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07 July 2015

New MFA paper examines changes since passing of Dodd-Frank Act


The Managed Funds Association has released a new position paper detailing the changes financial markets have undergone since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as the expanded role alternative investments now play.

The paper, “Dodd-Frank at 5: The Role of Alternative Investments in Today’s Capital Markets,” is the first in-depth look at the role the Dodd-Frank Act has had in reshaping our financial institutions from the standpoint of the alternative investment industry.

The report largely focuses on the Dodd-Frank Act, but also discusses regulatory regimes implemented in the European Union since the financial crisis. These new regulations have changed the way financial markets function, creating a new economy that is more regulated, more transparent and more reliant on alternative investment vehicles. Hedge fund managers, as the paper explains, have adapted to this new environment and continue to advocate for globally-consistent regulations that foster fair and efficient markets for all investors.
 
The following key takeaways provide a more detailed understanding of the hedge fund industry and its investors, as well as clarify several common misconceptions:
 
• Hedge funds are no longer just tools for high-net worth individuals.  Today, institutional investors now represent nearly two-thirds of the industry’s assets under management. Fund managers are trusted partners of pension funds, charitable foundations and university endowments that help these organizations fulfill their fiduciary obligations and meet financial goals.
 
• Hedge funds are part of the financially regulated mainstream. Fund managers and their activities are monitored by the SEC and CFTC in the US and well-regulated by several EU regulatory laws and individual Member State authorities.
 
• The hedge fund industry is more transparent than ever before.  Fund managers report detailed information about their funds to regulators and investors. 
 
• As new regulations have constrained the lending capabilities of banks, hedge funds have stepped in to provide capital for local communities and businesses working to expand and create jobs.
• The US systemic risk regulator, FSOC, has acknowledged that “asset management firms and investment vehicles have closed without presenting a threat to financial stability.” In fact, the very nature of the industry prevents it from posing a systemic risk for the following reasons:

Relative Size: Hedge funds’ approximately $3 trillion in AUM represents a fraction of broader markets.

Less Concentration: The hedge fund industry is far less concentrated than other parts of the financial services industry, making it unlikely that the closing of any one fund would cause a systemic risk. Only a few hedge fund firms have more than a one percent market share of the industry’s total AUM, and no hedge fund has more than 10 per cent – small percentages when compared to other members of the financial system.

Full report



© MFA


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