WASHINGTON - Hedge funds will face closer scrutiny under rules being approved Wednesday that seek to protect investors from risky trades and prevent another financial crisis.
The rules were mandated under the financial overhaul law passed last year. They require hedge funds and private equity funds to open their books to periodic inspections by the Securities and Exchange Commission. They also force the funds to disclose information about their operations, finances and investors.
Hedge funds are lightly regulated investment pools that collect money from pension funds, endowments and wealthy individuals. They use complex trades to seek big returns. Private equity funds focus on buying and reselling companies.
The SEC is expected to adopt the rules at its meeting on Wednesday. The funds will be required to register by early 2012.
Groups representing hedge funds and private equity funds have expressed support for the registration requirement. Many hedge funds have already registered voluntarily, according to industry groups.
Until now, hedge funds have been able to avoid registering with the SEC because of an exemption for investment groups that have fewer than 15 clients. Nearly all hedge funds qualify for the exemption because they are a collection of funds that count each individual fund as one client. In reality, a large hedge fund could have hundreds of individual investors.
The hedge fund industry commands trillions of dollars in assets and invests in anything from commodities to real estate. They account for an estimated 20 percent of all stock trading and have grown dynamically in recent years. At the same time, there has been a rise in fraud among hedge funds, according to regulators.
During the 2008 financial crisis, private funds had to come up with money when their capital was put at risk. That contributed to the strain on financial markets, regulators said. Some hedge funds suffered huge losses, notably from investments backed by high-risk mortgages.
The requirements vary in accordance with the size and complexity of a fund. For example, funds with more than $1 billion in assets under management will have to provide more details. Private funds with less than $150 million in assets under management in the U.S. will be exempt from the registration requirement, as will venture capital funds.
by Marcy Gordon Associated Press Jun. 23, 2011 12:00 AM
Hedge funds face added regulation
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Real Estate News
Reuters: Business News
National Commercial Real Estate News From CoStar Group
Latest stock market news from Wall Street - CNNMoney.com
Archive
-
▼
2011
(704)
-
▼
June
(62)
- Home prices up first time in 8 months
- Glendale's Westgate City Center changed face of city
- Arizona's jobless able to keep homes with help of ...
- Maracay Homes to join Scottsdale Quarter
- As Fed bond buying ends, uncertainties may emerge
- Phoenix exec admits plotting wire fraud
- Only tap an IRA, 401(k) as last resort
- Smart Moves: Money diet can help buyers save for a...
- Trillium Pinnacle Peak apartments sold to Weidner ...
- Silverleaf project at DC Ranch revived after 2-yea...
- Planning panel OKs hike in building height, densit...
- G-20 lists measures to steady food prices
- Building outlook dim for West
- Phoenix-area real-estate agents subdued, report says
- Recovery revealing more cracks
- Fed chief puzzled by continuing economic woes
- Hedge funds face added regulation
- Realty Executives files reorganization plan
- Former Radical Bunny partners face contempt charges
- Home sales at 2011 low as few first-time buyers ma...
- Phoenix real-estate investor pleads guilty in frau...
- State trust land in north Scottsdale sells for $3....
- Zoning request would allow Scottsdale homes, deale...
- Glendale Centerline project gets the go-ahead
- Experts offer varied housing outlooks
- Auction set for Glendale center
- Inman News writers win 3 awards | Inman News
- Foreclosure Filings in Downtrend. Masked Reality?
- Apartments are aimed at the disabled
- Trustee sale of land threatens Solis project
- DC Ranch Crossing shopping center sells for $16.5 ...
- Capital One to buy ING Direct USA for $9 billion
- Builders start more homes but pace still slow
- Angel investment on increase
- Law firm accused of ties to schemes
- Holding fast at $115,000
- Fewer foreclosed homes in Valley sold in May
- Foreclosures fall for 8th straight month
- Foreclosures fall for 8th straight month
- Commodity costs subject to the whims of investors
- E-mails focus of resort's bankruptcy hearing
- Equity is now in a postwar trough
- Scottsdale council delays decision on developer's ...
- Expert: Builders have long road back
- Mortgage-rule changes worry some organizations
- Mortgage-fraud laws are getting results
- Fight on debit-card fees a test for Senate
- Valley bankruptcies fell again in May
- You can attach landlord's account
- Federal fees halted to three mortgage servicers « ...
- Squatter Nation: 5 years with no mortgage payment
- Ariz. banks still among most fragile
- Meritage has 'net zero' home
- Mayo adding to its campus
- Phoenix apartment complex sold for $76 million
- Goldman Sachs is subpoenaed
- Scottsdale mixed-use project Camelback Executive P...
- $20 million to boost fund for affordable living ne...
- Scottsdale neighborhood-center plan resurfaces
- Phoenix high-rise deal averts foreclosure
- Phoenix to use grant to upgrade Summit Apartments
- Phoenix-area housing market shows signs of price s...
-
▼
June
(62)