SEC: 88% Less Would Make Hedge Fund Cut
by Christopher Glynn, Reporter December 14, 2006
The number of households able to invest in hedge funds would be reduced by 88% should a proposed change to the accredited investor standard take effect, according to the SEC.
Commissioner Paul Atkins said the SEC conducted research that showed just 1.29% of households in the country would meet the proposed criteria for hedge fund investing.
The SEC made a proposal Wednesday that raised the minimum net worth needed to be a hedge fund investorâknown as the accredited investor standardâfrom $1 million to $2.5 million. The five-member SEC will next put the proposal, passed in a unanimous vote, out for a 60-day public comment period.
The hedge fund industry has grown to its current sizeâ$1.786 trillion according to the HFN Asset Flow Reportâvia expanding from its original investor base of rich people and institutional clientele to include the more mainstream investor.
â[A $2.5 million accredited investor standard] is a big hurdle for a lot of people,â said Ricardo Davidovich, a partner at Tannenbuam Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt, a law firm with a sizeable hedge fund practice.
Robert Leonard, head of the New York hedge fund practice of law firm Bingham McCutchen, concurred, adding that the proposed increase would eliminate a lot of people who would otherwise seek to invest in the asset class.
by Christopher Glynn, Reporter December 14, 2006
The number of households able to invest in hedge funds would be reduced by 88% should a proposed change to the accredited investor standard take effect, according to the SEC.
Commissioner Paul Atkins said the SEC conducted research that showed just 1.29% of households in the country would meet the proposed criteria for hedge fund investing.
The SEC made a proposal Wednesday that raised the minimum net worth needed to be a hedge fund investorâknown as the accredited investor standardâfrom $1 million to $2.5 million. The five-member SEC will next put the proposal, passed in a unanimous vote, out for a 60-day public comment period.
The hedge fund industry has grown to its current sizeâ$1.786 trillion according to the HFN Asset Flow Reportâvia expanding from its original investor base of rich people and institutional clientele to include the more mainstream investor.
â[A $2.5 million accredited investor standard] is a big hurdle for a lot of people,â said Ricardo Davidovich, a partner at Tannenbuam Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt, a law firm with a sizeable hedge fund practice.
Robert Leonard, head of the New York hedge fund practice of law firm Bingham McCutchen, concurred, adding that the proposed increase would eliminate a lot of people who would otherwise seek to invest in the asset class.