Hedge funds would get to keep lots of trades secret in SEC plan
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[NEW YORK] Hedge funds have long complained about US rules that force them to reveal their investments to other traders. For many money managers, that obligation could be going away.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said Friday that it's considering requiring only investors who hold at least US$3.5 billion in equities to disclose their holdings quarterly. Under current requirements, fund managers with at least US$100 million in securities must report their investments every three months. The proposal would mark a dramatic easing of rules that haven't been changed in more than four decades.
If the shift happened, the SEC said that 90 per cent of the dollar value of US stock holdings now reported would continue to be publicly disclosed. Under the plan, almost 90 per cent of smaller fund managers would no longer have to disclose their investments and their firms would save as much as US$136 million a year, according to the agency's estimates.
Fund managers report their equity investments in forms known as 13Fs. They must be filed within 45 days of the end of each quarter. The documents reveal a fund's holdings in stocks that trade on US exchanges, as well as options and convertible debt. The filings don't include non-US traded securities or wagers against stocks, nor do they show the price at which a fund bought or sold a security.
'UNNECESSARY BURDENS'
"Today's proposal will update, for the first time in over 40 years, the 13F reporting threshold to a level that furthers the statutory goal of enabling the SEC to monitor holdings of larger investment managers while reducing unnecessary burdens on smaller managers," SEC chairman Jay Clayton said in a statement.
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The SEC will seek public comment on its proposal for 60 days. One impact of the plan is that it could prevent well-known hedge fund managers who have limited investments in stocks from revealing their holdings.
Mr Clayton, handpicked by President Donald Trump, has prioritised easing regulatory requirements for smaller companies by letting them disclose less information than their larger counterparts.
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