Decomposing FoHF returns
Where and when funds of hedge funds add and lose value
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23/06/2010
last week, a Tuxedo-clad George Osborne, attending his first Mansion House dinner as UK Chancellor, confirmed the inevitable – the FSA would be disbanded and become part of a new, more powerful, Bank of England. The second countdown to 2012, he said, starts here.
Some city wags have suggested that, in essence, all this means is ‘brass plate change on the front door’. Others call this unfair; highlighting the time and effort the Conservatives have spent on the regulatory reconstruction. Either way, the fundamental first step still remains unanswered.
“It’s not clear at this stage whether there’ll be a big change,” says Andrew Shrimpton of Kinetic Partners. “For now it’s about working out who your regulator is going to be in two years’ time .”
The new kids on the block? The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), parented by the BoE and concentrating on macro analysis and data collection, and the Consumer Protection and Markets Authority (CPMA), responsible for the conduct of all firms, retail and wholesale, and “styled on the SEC” says Shrimpton.
Small hedge funds, it would seem, are a lock for the CPMA – so said a Conservative white paper back in July 2009. For larger and insurer/bank-owned hedge funds the outcome is still a little murky. The government is expected to release further details later in the summer, but, until then, some funds can only speculate.
29/02/2012
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29/02/2012
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02/02/2011
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