Archive for the ‘Hedge Funds, other investment vehicles’ Category

Cayman funds “Exodus” is a load of blarney

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

A report published in The Financial Times on January 16 once again perpetuates the myth that The Cayman Islands is suffering at the hands of Ireland regarding the re-domiciling of funds.

The story, quoting the Irish Funds Industry Association, claims the hedge fund industry is drifting away from The Cayman Islands

In December, the Irish stated that they have doubled their registered funds to 7.4%, but these statistics pale in comparison to the Cayman fund industry, which continues to grow by approximately 95 funds per month, according to the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. The regulator is reporting a natural attrition rate of de-registrations of approximately 5%, which has been a typical rate over the past several years, indicating stability in the Cayman industry.

The regulator has also confirmed that only four funds have cited re-domicilation to the EU as their reason for termination – two of those funds to Malta and two to Luxembourg.

“If we sent out a press release each time a Cayman fund was launched, the international media would be flooded with two such announcements each day. A doubling of registered funds to 7.4% does not constitute news. What astounds me is how these insignificant claims get column inches. These are statistics to be shy about.” stated Cayman Finance chairman Anthony Travers.

A recent study conducted by International Fund Investment has revealed that 60% of investors surveyed are against more regulation as it adds to increased costs (which directly impact returns) with no other discernable benefits, including investor protection.
This study also showed that only 18% of fund managers are even considering moving funds to the EU.
“For the institutional investors and managers the well understood path of the Cayman fund – non-bureaucratic, quick set up times, high quality service providers and its solid reputation is preferred Cayman is well-known and that familiarity breeds trust,” says Simon Osborn of International Fund Investment. “A number of managers believe that the AIFMD could drive managers out of the EU and only managers serious about EU distribution will have EU domiciled funds. The rest will continue to use offshore structures,” continued Osborn.

“Comparing the information of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority and the International Fund Investment report supports what the Cayman service providers are seeing,” stated Travers. “Investors are not looking for increased regulation. They are looking for returns and the emphasis is now on stress-tested products such as Cayman’s and effective due diligence to best protect their investments,” he continued.

When asked about the viability of the Irish claims of gaining large numbers of funds from Cayman, Travers pointed out that Ireland as a whole is in serious financial difficulty and it would be prudent for any investor or manager undertaking proper due diligence to consider very carefully the longevity and sustainability of Ireland as a domicile.

Cayman is well placed in terms of EUAIFM Directive and is compliant on the relevant issues. Cayman Finance is currently commissioning a ‘gap analysis’ to highlight any areas for improvement that will have positive effects in the long run.

“Rumors of our demise are greatly exaggerated”

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Whilst the taxpaying public and corporations in many G20 jurisdictions are battling the effects of the increased taxation, in fact international capital is starting to flow once again, hedge fund returns are up ticking. Now it is useful to take a hard statistical look at how Cayman’s financial services industry has fared through the crisis

One of the easiest figures to get a handle on is the number zero – the total number of banks and financial institutions that failed in the Cayman Islands during this latest financial crisis. Perhaps Gordon Brown and Alasdair Darling are simply badly briefed, but there is no statistical basis for the suggestion that instability exists within the Cayman Islands regulatory regime and their criticisms of it are ill founded.  No doubt, without the power to print money like their UK and US counterparts the Cayman regulatory authorities are simply not in a position to bail out private enterprise, and therefore require a more risk-adverse and prudent set of operating guidelines to be practiced by the Cayman banking sector.  If we allow the facts to get in the way of the negative PR for just a moment, we find the strength of the Cayman banking industry well evidenced by deposits and interbank bookings, now tracking at $1.795 trillion which is slightly behind the peak of $1.9 trillion recorded in September 2007, but still a healthy overall figure considering the global climate in which this sector has been operating and considering that there have been zero depositor losses.

Registered investment funds fell from 9,870 as at December 2008 to 9,523 at the end of 2009, but are still well ahead of the 8,751 funds in 2007.  A new growth trend is evidenced – January 2010 figures show 147 new fund authorisations and only 58 terminations. This compares quite favorably to the 106 authorisations and 39 terminations seen in January 2008 and is on target with the natural attrition trends experienced in the healthier market periods of years past.

These Cayman Islands fund statistics are surprisingly being used by some, who doubtless believe their own PR, to suggest major outflows of fund business are occurring from Cayman. In fact the drop is around 4% and after the worst financial crisis in a century this seems more like a sign of a strong fundamental belief in the jurisdiction. And where did the 4% go? There is no evidence they went anywhere other than into liquidation as a result of poor investment return and certainly not to Dublin where if we make a like-for-like comparison, we find that Irish domiciled funds fell from 5,025 to 4,627 over the same period, which is more than double the Cayman decrease. It must be also pointed out that the Irish, to boost their numbers, include sub-funds in their calculations, whereas in Cayman sub-funds are not included.  More interestingly, Irish fund listings fell from 1,605 to 1,270 during this same period, which is a loss of greater than 20 per cent and is consistent with the general malaise affecting the Irish economy.

In the insurance division, the story is brighter yet with the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) reporting the 2009 number of total insurance companies (including both domestic and international insurers) at 815, which is up 10 from year ending 2008 and 22 over the 2007 total of 793.  Captives specifically have experienced gains over this period, rising to 780 at the end of 2009 from 765 in 2007.  The assets held in the captive insurance industry have risen from $36.8 billion in 2008 to $44.7 at the end of 2009, an 18 percent increase.  By contrast, the largest jurisdiction for the captive insurance industry, Bermuda, reports 1,140 captives holding $84 billion in assets, which is down from their 2007 report of 1,149 captives holding $88.8 billion in assets.  Cayman, the second largest domicile for captives, continues to obviously gain ground against its major competitor.

Overall, these numbers are strong and prove the resilience of Cayman’s financial services industry and suggest that Cayman structures are essential to the global flow of capital – a key to economic recovery everywhere. The question that has not yet been asked, given the strength of the capital flows through Cayman, is the extent to which the protectionist elements of both the HIRE Act 2010 in the US and the European Funds Directive will have the unintended consequence of drying up the flow of funds from Cayman to the US and Europe at a time when the funding requirements of both are increasing, not decreasing.  The more logical consequence of the most recent iteration of the European Funds Directive is that rather than Cayman hedge funds wishing to move to the EU, fund managers who wish to continue to run a hedge fund proper must move out of the EU.

The recession has not completely leapfrogged the Cayman Islands as transactional volumes have decreased, as no doubt have assets under management (we await the latest CIMA figures).  The business community as a whole has had to downsize accordingly.  Streamlining into leaner operations is to be expected as part of a normal business cycle and so too Government must downsize the public sector expenditure   But, in what has hopefully been the most trying financial period our generation will have to face, the Cayman product has shown extraordinary fortitude, exhibiting both strong demand and staying power.

Anthony Travers

Cayman Finance.