Lifting the Lid: Hedge funds stay under SEC's radar |
Date: Friday, June 15, 2007
Author: Karey Wutkowski, Reuters
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hedge funds are flouting one of the few
This would be another blow to some lawmakers and regulators who have been
seeking, yet largely failing, to bring the secretive industry out of the
shadows.
The $1.5 trillion hedge fund industry is playing an increasingly powerful
role in financial markets, whether it is funds calling for the ouster of poorly
performing CEOs or financing private equity takeovers.
Attorneys working with hedge funds acknowledge that funds often do not file
the so-called Form D private placement document that tells regulators and the
public when they start a new fund and also discloses some other details,
including who owns 10 percent or more.
Although the document is modest in scope and filed in paper form, making it
difficult to view, some hedge funds rankle at having to disclose any
information. They also know the SEC lacks enough staff to check that every fund
submits the form when starting a new round of capital-raising.
Indeed, the American Bar Association sent a letter to the SEC in March
acknowledging the problem.
"Since many private offerings are conducted in compliance with all the
requirements of Regulation D but for the filing of Form D, that requirement
does not serve even a data-collection purpose," the
Keith Higgins, who helped draft the letter and is a partner in Boston with
the corporate law firm Ropes & Gray, said members of the committee who put
together the memo told him it is "definitely the case" that hedge
funds fail to file Form Ds. "They like to operate in a bit of a veil of
secrecy or as much secrecy as possible." he said.
Now, the SEC is considering changes, which could include ending the
requirement to disclose who owns 10 percent or more and introducing electronic
filing, SEC officials said.
The agency already said publicly at an open meeting last month that it is
hoping to make the form electronic.
David Cushing, a partner at Crow & Associates which advises hedge funds,
said the industry has grown so much in the last decade that any public
information is coveted.
"The environment has become very competitive, and people may use the
information to the detriment of the fund through alternative trading
strategies," Cushing said.
But some experts question whether easing existing regulation is the correct
way to get hedge funds to comply. "As a policy matter, it's wrong to
change rules to entice people to follow the law," said Mercer Bullard, a
securities law professor at the
Regulators tried to get a better handle on the industry by requiring them to
register with the SEC and submit to random inspections. But an appeals court
last year overturned the rule, saying the SEC lacked authority to regulate
hedge funds.
The industry's lack of transparency is a concern to House Financial Services
Committee Chairman Barney Frank, who has called for global leaders to study the
funds' effects on markets.
"Private equity and hedge funds have, in a short period, become owners
and movers of vast pools of financial capital, with significant influence on
the real economy, employment and long-term competitiveness for our
companies," the Massachusetts Democrat wrote in a letter to President
George W. Bush last month.
FORM D DELINQUENCY
Hedge funds and other investment vehicles that are exempt from registration
or periodic reporting requirements are nonetheless required to file a Form D
with the SEC within 15 days of their first sale of securities in a fund.
The form's original purpose was to notify regulators that a fund was going
into business, not to detail operations.
"It gave the SEC a basis for having some information," said Barry
Barbash, a former SEC director of investment management who now advises hedge
fund clients for Willkie Farr & Gallagher. "For example, if the SEC,
in the course of doing a routine review, came across information that the fund
was engaging in insider trading, the SEC would have some background."
Form D requires a fund to disclose being how much it intends to raise, how
much it has already raised, the names of its managers and the 10-percent
beneficial owners in the fund.
Barbash said it can be in a hedge fund's best interest because it can smooth
the way for them to do private capital raising. The SEC's acceptance of a Form
D theoretically tells a fund that it is exempt from more disclosure
requirements.
The changes the SEC is considering -- dropping the beneficial owner
disclosure and requiring electronic filings -- would make it easier for hedge
funds to comply. Still, it will mean that regulators and others who want to
know more about who owns the funds are likely to get even less information.