When State Street Global Markets, a unit of mega custodian State Street, first acknowledged in 2011 that it had overcharged a UK pension fund client for transition management services, its public account sounded familiar. The bank did nothing wrong. Rogue employees, who violated bank policy, were to blame. They were dismissed and the client was […]
WAMCO Fine: A Coding Error or Compliance Breakdown?
A computer coding error. That’s how most media outlets explained one of the key reasons the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the US Department of Labor whammied a large US fixed-income fund manager with a US$22 million fine. The second is inappropriate cross-trading which unfairly benefited one group of clients at the expense of others. But […]
Europe’s AIFMD: Will US Fund Managers Bite or Should They?
The EU’s new Alternative Investment Managers Directive (AIFMD) is supposed to give alternative investment fund managers the same cachet as their traditional investment manager peers following UCITS. Or so, European regulators think. But the allure of AIFMD appears to have been lost on a critical sector of the alternative funds market. US fund managers aren’t […]
FCA Leaves Asset Owners to Self-Police Custodian Fees
In deciding not to monitor the fees charged by UK custodians for some value-added outsourced services, the UK’s securities watchdog may have just opened a floodgate of lucrative business for third-party consultants. A new committee just established by the UK fund management trade group Investment Management Association (IMA) along with fund managers and custodians is […]
FATCA: How to Reduce Ops Risk
At the core of FATCA is the need for foreign financial intermediaries to know and report whether securities accounts are owned by US persons who are deliberately trying to avoid paying their correct share of US taxes.In fulfilling the rules of FATCA, the US legislation designed to catch US tax evaders, financial firms would be […]