suspect it is an attempt to address the demise of the Hedge Fund Rule and allow the SEC to define the investors in private investment funds as “clients” of the fund manager. The courts had ruled that the SEC overstepped their authority when they tried this definition on their own.

Final Thoughts

This Act seems much more intrusive to private investment funds than the Hedge Fund Adviser Registration Act of 2009 or the Hedge Fund Transparency Act of 2009.

At this point, it is not clear which of these competing acts will end up becoming law, if any.

References:

Author: Doug Cornelius

You can find out more about Doug on the About Doug page

4 thoughts on “More on the Private Fund Transparency Act of 2009”

  1. Pingback: Weekend Reading: What Blackrock/BGI really means
  2. Thank you for this post.

    I have a question about the exemption planned for foreign investment advisers. Would it not be a strong (and dangerous) incentive to move out of the United-States the hedge fund industry?

    What is the current situation about foreign investors? Are they submitted to the 15 clients limit? What are the propositions of the two other bills on that subject?

    1. Tythan –

      This act is just one possibility. At this point I am not sure how private investments funds will be further regulated in the US. I would expect something by the end of the year.

      Certainly, over-regulation could push some activity offshore and stifle innovation in the industry. The other argument is to better define what risk the regulators are trying to control. I have not heard many good arguments for more regulation of private investment funds.

      As is the policy on this site, I cannot answer specific questions. You should seek your own securities counsel on how the investment advisers act may apply to a particular situation.

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