Aima to engage policymakers at European Commission hedge fund conference |
Date: Friday, February 27, 2009
Author: Hedgeweek.com
Hedge fund industry body the Alternative Investment
Management Association will take part in a high-level conference on
private equity and hedge funds organised by the European Commission on
February 26 and 27 in Brussels.
The second day of the conference will examine hedge funds and will
bring together representatives of the hedge fund industry, investors,
members of the regulatory community and other experts to consider
emerging policy issues.
Aima will be represented by executive director Florence Lombard
(pictured) and Christopher Fawcett, former Aima chairman and managing
partner of Fauchier Partners, who will address issues such as financial
stability, risk management, investor protection and transparency.
The conclusions from these discussions, coupled with the results of an
ongoing public consultation on hedge funds, will feed into the
Commission's review of the supervisory and regulatory framework for all
financial market actors in the context of the global financial crisis.
Earlier this week Aima unveiled a new policy platform featuring a major
transparency initiative, announcing it would support the principle of
full transparency and supervisory disclosure of systemically
significant positions and risk exposures by hedge fund managers to
their national regulators.
Other elements of the platform include an aggregated short position
disclosure regime to national regulators, support for new policies to
reduce settlement failure including problems with naked short selling,
a global manager-authorisation and supervision template based on the
model of the UK's FSA, and a call for unified global standards for the
industry.
In its recent response to the European Commission's consultation paper
on hedge funds Aima stressed that the hedge fund industry in Europe is
currently rigorously regulated and argued that the industry has
responded in an orderly way to the current crisis and not triggered any
systemic risks.
'Aima is dealing with policy makers and regulators at a national,
European and international level on the future regulatory framework of
the hedge fund industry,' Lombard says. 'We look forward to working
with the Commission and other bodies to achieve consensus on these
major issues and we believe the active cooperation and leadership we
are providing on behalf of the industry will prove helpful.
'We think the hedge fund industry is part of the solution, not part of
the problem. Because of the essential role that hedge funds play in
providing liquidity to capital markets, they will actually play an
important role in assisting any eventual recovery.'
Founded in 1990, Aima has more than 1,200 corporate members in 43
countries including hedge fund managers, fund of hedge funds managers,
prime brokers, providers of legal and accounting services and fund
administrators.