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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

July 2011: 

Private Fund Advisers: 

Although a Self-Regulatory Organization Could Supplement SEC 
Oversight, It Would Present Challenges and Trade-offs: 

GAO-11-623: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-623, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Over the past decade, hedge funds, private equity funds, and other 
private funds proliferated but were largely unregulated, causing 
members of Congress and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) staff 
to raise questions about investor protection and systemic risk. To 
address this potential regulatory gap, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street 
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) brought certain 
advisers to private funds under the federal securities laws, requiring 
them to register with SEC. The Dodd-Frank Act also requires GAO to 
examine the feasibility of forming a self-regulatory organization 
(SRO) to provide primary oversight of private fund advisers. This 
report discusses (1) the feasibility of forming such an SRO, and (2) 
the potential advantages and disadvantages of a private fund adviser 
SRO. 

To address the mandate, GAO reviewed federal securities laws, SEC staff’
s recently completed study on its investment adviser examination 
program that was mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act, past regulatory and 
legislative proposals to create an SRO for investment advisers, and 
associated comment letters. GAO also interviewed SEC and SRO staffs, 
other regulators, and various market participants and observers. We 
provided a draft of this report to SEC for review and comment. SEC 
staff provided technical comments, which we incorporated, as 
appropriate. 

What GAO Found: 

Regulators, industry representatives, investment advisers, and others 
told GAO that it was difficult to opine definitively on the 
feasibility of a private fund adviser SRO, given its unknown form, 
functions, and membership. Nonetheless, the general consensus was that 
forming a private fund adviser SRO could be done, as evidenced by the 
creation and existence of other SROs. At the same time, they said that 
the formation of a private fund adviser SRO would require legislation 
and would not be without challenges. SEC staff and securities law 
experts said that the federal securities laws currently do not allow 
for the registration of a private fund adviser SRO with SEC. In 
addition, regulators, industry representatives, and others told GAO 
that forming such an SRO could face challenges, including raising the 
necessary start-up capital and reaching agreements on its fee and 
governance structures. Some of the identified challenges are similar 
to those that existing securities SROs had to confront during their 
creation. 

Creating a private fund adviser SRO would involve advantages and 
disadvantages. SEC will assume responsibility for overseeing 
additional investment advisers to certain private funds on July 21, 
2011. It plans to oversee these advisers primarily through its 
investment adviser examination program. However, SEC likely will not 
have sufficient capacity to effectively examine registered investment 
advisers with adequate frequency without additional resources, 
according to a recent SEC staff report. A private fund adviser SRO 
could supplement SEC’s oversight of investment advisers and help 
address SEC’s capacity challenges. However, such an SRO would oversee 
only a fraction of all registered investment advisers, as shown in the 
figure below. Specifically, SEC would need to maintain the staff and 
resources necessary to examine the majority of investment advisers 
that do not advise private funds and to oversee the private fund 
adviser SRO, among other things. Furthermore, by fragmenting 
regulation between advisers that advise private funds and those that 
do not, a private fund adviser SRO could lead to regulatory gaps, 
duplication, and inconsistencies. 

Figure: Number of Registered Investment Advisers, as of April 1, 2011: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

All registered investment advisers: 11,505; 
Advisers with clients other than private funds: 8,744; 
Advisers with private fund and other types of clients: 2,761; 
Advisers with only private fund clients: 863. 

Source: GAO analysis of SEC information. 

[End of figure] 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-623] or key 
components. For more information, contact A. Nicole Clowers, 202-512-
8678, clowersa@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Although Forming an SRO to Oversee Private Fund Advisers Appears 
Feasible, It Would Require Legislative Action and Present Challenges: 

Although a Private Fund Adviser SRO Could Help Address SEC's 
Examination Capacity Challenges, It Would Involve Trade-offs: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Figure: 

Figure 1: Number of Registered Investment Advisers, as of April 1, 
2011: 

Abbreviations: 

CFTC: Commodity Futures Trading Commission: 

FINRA: Financial Industry Regulatory Authority: 

NASAA: North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc. 

NFA: National Futures Association: 

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission: 

SRO: self-regulatory organization: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 11, 2011: 

The Honorable Tim Johnson: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard C. Shelby: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Spencer Bachus: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Barney Frank: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Financial Services: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Over the past decade, private funds--such as hedge funds and private 
equity funds--proliferated but generally were not regulated, raising 
questions about investor protection and systemic risk to financial 
markets.[Footnote 1] For example, according to Hedge Fund Research, 
Inc., in 2000, there were around 3,300 hedge funds with about $490 
billion in assets under management, and in 2010, there were around 
7,000 funds with $1.6 trillion in assets under management.[Footnote 2] 
Institutional investors, such as pension plans, endowments, and 
foundations, typically invest in private funds to diversify their 
investment portfolios. Traditionally, private funds have been 
organized, structured, and operated in a manner that enabled the funds 
to qualify for an exclusion from certain federal securities laws and 
regulations that apply to other investment pools, namely mutual funds. 
In addition, many advisers to private funds were able to qualify for 
an exemption from SEC registration. Concerned that the unregulated 
status of private funds and their advisers posed a serious regulatory 
gap, Congress recently brought advisers to certain private funds under 
the federal securities laws. Specifically, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street 
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) amended the 
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (Advisers Act) to generally require 
advisers only to private funds with assets under management in the 
United States of $150 million or more to register as investment 
advisers with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).[Footnote 
3] However, the SEC chairman, SEC staff, and industry associations 
have questioned the sufficiency of the agency's resources to examine 
investment advisers, including the private fund advisers soon subject 
to SEC oversight, with adequate frequency. 

Historically, the U.S. securities markets have been subject to a 
combination of industry self-regulation (with SEC oversight) and 
direct SEC regulation. This regulatory scheme was intended, in part, 
to relieve resource burdens on SEC by giving securities self-
regulatory organizations (SRO), such as national securities exchanges 
and associations, responsibility for much of the day-to-day oversight 
of the securities markets and broker-dealers under their jurisdiction. 
[Footnote 4] SEC previously has considered creating an SRO to help it 
oversee investment advisers and funds, reflecting, among other things, 
its concern about the adequacy of its resources to address the 
industry's growth.[Footnote 5] However, to date, no SRO for investment 
advisers, which includes private fund advisers, has been created. 

