AIMA urges FSB to exclude credit hedge funds from shadow banking debate |
Date: Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Author: Owen Dickson, COO Connect
Credit hedge funds should not be considered part of the shadow banking
sector, according to a paper by AIMA, the hedge fund industry body.
The paper argues credit hedge funds unlike banks and other non-bank financial
institutions do not take deposits nor do they offer daily liquidity.
Furthermore, it argues they do not “hold themselves out as guaranteeing the
return of the invested principal.” Most importantly, hedge funds have not and
will not be bailed out by taxpayers.
“Hedge fund managers are subjected to stringent regulation already. And under
Dodd-Frank and AIMFD, hedge funds are increasingly going to be monitored very
carefully. The alternatives industry is certainly not in the shadows and should
not be in the Financial Stability Board’s (FSB) sights,” said one industry
source.
In November 2010, the G20 mandated the FSB to develop recommendations to
strengthen the oversight and regulation of the shadow banking system. However,
there is continued debate about what constitutes a shadow bank. Recent G20
communiqués have referred to credit hedge funds, money market funds,
securitisation, sec lending and repo activities as being part of the shadow
banking system.
The industry source said that it was important to engage with international
regulators. “There is a lot of confusion about what exactly a shadow bank is and
it is important to explain that hedge funds do not engage in bank-like
activities and are not in the shadows, so they do not belong in this debate,”
said the source.
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