Archive:2024

1
Europe: FCA Amends Opening Date for Registration of New UCITS Schemes Under UK Overseas Fund Regime
2
Europe: Updated FCA Guidance on Registration for the UK Overseas Funds Regime
3
The SEC Is Not Done Bringing Enforcement Actions for Off-Channel Communications
4
Missouri Anti-ESG Rules Struck Down
5
CME Group Clarifies and Emphasizes the Duty to Supervise Trading on its Markets
6
Australia: Is ASIC Coming for Private Market Funds?
7
Child’s Play: Congress Proposes Allowing Sandboxes for AI Within the Financial Services Industry
8
Europe: ESMA’s Call for Evidence on the UCITS Eligible Assets Directive Closes
9
Australia: Environmental Futures Launch on the ASX
10
PFAR Appeal Timeline Runs Out

Europe: FCA Amends Opening Date for Registration of New UCITS Schemes Under UK Overseas Fund Regime

By: Emma O’Dwyer, Aoife Maguire, and Gayle Bowen

The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has put back the opening date for the application gateway for recognition of new UCITS schemes (i.e. those schemes not already registered under the Temporary Marketing Permissions Regime) under the OFR.

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Europe: Updated FCA Guidance on Registration for the UK Overseas Funds Regime

By: Emma O’Dwyer, Aoife Maguire, and Hazel Doyle

On 12 August 2024, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority released updated information on its website page on the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR). It provides details on how UCITS management companies (Operators) can register for FCA Connect – which is the first step for any Operator looking to register funds under the OFR. See our previous OFR-related blogs for more information on the OFR.

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The SEC Is Not Done Bringing Enforcement Actions for Off-Channel Communications

By: Pablo J. Man and Lance C. Dial

Following a number of eyebrow-raising settlements with broker-dealers and dual registrants and a standalone investment adviser, on 14 August 2024 the SEC settled charges against 26 broker-dealers, investment advisers, and dual registrants for recordkeeping failures related to off-channel communications. The combined monetary penalties totaled nearly US$393 million, with individual penalties ranging from US$400,000 to US$50 million. The SEC noted that three of the firms (which paid US$5.5 million, US$4.5 million, and US$1.6 million penalties) self-reported their violations and consequently paid “significantly less” than they otherwise would have.

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Missouri Anti-ESG Rules Struck Down

By: Lance C. Dial and Pablo J. Man

Yesterday, 14 August 2024, a United States District Court issued a decision in Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association vs. Ashcroft finding that a pair of “anti-ESG” regulations promulgated by the Missouri Securities Division were both preempted by federal law and unconstitutional. While specifically applicable only to the Missouri regulations, this decision sets new guardrails for existing and future state regulation of federally-registered broker-dealers and investment advisers both generally and relating to environmental social and governance (ESG) investing.

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CME Group Clarifies and Emphasizes the Duty to Supervise Trading on its Markets

By: Clifford Histed and Cheryl Isaac

If you or your company trades on CME, CBOT, NYMEX or COMEX (CME Group exchanges, collectively referred to herein as “CME”), you will need to take note of CME’s new Market Regulation Advisory Notice (MRAN), which became effective on 16 July. The new MRAN is called “Supervisory Responsibilities for Employees and Agents” and should be reviewed closely to understand CME’s expectations related to diligent supervision, including policies, trainings, monitoring, remediation and sanctions.

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Australia: Is ASIC Coming for Private Market Funds?

By: Kane Barnett

What the ASIC chair said

At a recent industry event, the chair of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC), indicated that ASIC would be increasing its scrutiny of private market funds.

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Child’s Play: Congress Proposes Allowing Sandboxes for AI Within the Financial Services Industry

By Matthew J. Rogers and Maxwell J. Black

A bipartisan group in the US Congress has introduced legislation that aims to foster artificial intelligence (AI) innovation within the financial services industry by creating regulatory sandboxes. This new bill marks a significant step toward a unified, nationwide framework for regulating AI in the financial services industry.

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Europe: ESMA’s Call for Evidence on the UCITS Eligible Assets Directive Closes

By: Áine Ní Riain and Michelle Lloyd

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has today closed its Call for Evidence (CfE) on the review of the UCITS Eligible Assets Directive (EAD).

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Australia: Environmental Futures Launch on the ASX

By: Matthew Watts, Lisa Lautier, and Dhivya Kalyanakumar

Environmental Futures

In a push to support investors through the energy transition, the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) has listed a suite of environmental futures contracts on ASX 24 covering:

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PFAR Appeal Timeline Runs Out

By: Ed Dartley and Jamie M. Robinson

The clock ran out Monday, 22 July 2024 for the SEC and its timeline to appeal the unanimous decision of the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit to vacate the Private Fund Adviser Rules (PFAR). The 2023 August adoption of PFAR and the Fifth Circuit’s 2024 June subsequent decision to vacate, has caused both controversy and compliance confusion across the private fund sector over the last few years. Even in the absence of an appeal, open questions remain surrounding the implications of future rulemaking under Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act and the SEC’s stated goal to enhance transparency in the private funds space.

While the next steps for the SEC remain to be seen, managers and investors alike will still need to gauge market reaction to the core principles of PFAR and how they may drive industry initiatives separate and apart from any future regulatory efforts. For example, Institutional Limited Partners Association (ILPA) continues to adjust the parameters of the “Quarterly Reporting Standards Initiative” which was launched in early 2024 and proposes model reporting forms that are substantively similar to what was proposed in the Quarterly Statements provision of PFAR. Now that the “wait and see” attitude on PFAR is past us, it can be expected that private fund industry participants will continue to explore the parameters of the goals that PFAR tried to achieve.

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