Section 416 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires us to study the feasibility 
of forming an SRO to oversee private funds. As discussed with your 
staff, this report discusses: 

* the feasibility of forming and operating a private fund adviser SRO, 
including the actions that would need to be taken and challenges that 
would need to be addressed, and: 

* the potential advantages and disadvantages of a private fund adviser 
SRO.[Footnote 6] 

To address these objectives, we analyzed the Securities Exchange Act 
of 1934, Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and Commodity Exchange Act to 
identify the various types of existing SROs, including their 
registration requirements, regulatory functions, and oversight 
frameworks.[Footnote 7] In addition, we reviewed past regulatory and 
legislative proposals for creating SROs to oversee investment advisers 
or funds, relevant academic studies, SEC staff's Study on Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations (as mandated under section 914 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act)--hereafter referred to as the section 914 study--and 
related material to gain insights on the potential form and functions 
of a private fund adviser SRO.[Footnote 8] We also reviewed letters 
addressing the need for enhanced examination and enforcement resources 
for investment advisers received by SEC in connection with its section 
914 study to review and analyze the need for enhanced examination and 
enforcement resources for investment advisers, comment letters on past 
proposals for an investment adviser or fund SRO, and other material to 
document the potential challenges in, and advantages and disadvantages 
of, creating a private fund adviser SRO. We also interviewed SEC staff 
and tested procedures used to generate estimates of the number of 
advisers to private funds, as of April 1, 2011, and found the data to 
be reliable for the purposes of our report. We interviewed staff of 
regulators, including SEC, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission 
(CFTC), the North American Securities Administrators Association 
(NASAA), the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), and the 
National Futures Association (NFA); representatives of industry 
associations representing investment advisers and private or other 
types of funds, including the Alternative Investment Management 
Association, Coalition of Private Investment Companies, Investment 
Company Institute, Managed Funds Association, and Private Equity 
Growth Capital Council; market participants, including 17 advisers 
and/or investors in private funds who were members of the industry 
associations with whom we met; and others, including a compliance 
consultant firm and three law professors, about the potential 
challenges in, and advantages and disadvantages of, creating a private 
fund adviser SRO. In our interviews with regulators and others on the 
feasibility and associated challenges of forming and operating a 
private fund adviser SRO, we generally predicated our discussion on 
the assumption that a private fund adviser SRO would be similar in 
form and function to FINRA, the SRO for the broker-dealer industry. 
[Footnote 9] 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2010 through July 2011 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

The Advisers Act generally defines an investment adviser, with certain 
exceptions, as any individual or firm that receives compensation for 
giving advice, making recommendations, issuing reports, or furnishing 
analyses on securities either directly to investors or through 
publications.[Footnote 10] As of July 21, 2011, individuals or firms 
that meet this definition and that have over $100 million in assets 
under management generally must register with SEC and are subject to 
SEC regulation. Advisers with less than $100 million in assets under 
management may be required to register with and be subject to 
oversight by one or more state securities regulators. The Advisers Act 
requires investment advisers to adhere to the high standards of 
honesty and loyalty expected of a fiduciary and to disclose their 
background and business practices.[Footnote 11] 

Traditionally, private funds (such as hedge and private equity funds) 
have been structured and operated in a manner that enabled the funds 
to qualify for an exclusion from some federal statutory restrictions 
and most SEC regulations that apply to registered investment pools, 
such as mutual funds. For example, in 2008, we found that private 
equity and hedge funds typically claimed an exclusion from 
registration as an investment company.[Footnote 12] By relying on one 
of two exclusions under the Investment Company Act of 1940, such funds 
are not required to register as an investment company. The first 
exclusion is available to private funds whose securities are owned by 
100 or fewer investors. The second exclusion applies to private funds 
that sell their securities only to highly sophisticated investors. To 
rely on either exclusion, the private fund must not offer its 
securities publicly.[Footnote 13] Before the passage of the Dodd-Frank 
Act, many advisers to private funds were able to qualify for an 
exemption from SEC registration.[Footnote 14] Although certain private 
fund advisers were exempt from registration, they remained subject to 
antifraud (including insider trading) provisions of the federal 
securities laws.[Footnote 15] 

The Dodd-Frank Act requires that advisers to certain private funds 
register with SEC by July 21, 2011.[Footnote 16] Specifically, Title 
IV of the Dodd-Frank Act, among other things, amends the Investment 
Advisers Act by: 

* eliminating the exemption from SEC registration upon which advisers 
to private funds have generally relied--thereby generally requiring 
advisers only to private funds with assets of $150 million or more to 
register with SEC;[Footnote 17] 

* providing SEC with the authority to require certain advisers to 
private funds to maintain records and file reports with SEC; 

* providing exemptions from registration to advisers solely to venture 
capital funds, advisers to certain private funds with less than $150 
million of assets under management, and certain foreign private 
advisers;[Footnote 18] 

* authorizing SEC to collect certain systemic-risk data and share this 
information with the Financial Stability Oversight Council; and: 

* generally requiring that advisers with assets under management of 
less than $100 million register with the state in which they have 
their principal office, if required by the laws of that state. 

As shown in figure 1, according to SEC staff, 11,505 investment 
advisers were registered with SEC as of April 1, 2011, of which the 
staff estimate 2,761 advise private funds.[Footnote 19] Of these 
2,761, approximately 863 registered investment advisers report on 
their disclosure form that their only clients are private funds, and 
approximately 1,898 advisers report that they advise private funds and 
other types of clients, such as mutual funds.[Footnote 20] 

Figure 1: Number of Registered Investment Advisers, as of April 1, 
2011: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

All registered investment advisers: 11,505; 
Advisers with clients other than private funds: 8,744; 
Advisers with private fund and other types of clients: 2,761; 
Advisers with only private fund clients: 863. 

Source: GAO analysis of SEC information. 

[End of figure] 

When the Dodd-Frank Act's new registration provisions take effect, the 
composition of registered investment advisers will change. SEC staff 
estimates that approximately 3,200 advisers currently registered with 
SEC will fall below the required amount of assets under management for 
registration with SEC (increasing from $25 million under current law 
to $100 million under the Dodd-Frank Act amendments. As a result, they 
will be required to register with one or more state securities 
authorities instead of SEC--leaving 8,300 advisers registered with 
SEC. In addition to these advisers, SEC staff also estimates that (1) 
approximately 750 new investment advisers to private funds will have 
to register with SEC because of the elimination of the registration 
exemption on which private fund advisers have typically relied and (2) 
approximately 700 new investment advisers will register with SEC as a 
result of growth in the number of investment advisers (based on 
historical growth rates). Therefore, SEC staff estimates that there 
will be approximately 9,750 registered investment advisers after the 
implementation of these Dodd-Frank Act amendments. However, an 
estimate of the total number of registered investment advisers with 
private fund clients remains uncertain, because some of the 2,761 
currently registered advisers with private fund clients may be 
required to deregister with SEC, depending on the amount of their 
assets under management, and some of the newly registering advisers 
may advise one or more private funds. 

