Publications

- November 1, 2011: Vol. 5, Number 10

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Take Note: The Advent of Major Regulatory Change in the United States Will Require Alternative Asset Managers to Stand Up and Be Counted

by Deborah Prutzman

Investors in real estate funds may be confused by some of the regulatory changes occurring in the United States — particularly those requiring advisers to register with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). At the most basic level, investors may wonder whether they should care about what’s going on and how much time it will take to figure out what really matters.

All of this is part of the fallout from the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the US law passed in 2010. This major overhaul of the US financial regulatory structure greatly impacts alternative asset managers. Unlike Europe, where managers were already subject to regulation, in the United States very few managers were registered. Prior law let them avoid registration by limiting the number of funds they advised to less than 15. It’s no surprise that virtually everyone limited their fun

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