Marketers to Public Plans in New York City and California Required to Register as Lobbyists

As of the beginning of 2011, investment advisers, as well as individuals and third-party firms, soliciting business from New York City or the State of California public pension plans must determine if they have any registration obligations under the lobbying laws of those jurisdictions and comply with any applicable requirements as soon as possible. These regulations have been imposed in the wake of pay-to-play scandals in both locales and are in addition to any obligations an investment adviser may have under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“SEC”) pay-to-play rules. Continue reading

Financial Reform Leaves New York Investment Advisers Unsure Where to Register

The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, signed into law by President Obama on July 21, 2010, has left behind an odd but important ambiguity for investment advisers located in New York state.  The law requires most investment advisers with less than $100 million in assets under management to register with the securities commissioner of the state where the adviser maintains its principal office and place of business, provided that the adviser “would be subject to examination as an investment adviser” by such commissioner.  Unlike most other states, however, New York has never conducted examinations of investment advisers and currently its General Business Laws provide no specific authority for such examinations.

The Investment Adviser Association (the “IAA”), a not-for-profit association representing the interests of federally registered investment advisers, has estimated that approximately 350 New York-based advisers would be forced to de-register with the SEC as a result of the Dodd-Frank law.  David Tittsworth, the executive director of the IAA, has commented that “the answer about where they register is unclear.  It’s highly likely that the SEC will, in time, issue some sort of transitional rules that will deal with this and other questions.”

In order to avoid leaving these New York advisers in “no man’s land”, one of two responses is likely before the law takes effect in July of next year: either the SEC will bring these advisers back within its jurisdiction or New York will adopt an examination program to meet the requirements of the law.  New York advisers affected by the law will have to sit tight for the time being until guidance is released.

NY Gov Paterson Drops Tax On Nonresident Hedge-Fund Managers

On Friday June 23, Governor Paterson’s press secretary confirmed via email that New York’s controversial proposal for an extra tax on hedge fund managers that do business in New York but live elsewhere has officially been taken off the table.

In an email, press secretary Morgan Hook wrote:

“The Governor re-submitted a revenue bill that does not contain the hedge fund tax, and he would prefer the legislature pass his version of the revenue bill.”

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NY Hedge Fund Tax Update: Not Moving to Connecticut Just Yet

To follow up on yesterday’s post (N.Y. Hedge Fund Tax May Fall by the Wayside), FINalternatives reported today that in reply to a letter from Connecticut Governor Jodi Rell welcoming New York’s hedge fund industry to move to Connecticut if New York decides to tax as ordinary income “carried interest” payments made to hedge fund managers with offices in New York, but who live out of state , the New York Hedge Fund Roundtable responded with a cautious “thanks, but no thanks.”

Timothy Selby, president of the Roundtable, wrote to Rell:

Your letter was well-received and we hope that [New York] Gov. [David] Paterson’s recent statements backing away from the tax proposal prove true.

We applaud Connecticut for appreciating the value of the hedge fund industry and for pursuing economic policies that promote its growth. We only hope, however, that lawmakers in Albany reach the same conclusion.

In his letter Selby also voiced a clear preference for hedge fund managers to keep their offices in New York:

New York is the financial capital of the world and is home to more hedge fund managers and industry professionals than any other state. This is no accident, as New York offers access to markets, investors and human resources that are unmatched anywhere else.