Although advisers to certain private funds will be required to 
register with SEC, the private funds themselves may continue to 
qualify for an exclusion from the definition of an investment company 
under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Because private funds 
typically are not required to register as investment companies, SEC 
exercises limited oversight of these funds.[Footnote 21] Nonetheless, 
the Dodd-Frank Act amends the Advisers Act to state that the records 
and reports of private funds advised by a registered investment 
adviser are deemed to be the records and reports of the investment 
adviser.[Footnote 22] Thus, according to SEC staff, such records and 
reports are subject to examination by SEC staff. 

SEC oversees registered investment advisers primarily through its 
Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations, Division of 
Investment Management, and Division of Enforcement. In general, SEC 
regulates investment advisers to determine whether they (1) provide 
potential investors with accurate and complete information about their 
background, experience, and business practices and (2) comply with the 
federal securities laws and related regulations. More specifically, 
the Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations examines 
investment advisers to evaluate their compliance with federal 
securities laws, determine whether these firms are fulfilling their 
fiduciary duty to clients and operating in accordance with disclosures 
made to investors, and assess the effectiveness of their compliance-
control systems. The Division of Investment Management administers the 
securities laws affecting investment advisers and engages in 
rulemaking for SEC consideration and other policy development 
intended, among other things, to strengthen SEC's oversight of 
investment advisers.[Footnote 23] The Division of Enforcement 
investigates and prosecutes violations of securities laws or 
regulations. 

Securities SROs include national securities exchanges and securities 
associations registered with SEC, such as the New York Stock Exchange 
and FINRA. SROs are primarily responsible for establishing the 
standards under which their members conduct business; monitoring the 
way that business is conducted; bringing disciplinary actions against 
their members for violating applicable federal statutes, SEC rules, 
and their own rules; and referring potential violations of nonmembers 
to SEC. SEC oversees SROs, in part by periodically inspecting them and 
by approving their rule proposals. At the time that the system of self-
regulation was created, Congress, regulators, and market participants 
recognized that this structure possessed inherent conflicts of 
interest because of the dual role of SROs as both market operators and 
regulators. Nevertheless, Congress adopted self-regulation of the 
securities markets to prevent excessive government involvement in 
market operations, which could hinder competition and market 
innovation. Congress also concluded that self-regulation with federal 
oversight would be more efficient and less costly to taxpayers. For 
similar purposes, Congress created a self-regulatory structure for the 
futures markets.[Footnote 24] NFA is a futures SRO registered with 
CFTC as a national futures association. 

Section 914 of Title IX of the Dodd-Frank Act required SEC to study 
the need for enhanced examination and enforcement resources for 
investment advisers. Among other things, SEC was required to study the 
number and frequency of examinations of investment advisers by SEC 
over the last 5 years and the extent to which having Congress 
authorize SEC to designate one or more SROs to augment SEC's efforts 
in overseeing investment advisers would increase the frequency of 
examinations of investment advisers. In January 2011, SEC staff issued 
the report. SEC staff concluded that the number and frequency of 
examinations of registered investment advisers have declined over the 
past 6 years and that SEC faces significant capacity challenges in 
examining these advisers, in part because of the substantial growth of 
the industry and the limited resources and number of SEC staff. 
[Footnote 25] As a result, SEC staff recommended three options to 
Congress to strengthen SEC's investment adviser examination program: 
(1) imposing user fees on advisers to fund SEC examinations, (2) 
authorizing an SRO to examine all registered investment advisers, and 
(3) authorizing FINRA to examine its members that are also registered 
as investment advisers for compliance with the Advisers Act. In its 
report, SEC staff discusses the trade-offs of each of these options. 

Although Forming an SRO to Oversee Private Fund Advisers Appears 
Feasible, It Would Require Legislative Action and Present Challenges: 

Regulators, industry representatives, investment advisers, and others 
we interviewed told us that it was difficult to opine definitively on 
the feasibility of forming and operating a private fund adviser SRO 
because of the many unknown factors, such as its specific form, 
functions, and membership.[Footnote 26] Nonetheless, the general 
consensus was that forming a private fund adviser SRO similar to FINRA 
could be done but not without challenges. Regulators and industry 
representatives pointed to the creation and existence of other 
securities SROs as evidence that forming an SRO to oversee private 
fund advisers is feasible. However, SEC staff and two securities law 
experts told us that legislation would be needed to allow a private 
fund adviser SRO to be formed under the federal securities laws. 
Moreover, regulators, industry representatives, and others identified 
a number of challenges to forming a private fund adviser SRO, some of 
which were similar to the challenges involved in creating other SROs, 
such as FINRA and NFA. 

Legislation Would Be Needed to Allow a Private Fund Adviser SRO to 
Operate under the Federal Securities Laws: 

According to SEC staff and two securities law experts, legislation 
would be needed to allow for the formation of a private fund adviser 
SRO under the federal securities laws. Neither the Advisers Act nor 
the other federal securities laws expressly authorize the registration 
of a private fund adviser SRO. As a result, SEC staff and these 
experts told us that Congress would need to enact legislation to allow 
for such an SRO to register with SEC and for SEC to delegate any 
regulatory authority to the SRO. Past proposals to create an SRO to 
oversee investment advisers were also predicated on legislation. 
[Footnote 27] For example, the House of Representatives passed a bill 
in 1993 that, among other things, would have amended the Advisers Act 
to authorize the creation of an "inspection-only" SRO for investment 
advisers.[Footnote 28] 

Congress has taken different approaches in creating different types of 
SROs and has granted the SROs different authorities. For example, it 
passed the Maloney Act in 1938, which amended the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934 to provide for the registration of national securities 
associations as SROs for the over-the-counter securities market. 
[Footnote 29] This provision led to the registration of the NASD, 
which later merged with parts of the New York Stock Exchange to become 
FINRA. National securities associations have broad regulatory 
authorities, including rulemaking, examination, and enforcement 
authority. In contrast, Congress in 1975 provided for SEC to establish 
the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board--an SRO charged only with 
issuing rules for the municipal securities industry.[Footnote 30] More 
recently, Congress created the Public Company Accounting Oversight 
Board to oversee the auditors of public companies in the Sarbanes-
Oxley Act of 2002.[Footnote 31] Like FINRA, the Public Company 
Accounting Oversight Board has broad regulatory authorities, but 
unlike FINRA, its board is selected by SEC, and its budget, although 
established by the board, is subject to SEC approval.[Footnote 32] 
Previously introduced legislation authorizing the registration of an 
SRO for investment advisers has ranged from an SRO with potentially 
broad regulatory authorities similar to those of FINRA to an SRO 
empowered only to inspect registered investment advisers for 
compliance with the applicable securities laws.[Footnote 33] 

