Quote from laurentc:
That is really interesting.
So I do not understand why most non-US funds clearly write in their Memorandum/DDocs that no US investors could invest in their fund.
Your answer seems to confirm that any non-US fund should allow the TAX-EXEMPT US investors to invest in their fund, so that they would be able to sold their fund to more potential investors, withou additional "risks" with the US IRS.
What do you think?
Do you think they do not allow the US persons to invest because they do not know the US regulations/taxes issues enough?
Or because allowing tax-exempt could let them involuntarily accept a non-tax exempt investor, that could eventually cause trouble to the fund?
There's really no reason to allow US Tax Exempts into a non-US fund unless that fund uses debt and generates UBTI which creates a tax liability for US Tax Exempts. If there is no debt financing, then the US Tax Exempts can invest in the US based fund. If the fund does generate UBTI, the fund will often allow US Tax Exempts into the offshore fund. There could be other SEC regulations that keep them from offering the fund to any US investor.