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This paper responds to a request from the G7 Finance Ministers and Governors at their February 2007 meeting in Essen to update its 2000 report. It focuses on financial stability issues relating to hedge funds. It does not address investor protection issues associated with institutional or retail investments in hedge funds.
The report states that activity by hedge funds has expanded rapidly. Also, a small number of core intermediaries have come to play an increasingly important role in some key areas of wholesale financial markets. The relationships between these core intermediaries and hedge funds, through prime broking and counterparty relationships, have thus become more central to the robustness of the financial system.
The FSF makes five recommendations to support and where relevant build upon ongoing supervisory and private sector work:
The FSF underscores the importance of ongoing cooperation among financial authorities in taking forward these recommendations and in spreading good practices. It also notes the importance of authorities’ market surveillance activities and of their continuing dialogue with a range of market participants and actors to keep abreast of innovation and to assess the adequacy of practices and policy approaches in addressing risks to financial stability.
The 2000 Report was published in the wake of the Asian financial crisis and the turbulence in global markets that accompanied the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) in 1998.
Press release
Full report (update of the FSF’s 2000 report)
FSF recommendations and concerns (2002)
Progress report (2001)
Working group report (2000)