Representatives from all of the investment funds and adviser 
associations we spoke with opposed forming a private fund adviser SRO, 
indicating that their members would not voluntarily form or join one. 
In addition, officials from NASAA and some industry representatives 
also told us that no basis exists for forming an SRO to oversee 
private fund advisers. According to NASAA officials, the requirement 
under the Dodd-Frank Act for certain private fund advisers to register 
with SEC obviates the need for an SRO for these advisers because SEC 
and state securities regulators are in the best position to oversee 
them. Furthermore, representatives from two industry associations told 
us that the nature of private equity funds and investors obviates the 
need for an SRO. For example, representatives from one industry 
association said that the terms of a private equity fund typically are 
negotiated between an adviser and institutional investors, providing 
the investors and their lawyers with the opportunity to include any 
protections they deem necessary. These views suggest that the 
feasibility of a private fund adviser SRO may depend, in part, on 
whether legislation authorizing such an SRO made membership mandatory 
for registered investment advisers to private funds. Similarly, in its 
section 914 study, SEC staff noted that for an investment adviser SRO 
to be successful, membership would need to be mandatory to ensure that 
all investment advisers would be subject to SRO examination.[Footnote 
34] For similar purposes, the federal securities and commodities laws 
require broker-dealers and futures commission merchants dealing with 
the public to be members of a securities or futures SRO, respectively. 
[Footnote 35] 

A Number of Challenges Would Have to Be Addressed in Forming a Private 
Fund Adviser SRO: 

Regulators, industry associations, and others told us that forming and 
operating an SRO to oversee private fund advisers would face a number 
of challenges. One of the principal challenges would be funding the 
SRO's start-up costs. None of the regulators or associations could 
provide us with an estimate of the start-up costs in light of the many 
unknown variables, including the SRO's number of members and 
regulatory functions. For example, advisers with only private fund 
clients could be the only advisers required to be members of the SRO. 
Alternatively, other advisers could also be required to be members, 
such as advisers with both private fund and other types of clients or 
advisers managing a certain minimum amount of private fund assets. 
However, representatives from two industry associations told us that 
the cost of forming a new SRO would be considerable and that it would 
exceed the cost of providing resources to SEC to conduct additional 
examinations of investment advisers to private funds.[Footnote 36] 
Data from two of the more recently created SROs show that their start-
up costs varied considerably. According to the Public Company 
Accounting Oversight Board's 2003 Annual Report, the board's start-up 
costs were about $20 million dollars. In contrast, NFA officials told 
us they used around $250,000 to fund NFA's start-up in the early 
1980s.[Footnote 37] 

Another challenge that a private fund adviser SRO could face is 
establishing and reaching agreement on matters involving the SRO's 
organization, including its fee and governance structures. In 
particular, representatives from industry associations told us that 
the concentration of assets under management in a small number of 
large firms may make reaching an agreement on how to assess fees 
difficult. For example, representatives from one industry association 
said this condition could present challenges in formulating a fee 
structure that does not impose too much of a financial burden on 
smaller advisers or allocate an inequitable share of the fees to the 
largest advisers. In addition, if the SRO were modeled after FINRA or 
NFA, it would need to create, among other things, a board of directors 
to administer its affairs and represent its members. Private funds 
advisers differ in terms of their business models, investment 
strategies, and amounts of assets under management. According to 
several industry associations and firms, such diversity means that 
each group's interests may differ from each other, making it difficult 
to reach key agreements. For example, industry associations said that, 
among other things, the diversity of the industry with respect to 
investment strategies and assets under management may make reaching 
agreement on the allocation of board seats a challenge. More 
specifically, one industry association stated that the larger firms, 
if required to pay a large portion of the SRO's costs, may also want, 
or develop greater influence over the SRO's activities.[Footnote 38] 
Furthermore, CFTC staff told us that reaching agreements could be 
complicated by the competitiveness of private fund advisers with each 
other and their general unwillingness to share their data with each 
other. According to officials from NFA, which today has a membership 
of about 4,000 firms and six different membership categories, it took 
nearly 7 years for the various parties to reach all of the necessary 
agreements. 

A private fund adviser SRO may also face challenges in developing, 
adopting, and enforcing member compliance with its rules, if given 
rulemaking authority similar to that of FINRA. According to SEC staff 
and industry representatives, FINRA, like other SROs, traditionally 
has taken a rules-based approach to regulating its members--adopting 
prescriptive rules to govern member conduct, particularly interactions 
between member broker-dealers. Representatives from one industry 
association told us that SROs traditionally use a rules-based 
approach, in part, to address the inherent conflicts of interest that 
exist when an industry regulates itself by minimizing the degree of 
judgment an SRO needs to use when enforcing its rules, thereby serving 
to enhance the credibility of self-regulation. In contrast, SEC staff 
and industry representatives told us that the regulatory regime for 
investment advisers is primarily principles-based, focusing on the 
fiduciary duty that advisers owe to their clients.[Footnote 39] The 
fiduciary duty has been interpreted through, among other things, case 
law and enforcement actions (and not defined by rules), and depends on 
the facts and circumstances of specific situations. According to SEC 
staff and industry representatives, adopting detailed or prescriptive 
rules to capture every fact and circumstance possible under the 
fiduciary duty would be difficult. Further, NASAA officials and 
industry representatives stated that attempting this approach could 
result in loopholes that would weaken the broad protections investors 
are currently afforded. Moreover, SEC staff and some industry 
representatives told us that the diversity among the different 
advisers would also make it difficult to adopt a single set of rules 
for all advisers. For example, SEC staff stated that because of the 
complex nature of hedge funds (such as their changing investment 
strategies), regulations will need to be constantly monitored for 
effectiveness and updated as needed; and as such, it may not be 
feasible to adopt detailed or prescriptive rules. 

Like private fund advisers, SROs, and other financial industry 
regulators, a private fund adviser SRO could face a challenge in 
attracting, hiring, and retaining qualified personnel. According to 
industry representatives, no organization other than SEC has 
experience and expertise regulating investment advisers. Private fund 
advisers told us that an SRO would have to compete with private fund 
advisers and other financial services firms for the limited number of 
individuals with the skills needed to establish or assess compliance 
with federal securities laws. For example, as registered investment 
advisers, private fund advisers may need to hire staff, including a 
chief compliance officer, to comply with SEC regulations requiring 
advisers to have effective policies and procedures for complying with 
the Advisers Act.[Footnote 40] According to two industry participants, 
the Dodd-Frank Act will likely further increase the need for 
individuals with these skills at various types of financial services 
firms as more entities are brought under regulation and additional 
requirements are placed on regulated firms. In addition to private 
entities, an SRO would be competing with SEC for these individuals. 
For example, SEC has estimated that it will need to hire about 800 
staff over the next several years--contingent on its budget requests--
to help implement its regulatory responsibilities under the Dodd-Frank 
Act. 

