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Recent Developments in Fund Management
Do you know your UCITS from your QIFs, and which is the best
vehicle for your investment funds?
David Williams
does, and here he looks at recent developments in this increasingly
complex sector.
Over the last few years, a distinct trend has emerged in the types
of investment funds that are being structured in Ireland and authorised
by the Financial Regulator. These funds are mostly promoted by the
international investment managers who use Ireland as the domicile
for their funds, which are then sold in the international marketplace.
However, there is an increasing demand for these products in the
domestic market as Ireland's growing private wealth management sector
looks to make greater use of them.
The trend is for funds to be either structured as a UCITS
or QIFs. The natural drift towards these two types of structure
has been caused by a number of regulatory developments at European
and domestic level.
In 2003, Ireland implemented the UCITS III Directive, which was
the first major step in expanding the range of assets that a UCITS
can invest in. The changes included the ability for a UCITS to invest
in derivatives, money market instruments and other investment funds,
so allowing for the creation of 'fund of funds' structures. In a
fund of funds, the investment manager uses his or her skill to select
the best performing managers in a specific sector on a global basis
and then invests in their funds, in effect delegating the individual
stock selection to proven performers.
However, the market always moves faster than the regulators and
as the financial markets have created ever more complex financial
instruments, there was some doubt and differing views expressed
on whether certain types of instruments, particularly those which
have embedded derivatives, were 'eligible assets' for a UCITS and
if so, how they should be treated for compliance monitoring purposes.
The EU Commission clarified these issues in its Eligible Assets
Directive in March 2007, which was transposed into Irish law last
December.
Among other things, the new Directive provides that:
- structured financial instruments that satisfy certain conditions
may now be classified as transferable securities and so become
eligible assets;
- a new definition of the types of closed-ended fund which a UCITS
may invest
in has been created, leading to greater clarity;
- a new definition of money market instruments has been introduced.
In addition, the Financial Regulator is now permitting certain
floating rate commercial bank loans to be eligible assets if they
are of the type that are normally dealt with on the money market.
Further clarification on the use of derivatives has also been included,
building on the UCITS III changes, so permitting access to broader
asset classes and new investment strategies. For example, although
a UCITS may not invest directly in hedge funds, it can gain a similar
exposure by investing in an index comprised of a number of hedge
funds through a derivative instrument.
But enough about UCITS. The structure of choice of the institutional
investor, where the cross-border marketing advantages of a UCITS
are not required, is usually the Qualifying Investor Fund (QIF).
Since February 2007, the Financial Regulator has stopped carrying
out its pre-authorisation reviews of QIF structures and it is now
possible to have a new QIF structure authorised on a filing-only
basis within one business day.
Since this groundbreaking change in approach, dialogue has continued
with the Financial Regulator and the funds industry to further improve
the QIF product from the perspective of fund managers and investors.
The objective is to remove certain requirements that are deemed
not to add any real value for investors, such as the requirement
for the QIF to produce interim accounts. We await publication of
any agreed changes to further enhance this structure, which has
proved to be ideal for the creation of investment products such
as hedge funds, private equity funds, real estate funds and fund
of funds (including funds of hedge funds).
As the financial marketplace becomes ever more complex, the regulatory
regime that exists in Ireland for the creation of investment fund
structures is responding accordingly.
A UCITS is an Undertaking for Collective Investment in Transferable
Securities, an investment fund which may be freely marketed to any
type of investor within the EU.
Qualifying Investor Funds, or QIFs, can only be sold to professional
or institutional investors. For a QIF, the Financial Regulator disapplies
most of the usual investment and borrowing restrictions which apply
to other types of fund structures, so making this the vehicle of
choice where the investment manager wishes to employ leverage or
retain maximum flexibility with regard to the fund's investment
policies.
For further information please contact David
Williams.
© 2003-2008 LK Shields Solicitors.
All rights reserved.
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