European diplomats prepare for hedge fund talks |
Date: Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Author: Reuters
European
parliamentarians and diplomats are preparing for another round of talks
this week to end the wrangling over rules to control the hedge fund
industry. Failure to break the deadlock on a law for
hedge funds, which has seen Britain largely isolated in Europe by its
defense of the industry, could delay a planned shake-up of financial
services spanning bonus limits to curbs on risk-taking. The draft law had been intended to curb pay
and borrowing at hedge funds and usher in an era of transparency for a
little-understood industry that many politicians said exacerbated
borrowing difficulties in Greece by betting on its debt. But Britain wants lighter regulation as the
industry important for London's financial center, while Germany and
France are seeking a heavier clampdown. Negotiations
in the parliament, which has an equal say alongside European countries
in approving the law, have been protracted but are due to conclude this
week. European ambassadors will
meet on Thursday in a bid to tee up agreement. Some British parliamentarians had hoped to
derail a regime that would require hedge funds and private equity groups
to register and disclose closely guarded trading information -- the
traditional advantage of hedge funds in the open market. The proposed law has also driven a rift
between Brussels and Washington. U.S.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has complained that the controls
could discriminate against American firms because the regulations would
not give a passport or license to operate in Europe to foreign firms. Washington, mulling lighter regulation for
the sector, is worried the new EU rules would make it harder for a New
York hedge fund, for example, to find investors in Europe. Jean-Paul Gauzes, the French lawmaker who
is in charge of broking a deal in the European parliament, has proposed
giving foreign funds a license to do business across the European
Union's 27 countries if they comply with the new law. The EU's financial services chief, Michel
Barnier, also has signaled a willingness to license foreign funds with a
base in London, for example, to do business across the continent. Diplomats, though, say the former foreign
minister lacks the backing of French President Nicolas Sarkozy on this. The ongoing row has turned the spotlight
on the EU's often long-winded process of introducing laws. Many experts
believe it bodes ill for reaching agreement on other more controversial
laws, such as establishing powerful new watchdogs for Europe. The tug-of-war between Brussels and
Washington will also hold up leaders of the Group of 20 most prosperous
countries who are trying to keep momentum in a regulatory crackdown on
banking.