Some of the challenges of forming a private fund adviser SRO may be 
mitigated if the SRO were formed by an existing SRO, such as FINRA, 
but other challenges could remain. Representatives from FINRA, NFA, 
and an industry association told us that an existing SRO may have 
access to internal funds to help finance the start-up costs of a 
private fund adviser SRO. An existing SRO also may have in place the 
necessary offices and other infrastructure. Finally, FINRA officials 
said that an existing SRO may be able to leverage some of its staff 
and staff development programs. At the same time, however, a few of 
the representatives from industry associations we spoke with said that 
even an existing SRO would face start-up challenges. They told us that 
an existing SRO would still face the challenges of hiring new staff or 
training existing staff to examine advisers for compliance with the 
Advisers Act, given that no SRO currently has such responsibility and 
skills. Moreover, they said that an existing SRO would also face 
challenges reaching agreement on, among other things, the SRO's 
governance structures. 

Although a Private Fund Adviser SRO Could Help Address SEC's 
Examination Capacity Challenges, It Would Involve Trade-offs: 

Under Title IV of the Dodd-Frank Act, SEC is required to assume 
oversight responsibility for certain investment advisers to private 
funds. According to SEC staff, the agency plans to examine registered 
private fund advisers through its investment adviser examination 
program, as it has done in the past, and has taken steps to handle the 
increased number of examinations of such advisers. These steps include 
providing training on hedge and private equity funds, identifying 
staff with private fund experience or knowledge, prioritizing the 
hiring of candidates with private fund experience, and bringing in 
outside experts to educate staff about private fund operations. 
However, SEC staff's section 914 study reported that without a stable 
and scalable source of funding that could be adjusted to accommodate 
growth in the industry, SEC likely will not have sufficient capacity 
in either the near or long term to effectively examine registered 
investment advisers with adequate frequency.[Footnote 41] We have also 
previously found that SEC's examination resources generally have not 
kept pace with increases in workload, which have resulted in 
substantial delays in regulatory and oversight processes.[Footnote 42] 
In addition, we have previously reported that, in light of limited 
resources, SEC has shifted resources away from routine examinations to 
examinations of those advisers deemed to be of higher risk for 
compliance issues.[Footnote 43] One trade-off to this approach we 
identified was that it may limit SEC's capacity to examine funds 
considered lower risk within a 10-year period.[Footnote 44] 

While a Private Fund Adviser SRO Could Help Address SEC's Examination 
Capacity Challenges, It Would Involve Trade-offs: 

According to securities regulators and industry representatives, a 
private fund adviser SRO could offer a number of advantages and 
disadvantages. A private fund adviser SRO could offer the advantage of 
helping augment SEC's oversight of registered private fund advisers 
and address SEC's examination capacity challenges. Through its 
membership fees, an SRO could have scalable and stable resources for 
funding oversight of its member investment advisers. As noted by SEC 
staff in its section 914 study, an SRO could use those resources to 
conduct earlier examinations of newly registered investment advisers 
and more frequent examinations of other registered investment advisers 
than SEC could do with its current funding levels. As evidence of this 
possibility, SEC staff cited FINRA's and NFA's abilities to examine a 
considerably larger percentage of their registrants in the past 2 
years compared with those of SEC.[Footnote 45] In addition, an SEC 
commissioner stated that an SRO would have the necessary resources to 
develop and employ technology to strengthen the examination program, 
provide the examination program with increased flexibility to address 
emerging risks associated with advisers, and direct staffing and 
strategic responses that may help address critical areas or issues. 
[Footnote 46] 

While a private fund adviser SRO could help augment SEC's oversight, 
its creation would involve trade-offs in comparison to direct SEC 
oversight. Many of the advantages and disadvantages of a private fund 
adviser SRO are similar to those of any type of SRO, which have been 
documented by us, SEC, and others.[Footnote 47] Advantages of a 
private fund adviser SRO include its potential to (1) free a portion 
of SEC's staff and resources for other purposes by giving the SRO 
primary examination and other oversight responsibilities for advisers 
that manage private funds, (2) impose higher standards of conduct and 
ethical behavior on its members than are required by law or 
regulations, and (3) provide greater industry expertise and knowledge 
than SEC, given the industry's participation in the SRO. For example, 
according to FINRA officials, the association, as an SRO, is able to 
raise the standard of conduct in the industry by imposing ethical 
requirements beyond those that the law has established or can 
establish. In doing so, FINRA can address dishonest and unfair 
practices that might not be illegal but, nonetheless, undermine 
investor confidence and compromise the efficient operation of free and 
open markets. Some of the disadvantages of a private fund adviser SRO 
include its potential to (1) increase the overall cost of regulation 
by adding another layer of oversight; (2) create conflicts of 
interest, in part because of the possibility for self-regulation to 
favor the interests of the industry over the interests of investors 
and the public; and (3) limit transparency and accountability, as the 
SRO would be accountable primarily to its members rather than to 
Congress or the public. For example, an SRO would have primary 
oversight for it members, but SEC currently conducts oversight 
examinations of a select number of FINRA members each year to assess 
the quality of FINRA's examinations. Although these examinations serve 
an oversight function, we previously have found that they expose firms 
to duplicative examinations and costs.[Footnote 48] 

A Private Fund Adviser SRO Would Fragment Investment Adviser 
Oversight, Which Could Have Implications for Its Potential Advantages 
and Disadvantages: 

SEC staff told us that estimating the extent to which, if any, a 
private fund adviser SRO would reduce the agency's resources burden is 
difficult, given the hypothetical nature of such an SRO. Nonetheless, 
available information suggests that a private fund adviser SRO may 
free little, if any, SEC staff and resources for other purposes. 
Although SEC does not collect specific data on the number of 
investment advisers that have private fund clients, as discussed 
earlier, its staff estimate that 2,761 of the 11,505 registered 
investment advisers (as of April 1, 2011) report having private funds 
as one or more of its types of clients. If, for example, a private 
fund adviser SRO were limited to those advisers with only private fund 
clients and were to have primary responsibility for examining its 
members, it could relieve SEC from having to examine approximately 863 
advisers. However, SEC still would have oversight responsibility for 
over 10,600 registered investment advisers that do not solely advise 
private funds.[Footnote 49] As a result, SEC may need to maintain 
much, if not most, of the resources it currently uses to oversee 
investment advisers because it would have oversight responsibility for 
the majority of the registered investment advisers, as well as the 
private fund adviser SRO. In contrast to a private fund adviser SRO, a 
broader investment adviser SRO could have primary responsibility for 
examining all of the 11,505 registered investment advisers, including 
private fund advisers, and thus reduce SEC's resource burden by a 
greater extent. 

