ESMA promotes global supervisory cooperation on alternative funds

30 May 2013

ESMA has approved cooperation arrangements between EU securities regulators with responsibility for the supervision of alternative investment funds (AIFs), including hedge funds, private equity and real estate funds.

ESMA has negotiated the agreements on behalf of all 27 EU Member State securities regulators as well as the authorities from Croatia, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.

These cooperation arrangements are a key element in allowing EU securities regulators to supervise efficiently the way non-EU alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs) comply with the rules of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD), and are a pre-condition in allowing non-EU AIFMs access to EU markets or to perform fund management activities on behalf of EU managers. These arrangements will apply to non-EU fund managers that manage or market AIFs in the EU and to EU fund managers that manage or market AIFs in third countries. The arrangements also cover cooperation in the cross-border supervision of depositaries and AIFMs’ delegates.

The arrangements, which will apply from 22 July, will facilitate the exchange of information, cross-border on-site visits and mutual assistance in the enforcement of the respective supervisory laws.

Steven Maijoor, ESMA Chair, said: “The approval by EU securities regulators of these cooperation arrangements is a significant step towards the successful implementation of the supervision of alternative investment funds by the July 2013 deadline, and their negotiation is a key achievement for ESMA in its coordinating role for EU securities markets.

“The agreements set high standards for cooperation on the supervision of cross-border alternative funds, thereby strengthening investor protection and the global consistency of supervision.”

The key elements of the cooperation arrangements are:

While ESMA has negotiated the MoUs centrally, they are bilateral agreements that must be signed between each EU securities regulator and the non-EU authorities. The actual supervision of AIFMs lies with the national securities regulators, therefore each authority decides with which non-EU authorities it will sign an MoU.

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