CFTC Relief for Funds of Funds

The CFTC has given funds of funds six more months to determine whether they needs to register as a commodity pool operator. Dodd-Frank has made interest rate and some foreign exchange derivatives “commodities” and made them subject to oversight by the CFTC. There is a December 31, 2012 deadline approaching. However, the CFTC rescinded guidance to help funds of funds determine how and when to look through their investments to determine if the fund of fund is a commodity pool.

However, the Managed Fund Association and Investment Adviser Association are concerned that their members do not yet have enough access to the underlying information from their investment funds to make the determination. And the CFTC has not issued new guidance to replace the guidance they rescinded.

This relief is not self operative. There are detailed instructions in the no-action letter stating what steps the fund manager needs to take.

I still have a problem that the is applies to a commodity pool operator, that is contingent on there actually being a commodity pool. The CFTC has not helped with that definition which still relies on the fund being organized for the purpose of trading in commodities.

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Real Estate Fund Managers and the CFTC

Many real estate fund managers, used to the lack of regulatory oversight, are wrestling with the implications of Dodd-Frank. One of the biggest sources of hand-wringing is whether to register as an investment adviser given the removal of the 15 clients exemption from the Investment Advisers Act. Another agency is potentially making regulatory changes leading to a registration requirement.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has proposed removing some exemptions from the requirement to register as Commodity Pool Operator or a Commodity Trading Advisor. I have never paid much attention to these requirement. That is because interest rate swaps and foreign exchange hedges generally fell outside the definition of a commodity.

However, Section 712(d)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act empowers the CFTC and SEC to define swaps and could re-classifies “swaps” as “commodities”. That brings these formerly unregulated contracts under the regulatory regimes of the CFTC and the SEC. Under the comprehensive framework for regulating swaps and security-based swaps established in Title VII of Dodd-Frank, the CFTC is given regulatory authority over swaps and the SEC is given regulatory authority over security-based swaps. They can fight over mixed swaps.

The concern I have is that a real estate fund is likely to have “swaps” in place to reduce interest rate risk. If they are operating overseas, they may have hedges in place to reduce foreign exchange risk. Since those are likely to fall under the new definition of swap, and there is no end-user exemption, the real estate fund and its manager could now also fall under the regulatory regime of  the CFTC.

CFTC Rule 4.13(a)(3) currently exempts a fund from registration as a Commodity Pool Operator if:

  • the fund’s interests are exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 (’33 Act);
  • the investors in the fund are only Qualified Eligible Persons, accredited investors or knowledgeable employees;
  • the pool’s aggregate initial margin and premiums attributable to futures and options on futures do not exceed 5 percent of the liquidation value of the pool’s portfolio;
  • the fund is not marketed at a vehicle for trading in commodity futures or commodity options markets.

Rule 4.13(a)(4) currently exempts you from registration as a Commodity Pool Operator if the interests in the fund are exempt from registration under the ‘33 Act and the operator reasonably believes all participants are Qualified Eligible Persons or accredited investors.

The CFTC  is proposing to eliminate these exemptions because it is concerned that they are big loopholes from exemption. I think an unintended consequence could be dragging real estate funds and real estate operators into the regulatory framework.

I have to admit that I’ve just started reading the swap rules and the CFTC framework so I don’t understand how it all fits together. Frankly, the provision in Dodd-Frank and the proposed rules are a mess and full of inconsistencies, making this situation even harder to figure out and likely creating some unintended consequences.

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