A private fund adviser SRO could also create regulatory gaps in the 
oversight of registered investment advisers. Representatives from an 
investment adviser firm told us that it is common for advisers with a 
large amount of assets under management to manage portfolios for 
institutional clients, mutual funds, and private funds. The investment 
personnel and support functions often overlap, and a single portfolio 
management team often manages all three types of client portfolios. 
According to securities regulators, industry representatives, and 
others, if a private fund adviser SRO's jurisdiction was limited to 
only an adviser's private fund activities, the SRO would not be able 
to oversee and understand the full scope of activities of advisers 
with private fund and other clients. For example, representatives from 
an industry association told us that advisers typically maintain 
policies and procedures to allocate grouped trades (such as shares of 
an initial public offering) fairly among clients and avoid providing 
preferential treatment to a fund that pays performance fees at the 
expense of a fund that does not. An SRO with jurisdiction over only an 
adviser's private fund activities might not be able to detect trade 
allocation abuses involving an adviser's private fund and other 
clients. In such a case, SEC would be responsible for detecting such 
abuse and, therefore, may need to examine an investment adviser's 
relationship with its private fund clients--which could duplicate the 
SRO's efforts. 

In addition, a private fund adviser SRO could create conflicting or 
inconsistent interpretations of regulations. The formation of a 
private fund adviser SRO would result in the SRO overseeing investment 
advisers to private funds and SEC overseeing all other investment 
advisers. A securities regulator, industry representatives, and others 
told us that through examinations or enforcement actions, a private 
fund adviser SRO could interpret a regulation one way for its members, 
but SEC could interpret the same regulation another way for advisers 
that are not members of the SRO. Furthermore, for advisers with both 
private fund and other clients, if the SRO's jurisdiction were limited 
to an adviser's private fund activities, the opportunity would exist 
for the SRO to interpret a regulation one way for the adviser with 
respect to its private fund clients and for SEC to interpret the 
regulation a different way for the same adviser with respect to its 
other clients. Representatives from an industry association commented 
that SEC would have to spend significant amounts of time ensuring that 
the SRO and SEC staffs are applying the rules consistently among 
similar situations and circumstances, which would include writing 
guidance on interpretations beyond what is normally done. 

Finally, a private fund adviser SRO could result in duplicative 
examinations of investment advisers. As discussed earlier, many 
advisers with large portfolios manage assets for multiple types of 
clients, such as private and mutual funds, and have certain functions 
that serve all of their clients. According to securities regulators 
and industry representatives, for such advisers, their shared 
functions could be examined by both SEC and a private fund adviser 
SRO, if the SRO's jurisdiction was limited to an adviser's private 
fund activities. For example, the SRO could examine an adviser to 
ensure that it complied with its trade allocation policies and 
procedures for trades executed on behalf of its private funds, and SEC 
could examine the same policies and procedures to ensure that the 
adviser complied with them for trades executed on behalf of the 
adviser's other clients. These advisers could then be reexamined 
through SEC's oversight examinations. 

As required by the Dodd-Frank Act, SEC is taking steps to assume 
responsibility for registering and overseeing certain investment 
advisers to private funds. However, in its section 914 study, SEC 
staff concluded that the agency likely will not have sufficient 
capacity to effectively examine registered investment advisers, 
including private fund advisers, with adequate frequency. A private 
fund adviser SRO is one of several options that could be implemented 
to help address SEC's examination capacity challenges. However, doing 
so would involve trade-offs, including lessening SEC's capacity 
challenges versus increasing potential regulatory gaps, 
inconsistencies, and duplication in the oversight of registered 
investment advisers. As recommended by SEC staff in its recent study, 
other options to address SEC's capacity challenges include creating an 
SRO to examine all registered investment advisers or imposing user 
fees on advisers to fund SEC examinations. Like the private fund 
adviser SRO option, these two options would involve trade-offs that 
would have to be considered. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to SEC. SEC staff provided 
technical comments, which we incorporated, as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to SEC, interested congressional 
committees and members, and others. The report also is available at no 
charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-8678 or clowersa@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

A. Nicole Clowers: 
Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investment Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

The objectives of this report were to examine (1) the feasibility of 
forming and operating a private fund adviser self-regulatory 
organization (SRO), including the actions that would need to be taken 
and challenges that would need to be addressed, and (2) the potential 
advantages and disadvantages of a private fund adviser SRO. Although 
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd- 
Frank Act) directs us to assess the feasibility of forming an SRO for 
private funds, our study focuses on an SRO for private fund advisers. 
As discussed with congressional staff, the term "private funds," as 
used in section 416 of the Dodd-Frank Act, was intended to refer to 
private fund advisers. The Dodd-Frank Act amends the federal 
securities laws to require certain advisers to private funds, not the 
funds themselves, to register with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (SEC). Securities SROs serve to help enforce the federal 
securities laws applicable to their members. An SRO for private funds 
(not advisers) would not serve that purpose, because private funds 
could continue to qualify for exclusions from registering with SEC and 
thus would not generally be subject to the federal securities laws. 

To focus our discussions with regulators, industry associations, and 
observers on the feasibility, associated challenges, and advantages 
and disadvantages of a private fund adviser SRO, we generally 
predicated our discussions on the assumption that such an SRO would be 
similar in form and function to the Financial Industry Regulatory 
Authority (FINRA). 

To address both objectives, we analyzed the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and Commodity Exchange Act to 
identify characteristics of the various types of existing SROs, 
including their registration requirements, regulatory functions, and 
oversight framework.[Footnote 50] In addition, we reviewed past 
regulatory and legislative proposals for creating an SRO to oversee 
investment advisers or funds, relevant academic studies, SEC staff's 
Study on Enhancing Investment Adviser Examinations (as mandated under 
section 914 of the Dodd-Frank Act) (section 914 study), and related 
material to gain insights on the potential form and functions of a 
private fund adviser SRO. We did not evaluate the findings of the 
study or the staff's conclusions regarding the investment advisers 
examination program. We also reviewed letters received by SEC in 
connection with its section 914 study, comment letters on past 
proposals for an investment adviser or fund SRO, and other material to 
document the potential challenges in--and advantages and disadvantages 
of--creating a private fund adviser SRO. 

