The paper discusses the impact of the regulation and examines the options available to CTA managers to ensure compliance with the ESMA proposals.
Current UCITS regulations do not allow direct investment in commodities, therefore many CTA managers use indices to gain commodity exposure. The ESMA consultation, entitled “Guidelines on ETFs and other UCITS issues: Consultation on recallability of repo and reverse repo arrangements”, published in July 2012, proposes new guidelines governing UCITS eligible indices that directly impact UCITS CTAs/managed futures funds.
ESMA recommends that an index should be transparent and replicable to be UCITS-compliant, and that rebalancing more frequently than weekly will no longer be acceptable. This poses major problems for CTA managers using proprietary indices, as the methodology is their intellectual property, and disclosure of its constituents could enable competitors to replicate their strategy.
UCITS CTA funds utilising indices for commodity exposure account for around 50 per cent of all the assets managed in the strategy, and of the 10 largest UCITS CTA managers, seven use the index structure. The majority of CTA funds using an index structure will have to rethink the way they implement their strategy if the ESMA recommendations are ratified across Europe in their current form.
Louis Zanolin, chief executive of Alix Capital, says: “We expect a large portion of UCITS CTA managers with commodities exposure will choose to replace indices with certificates, a type of debt instrument, as this will allow them to maintain the desired commodity exposure while avoiding the upcoming index constraints. Only time will tell how exactly the regulations will affect CTA managers in practical terms, as each country is still in the process of implementing the ESMA recommendations into their national law. Commodities are an important asset class for investors seeking to build a diversified portfolio and for ESMA regulations to force managers to use complex methods to gain exposure to this asset class makes little sense. In our view it would be more beneficial to consider allowing UCITS funds to invest directly into commodity instruments.”
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