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Posts Tagged ‘securities regulation’

Judge backs Galvin in case against hedge fund

Thursday, October 1, 2009 : Permalink

Boston Herald – Secretary of State William Galvin’s office didn’t violate a well-known hedge fund manager’s free-speech rights when the state cracked down on the fund’s use of the Internet to advertise to nonqualified investors.

Suffolk Superior Court Judge Judith Fabricant rejected the claims of Phillip Goldstein that his First Amendments right were violated by Galvin’s securities division.

Fabricant effectively said that case law allows some restrictions on commercial speech if it’s for a greater good promoted by the state, such as securities regulation.

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Cayman Islands Hedge Funds and Capital Markets in India – Report

Friday, July 24, 2009 : Permalink

HedgeCo.net (West Palm Beach) – A study by Dennis S. Ryan and Sonia Xavier of offshore law specialist, Conyers Dill & Pearman has come out ‘Cayman Islands Funds – Entering the Gateway to Capital Markets in India.’ The team describes the history and challenges of what Cayman Islands domiciled investment funds have faced when seeking to invest into Indian capital markets.

One of the major hurdles in this regard has been addressed by the 10 June 2009 admission of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) as an ordinary (i.e., full) member of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), according to the report.

By way of background, the IOSCO Objectives and Principles of Securities Regulation were endorsed by its member regulators of various securities and futures markets in 1998, and generally are viewed by securities regulators as the key international benchmark on sound principles and practices for securities regulation. Currently, IOSCO members regulate the vast majority of the world’s securities markets.

To access the Indian markets, an investment fund must register as a Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) with The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). In the past, since CIMA was not a member of IOSCO, SEBI often engaged in extensive due diligence and inquiries before allowing registration of a Cayman fund as a FII. As a result, few Cayman Islands funds have registered with SEBI. CIMA’s admission to IOSCO looks set to change this trend in favour of Cayman Islands funds.

The timing could not be better, the report says, with emerging markets competing to attract liquidity, the Cayman Islands, with over 9,000 CIMA registered investment funds, a proven track record with investors and an excellent and sophisticated service infrastructure, has a great deal to offer India and investors that wish to access its markets.

One remaining challenge is that the Cayman Islands do not currently have a tax treaty with India, the law fim asid. Mauritius, on the other hand, has long been the preferred jurisdiction for investment into India as a consequence of the favourable double taxation agreement between those countries (the Mauritius-India DTAA), contributing to around 44% of foreign direct investment (FDI) into India.

Investment funds from non-tax treaty jurisdictions have developed a structure involving a wholly owned Mauritius subsidiary for purposes of Indian investment. Typically, this structure requires a Cayman Islands (or other non-treaty jurisdiction) investment fund to register with SEBI as a FII. The Mauritius subsidiary fund will then be registered with SEBI as a sub-account of the FII, permitting it to invest directly in Indian securities via SEBI.

The Mauritius fund will be set up as a Global Business Company Category 1 (GBC1) that is resident in Mauritius for tax purposes. As a Mauritius tax resident, this fund is subject to tax on income at the flat rate of 15%. However it is entitled to claim a credit for foreign tax on income not derived from Mauritius against the Mauritius tax payable, resulting in an effective tax rate generally ranging between 3% and nil. As a tax resident GBC1, the fund is also entitled to take advantage of Mauritius’ network of tax treaties, including the Mauritius-India DTAA, the report concluded.

Editing by Alex Akesson
alex@hedgeco.net

HedgeCo.Net is a premier hedge fund database and community for qualified and accredited investors only. Membership on www.hedgeco.net is FREE and EASY. We also offer FREE LISTINGS for Hedge Funds!

 

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SEC Commissioner Urges Greater Regulation of Hedge Funds

Wednesday, January 28, 2009 : Permalink

New York (HedgeCo.Net) – SEC Commissioner Luis Aguilar said his agency should be given the authority to regulate hedge funds after urging Congress “to close the glaring loopholes in securities regulation.”

Aguilar, one of the agency’s five commissioners, is among many who are calling for greater oversight in an industry that has been ravaged by turmoil and most recently, fraud.  

The SEC has been accused of lax regulation after a tumultuous year where many financial institutions imploded.  That belief was further fueled after the string of recent fraud cases involving intricate Ponzi schemes, incling the Bernard Madoff scandal that swindled billions out of investors.  Even since his infamous arrest, there have been a handful of cases that have surfaced, leaving a wake of angry investors with their fingers pointed to the SEC.

Mary Schapiro, who Barack Obama appointed as head of the SEC, has come out in favor of a mandatory registration by hedge funds, although she has not vocalized any wrong doing by the agency in recent months.

“Currently, the SEC is prohibited from exerting jurisdiction over particular financial instruments that seem to fall squarely within the agency’s mission,” Aguilar said, while stating his belief that the merging of the SEC with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission  would remedy the situation of who regulates what.

Julie Scuderi
Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net
Email: julie@hedgeco.net

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