We obtained information on the number of registered investment 
advisers from SEC based on information in the Investment Adviser 
Registration Depository, as of April 1, 2011. Using this database, SEC 
provided us estimates of the number of advisers with only private fund 
clients and the number of advisers with private fund and other types 
of clients. SEC staff derived these estimates based on information 
from Form ADV--the uniform form that is used by investment advisers to 
register with SEC, which requires information about, among other 
things, the investment adviser's business and clients. Form ADV does 
not currently include a specific question on whether the adviser is an 
adviser to private funds. To estimate the number of advisers that 
potentially advise private funds, SEC includes the number of advisers 
whose response to Form ADV's Item 7.B equaled "yes" and Item 5.D(6) is 
not 0 percent. Item 7.B asks the investment adviser whether it or any 
related person is a general partner in an investment-related limited 
partnership or manager of an investment-related limited liability 
company, or whether it advises any other "private fund," as defined 
under SEC rule 203(b)(3)-1. Item 5.D(6) asks the adviser to identify 
whether it has other pooled investment vehicles (e.g., hedge funds) as 
clients and if so to indicate the approximate percentage that these 
clients comprise of its total number of clients. We attribute these 
estimates to SEC even though we were able to replicate their estimates 
using these procedures. We found these figures to be sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of showing estimated numbers of registered 
investment advisers serving private clients. 

We interviewed regulators, including SEC, the Commodity Futures 
Trading Commission, FINRA, and the National Futures Association. We 
also interviewed representatives from the following 10 relevant 
industry associations representing investment advisers and private or 
other types of funds. Representatives of 17 advisory firms and/or 
investors in private funds who were members of some of these 
associations also participated in the interviews. 

* Alternative Investment Management Association: 

* Association of Institutional Investors: 

* Coalition of Private Investment Companies: 

* Financial Services Institute: 

* Hedge Fund Association: 

* Investment Adviser Association: 

* Investment Company Institute: 

* Managed Funds Association: 

* North American Securities Administrators Association: 

* Private Equity Growth Capital Council. 

To gather a diverse set of perspectives, we identified industry 
associations representing various types of investment funds, advisers, 
and investors in private funds by reviewing letters received by SEC in 
connection with its section 914 study and previous concept releases 
about an investment adviser SRO. We also drew upon our institutional 
knowledge. In addition, we interviewed market observers including a 
compliance consultant firm that provides these services to the 
financial services industry, and two law professors who have written 
papers on the potential use of an SRO to oversee investment companies 
and one whose paper focused on an SRO for hedge funds. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2010 through July 2011 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

SEC staff derived these data based on information from Form ADV--the 
uniform form that is used by investment advisers to register with SEC, 
which requires information about, among other things, the investment 
adviser's business and clients. Form ADV does not currently include a 
specific question on whether the adviser is an adviser to private 
funds. To estimate the number of advisers that potentially advise 
private funds SEC includes the number of advisers whose response to 
Form ADV's Item 7.B equaled "yes" and Item 5.D(6) is not 0 percent. 
Item 7.B asks the investment adviser whether it or any related person 
is a general partner in an investment-related limited partnership or 
manager of an investment-related limited liability company, or whether 
it advises any other "private fund," as defined under SEC rule 
203(b)(3)-1. Item 5.D(6) asks the adviser to identify whether it has 
other pooled investment vehicles (e.g., hedge funds) as clients and if 
so to indicate the approximate percentage that these clients 
constitute of its total number of clients. 

GAO Contact: 

A. Nicole Clowers, (202) 512-8678 or clowersa@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Richard Tsuhara, Assistant 
Director; Rudy Chatlos; Matthew Keeler; Marc Molino; Josephine Perez; 
Robert Pollard; Linda Rego; and Jennifer Schwartz made major 
contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Section 402(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer 
Protection Act, to be codified at 15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(29), defines 
the term "private fund" to mean an issuer that would be an investment 
company, as defined in section 3 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 
(15 U.S.C. 80a-3), but for section 3(c)(1) or 3(c)(7) of that act. 
Although hedge and private equity funds may fall under the definition 
of private fund, there is no precise legal or universally accepted 
definition of hedge fund or private equity fund. The term "hedge fund" 
commonly is used to describe pooled investment vehicles that often 
engage in active trading of various types of securities and commodity 
futures and options contracts. The term "private equity fund" can be 
defined narrowly as pooled investment vehicles that engage in 
leveraged buyouts of companies or more broadly to include pooled 
investment vehicles that invest in start-up or early stages of a 
company (called venture capital). 

[2] Hedge Fund Research, Inc., "2010 Q2 Hedge Fund Industry Report," 
HFR Global Hedge Fund Industry Reports, (Chicago, Ill., 2011), 
[hyperlink, http://www.hedgefundresearch.com]. 

[3] Pub. L. No. 111-203, §§ 403, 408, 124 Stat. 1376, 1571 (2010); 15 
U.S.C. § 80b-3. 

[4] An SRO can be defined in many ways. It can be broadly defined as a 
group of persons that establishes and enforces rules or best practices 
to govern the conduct of its members on a voluntary basis. Under this 
definition, an industry association could be defined as an SRO. For 
purposes of this report, we generally are defining the term more 
narrowly to mean a group of persons that is registered under the 
federal securities laws and subject to SEC oversight and minimum 
statutory and regulatory requirements. See, for example, Joel 
Seligman, Should Investment Companies Be Subject to a New Statutory 
Self-Regulatory Organization?, 83 Wash. U. L. Q. Vol. 83:1115, 1124 
(2005). 

[5] For example, in 2003, SEC requested comments on whether one or 
more SROs should be established for funds and/or investment advisers. 
See SEC, Compliance Programs of Investment Companies and Investment 
Advisers, Release No. IC-25925, IA-2107, 68 Fed Reg. 7038 (Feb. 11, 
2003) (proposed rule). 

[6] Our study focuses on an SRO for private fund advisers, not private 
funds. As discussed with congressional staff, the term "private 
funds," as used in the Dodd-Frank Act's text for the required GAO 
study, referred to private fund advisers. The Dodd-Frank Act amended 
the federal securities laws to require certain advisers to private 
funds, not the funds themselves, to register with SEC. Securities SROs 
serve to help enforce the federal securities laws applicable to their 
members. An SRO for private funds (not advisers) would not serve that 
purpose, because private funds can continue to qualify for an 
exclusion from registration with SEC and thus generally are not 
subject to the federal securities laws. 

[7] 15 U.S.C. §§ 78a-78pp; 15 U.S.C. §§ 7201-78d-3, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1519, 
1520, 1514A, 1348-1350; 7 U.S.C. §§ 1-26. 

