Digital Assets Report

Newsletter

Like this article?

Sign up to our free newsletter

SEC staff preview top hedge fund enforcement trends for 2013

Related Topics

In a recent speech before the Regulatory Compliance Association, Bruce Karpati, chief of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division’s asset management unit, suggested where the SEC may be heading regarding hedge fund oversight in the months to come.



Karpati both highlighted the SEC’s past enforcement activity concerning hedge funds (including several cases where the SEC alleged funds fraudulently overvalued their holdings) and signalled that the SEC’s emphasis on such activity will continue.
 
At the outset of his remarks, Karpati reviewed the enforcement division’s decision to create “specialised units” to provide the expertise and resources that will ideally provide better oversight of particular aspects of the financial markets.
 
Karpati heads the asset management unit, whose central focus is on hedge funds and investment advisers to alternative investments and private funds. The AMU was created in part to better understand the workings of the hedge fund industry and the diversity of hedge funds’ investment strategies, in order to handle the challenges in detecting and combating possible fraud.
 
Notably, the AMU has hired “industry professionals such as hedge fund managers” and private equity analysts who now assist on investigations and exams, conduct training and “assist on policymaking.” According to Karpati, “these industry professionals have already been successful in uncovering issues that we may not have identified otherwise. We like to say: ‘they know where the bodies are buried – and understand how they got there.’”
 
In the past three years alone the SEC has brought more than 100 enforcement actions against hedge fund managers. For example, in 2012 the SEC brought actions alleging that:

• A fund and its advisers committed fraud by falsely portraying a robust valuation procedure

• A hedge fund manager obtained a loan from another hedge fund he advised and gave liquidity rights to certain important investors (at the expense of other investors)

• Fund managers have misrepresented to investors that they had “skin in the game”

• Managers misstated investor returns and net asset values and

• Managers made investments contrary to their funds’ offering documents and marketing materials
 
According to Karpati, a “significant majority” of the 100+ cases “involved conflicts of interest, valuation, performance, and compliance and controls.”
 
He attributed seven of the hedge-fund related enforcement actions to the SEC’s previously announced “Aberrational Performance Inquiry,” whereby the “Division of Risk, Strategy, and Financial Innovation (RiskFin) and the Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) … analyse performance data of thousands of hedge fund advisers and refer suspicious candidates for examination or investigation.” Significantly, Karpati stated that the inquiry is continuing: “The inquiry is now focused on a subset of hedge fund strategies that have a high incidence of suspicious returns.”
 
In addition to alluding to the current focus of the Aberrational Performance Inquiry, Karpati also sent some clear signals (and some possible hints) regarding the types of enforcement actions that hedge funds and other participants in the “alternative space,” such as private equity funds, can expect the SEC to bring or pursue in 2013.

Karpati’s speech emphasised a current AMU programme – the “Private Equity Initiative” – that aims to identify private equity fund advisers that are at higher risk for certain specific fraudulent behaviour.

He identified one area that is likely to be targeted as part of the Private Equity Initiative: so-called zombie funds that are allegedly delaying liquidity of their holdings or that are misrepresenting the value of assets because income from those assets is their only source of revenue.

Judging by Karpati’s focus on “an emerging retail orientation of hedge funds,” the SEC may prioritise inquiries of funds that either “expose investors to [hedge funds] directly or indirectly.”

Karpati’s speech seems to presage a particular focus on smaller, unregistered advisers (i.e., “those with less than USD150m in assets under management”), given his observation that such advisers “pose a risk.”

The SEC’s recent insider trading enforcement activity, including actions against and involving hedge fund managers, service providers and others, will continue.

Finally, Karpati suggested that hedge funds can expect to see an increase in on-site exams in light of the Dodd-Frank Act, which subjects more private fund advisers to regulatory oversight. In particular, funds can expect to see an increase in risk-based “presence exams,” in which SEC staff will review one or more higher risk areas of a hedge fund’s operation.

In closing, Karpati recommended several steps managers could take to “insure that they fulfill their fiduciary duties” and “reduce the likelihood of more formal inquiries by Enforcement or AMU staff.”
 
Firstly, he recommended that hedge funds create a culture of compliance by making sure there is robust supervision of employees and satisfactory internal controls within the firm.
 
Karpati stressed that despite the demands on hedge fund managers, compliance must be given adequate time and resources. This includes carrying out periodic comprehensive reviews of the funds’ operations – including testing the funds’ valuation methodologies – to identify gaps in compliance programs or to assess if changes are needed in light of new activities or products offered by the fund.
 
Finally, Karpati highlighted the need for hedge funds to be prepared for SEC exam inquiries.

The Hedgeweek Awards 2013 for the best hedge fund performers and service providers will be held in London towards the end of Q1 2013. Please click here to nominate your product/firm.

Like this article? Sign up to our free newsletter

Most Popular

Further Reading

Featured