Britain’s fund-management industry remains vulnerable to shifts in the country’s regulatory relationship with the bloc.
      
    
    
      As negotiations about the terms of the U.K.’s departure from the European Union rumble on interminably,
 it’s pretty clear that the future relationship will be fractious at 
best. For the asset management industry, the fight around cross-border 
arrangements for overseeing investments is reigniting, with London’s 
hedge funds stuck in the crosshairs.
The
 shoe is pinching around so-called delegation rights, the rules that 
allow funds to be marketed and sold in one country and managed from 
another. Depending on how cynical you’re feeling, the EU is either 
concerned that post-Brexit Britain will leave savers exposed to a laxer 
regulatory regime, or it sees a one-time opportunity to attract a chunk 
of the lucrative asset-management industry away from London.
        
        
        
        There’s a lot at stake. About 8.5 trillion pounds ($11 trillion) is overseen by U.K. fund managers, according to the Investment Association. Some
 3.6 trillion pounds of that is on behalf of overseas customers, with 
European accounts contributing about 2.1 trillion pounds of the total. 
British-based hedge funds oversee an additional 350 billion pounds, the 
IA estimates.
        
        In January 2019, an attempted power grab by the European 
Securities Markets Regulator was rebuffed by the European Parliament. 
ESMA  had sought more control over the supervision of delegation rights; 
lawmakers made it clear that national watchdogs would remain the 
arbiters of what is and isn’t acceptable in outsourcing those 
fund-management activities.
        
    But in August, ESMA  said the current arrangements lead to increased market risk. And last week, the European Commission opened a consultation
 on reviewing the rules for so-called alternative investment funds 
(AIFs), which includes hedge funds, private equity and real estate.
        
            
            
        
        One of the stated aims of the review, which asks industry 
participants to answer 102 questions by the end of January, is to secure
 “a wider choice of AIFs for investors while at the same time ensuring 
that EU AIFMs [hedge funds] are not exposed to unfair competition or are
 otherwise disadvantaged.” Hold the questionnaire up to the light and 
it’s clearly watermarked with the sentiment, “how can we win more asset 
management business back from London?”
Question
 50, for example, asks “are the delegation rules sufficiently clear to 
prevent creation of letter-box entities in the EU,” which 
reflects concern that firms might have no physical presence beyond a 
brass plaque on a building, with all of the staffing housed outside of 
the bloc. Question 52 goes on to ask whether existing rules should be 
expanded to include “quantitative criteria” or “a list of core or 
critical functions that would always be performed internally and may not
 be delegated to third parties,” which could hobble the ability of 
non-EU firms to manage money for the region’s savers. A courtroom judge 
might reasonably assess these lines of questioning as leading the 
witness.
Brussels has made no secret of its disquiet at the 
prospect of the City of London answering only to its local regulator 
while continuing to act as the key venue for a vast swathe of euro and 
European trading activities. The likelihood that divergences between the regulatory regimes will increase
 in the coming years — either because one side seeks to gain a local 
advantage by loosening its rules, or as a result of natural drift over 
time — means the status quo is unlikely to persist for long....
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