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EU top-parliamentarian recommends strict hedge fund rules
 
  Hedgeweb - MON, NOV 23 2009
Funds & Investment Top parliamentarian Jean-Paul Gauzes has written to members of an influential European Union committee recommending strict rules for hedge funds that clamp down on pay and borrowing, according to Reuters, which cited his report.

The E.U. is scrutinizing a raft of regulations for the funds and other niche financial groups that includes imposing tough borrowing limits on the secretive industry, which has provoked increasing suspicion among politicians.

For weeks, the European parliament, which alongside the bloc??s member countries will write the final version of the law, has been waiting for a report from Mr. Gauzes, the parliamentarian appointed to broker a deal.

The report recommends tighter controls than many had expected for the industry, a significant setback for London which lobbied to water down the rules, according to Reuters, which obtained a copy Mr. Gauzes?? recommendations.

While acknowledging that hedge funds were not central to causing the worst financial crisis in a generation, Mr. Gauzes warns that they must now be subject to tight monitoring.

He recommends that hedge fund managers tell watchdogs how much they intend to borrow to pursue investments and stick to this self-imposed limit, a move many will see as unwelcome intrusion into their business.

Mr. Gauzes also wants to give a new pan-European watchdog ?? due to be set up in an overhaul of financial supervision ?? the power to intervene if, for example, it believes a hedge fund is taking too many risks.

The parliamentarian writes that the industry, best known for making reverse bets on company stocks rising or falling, should be subject to the same curbs on pay as bankers.

The draft law already outlines a pay code for hedge funds that discourages golden-handcuff payouts to retain high-fliers and demands that more than 40 percent of bonus payouts be deferred for at least three years.

The pay code also demands a balance between the amount hedge funds or private equity managers get paid in salary and bonus.

Mr. Gauzes writes that measures to keep the financial system stable and protect investors ??should preserve the balance between, on the one hand, the vitality and the creativity of this financial industry and, on the other hand, the need for efficient regulation and adequate supervision.?

Although hedge funds did not play a central role in the global financial crisis, many politicians have long been suspicious of their activity, prompting the European Commission, or E.U. executive, to draft rules to keep close tabs on them.

 
 
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