[8] We did not evaluate the findings of the study or the staff's 
conclusions regarding the investment adviser examination program. 

[9] FINRA was established in 2007 through the consolidation of NASD 
and the member regulation, enforcement, and arbitration functions of 
the New York Stock Exchange. FINRA is involved in various aspects of 
the securities business, including registering and educating industry 
participants, examining securities firms, writing rules, enforcing 
those rules and the federal securities laws, informing and educating 
the investing public, providing trade reporting and other industry 
utilities, and administering a dispute resolution forum for investors 
and registered firms. 

[10] See 15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11). 

[11] In SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 189- 
192 (1963), the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that the Advisers Act 
imposes a fiduciary duty on investment advisers. This standard imposes 
an affirmative duty to act solely in the best interests of the client. 
The investment adviser also must eliminate or disclose all conflicts 
of interest. 

[12] GAO, Hedge Funds: Regulators and Market Participants Are Taking 
Steps to Strengthen Market Discipline, but Continued Attention Is 
Needed, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-200] 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 24, 2008), and Private Equity: Recent Growth 
in Leveraged Buyouts Exposed Risks that Warrant Continued Attention, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-885] (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 9, 2008). 

[13] Section 3(c)(1) of the Investment Company Act excludes from the 
definition of investment company any issuer (1) whose outstanding 
securities (other than short-term paper) are beneficially owned by not 
more than 100 investors and (2) that is not making, and does not 
presently propose to make, a public offering of its securities. 15 
U.S.C. § 80a-3(c)(1). Section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act 
excludes from the definition of investment company any issuer (1) 
whose outstanding securities are owned exclusively by persons who, at 
the time of acquisition of such securities, are "qualified purchasers" 
and (2) that is not making, and does not at that time propose to make, 
a public offering of its securities. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-3(c)(7). 
Qualified purchasers include individuals who own at least $5 million 
in investments or companies that own at least $25 million in 
investments. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-2(a)(51). 

[14] Before the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, private fund advisers 
typically satisfied the "private adviser" exemption from registration 
as an investment adviser under section 203(b)(3) of the Advisers Act. 
This section exempted from SEC registration requirements investment 
advisers (1) that have had fewer than 15 clients during the preceding 
12 months, (2) do not hold themselves out generally to the public as 
an investment adviser, and (3) are not an investment adviser to a 
registered investment company. 15 U.S.C. § 80b-3. 

[15] See 15 U.S.C. § 80b-6. In 2007, SEC adopted a rule designed to 
clarify its ability to bring enforcement actions against unregistered 
advisers that defraud investors or prospective investors in a pooled 
investment vehicle. See Prohibition of Fraud by Advisers to Certain 
Pooled Investment Vehicles, Release No. IA-2628, 72 Fed. Reg. 44756 
(Aug. 9, 2007)(final rule)( 17 C.F.R. § 275.206(4)-8). 

[16] On June 22, 2011, SEC adopted final rules extending the date by 
which advisers relying on the "private adviser" exemption in section 
203(b)(3) must register with the commission to March 30, 2012. See 
Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 
Release No. IA-3221 (June 22, 2011)(final rule)( 17 C.F.R. Parts 275 
and 279). 

[17] Private fund advisers with more than $100 million in assets under 
management, if they have other clients along with their private fund 
clients, must generally register with SEC. 

[18] For a discussion of all of the exemptions provided under Title IV 
of the Dodd-Frank Act, see Exemptions for Advisers to Venture Capital 
Funds, Private Fund Advisers With Less Than $150 Million in Assets 
Under Management, and Foreign Private Advisers, Release No. IA-3222, 
(June 22, 2011) (Final Rule). 

[19] As we previously reported, before the Dodd-Frank Act, SEC's 
ability to directly oversee private fund advisers was limited to those 
that were required to register or voluntarily registered with SEC. See 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-200] and [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-885]. 

[20] SEC staff derived these data based on information from Form ADV—
the uniform form that is used by investment advisers to register with 
SEC, which requires information about, among other things, the 
investment adviser’s business and clients. Form ADV does not currently 
include a specific question on whether the adviser is an adviser to 
private funds. To estimate the number of advisers that potentially 
advise private funds SEC includes the number of advisers whose 
response to Form ADV’s Item 7.B equaled “yes” and Item 5.D(6) is not 0 
percent. Item 7.B asks the investment adviser whether it or any 
related person is a general partner in an investment-related limited 
partnership or manager of an investment-related limited liability 
company, or whether it advises any other “private fund,” as defined 
under SEC rule 203(b)(3)-1. Item 5.D(6) asks the adviser to identify 
whether it has other pooled investment vehicles (e.g., hedge funds) as 
clients and if so to indicate the approximate percentage that these 
clients constitute of its total number of clients. 

[21] See, for example, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-200] and [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-885]. 

[22] Pub. Law. No. 111-203, § 404(2), 124 Stat. 1376, 1571 (2010) (to 
be codified at 15 U.S.C. § 80b-4). 

[23] See Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment Advisers Act 
of 1940, Release No. IA-3221 (June 22, 2011)(final rule)( 17 C.F.R. 
Parts 275 and 279); SEC and CFTC, Reporting by Investment Advisers to 
Private Funds and Certain Commodity Pool Operators and Commodity 
Trading Advisors on Form PF, Release No. IA-3145, 76 Fed. Reg. 8068 
(Feb. 11, 2011) (proposed rule). 

[24] See, for example, GAO, Securities and Futures: How the Markets 
Developed and How They Are Regulated, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-86-26] (Washington, D.C.: May 15, 
1986). 

[25] SEC, Division of Investment Management, Study on Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations (Washington, D.C. January 2011). We 
did not evaluate the findings of SEC's study or the staff's 
conclusions regarding the investment adviser examination program. 

[26] There are multiple types of securities SROs that vary in their 
forms and functions. These types include (1) national securities 
exchanges, (2) registered securities associations, (3) registered 
clearing agencies, and (4) the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board. 
As discussed later, some SROs have broad regulatory authorities, 
including rulemaking, examination, and enforcement authority. Others 
have more limited authority. 

[27] SEC first considered an investment adviser SRO in 1963 in its 
report Special Study of the Securities Markets. That report 
recommended that registered investment advisers be required to join an 
SRO that would assume responsibility for determining and imposing 
minimum standards for principals and appropriate categories of 
employees of registered investment adviser firms. The recommendation 
was not acted upon. In 1983, SEC published a release seeking public 
comment on whether one or more SROs should be established to prescribe 
and administer the requirements under the Advisers Act and on whether 
membership in an SRO should be mandatory. 48 Fed. Reg. 8485 (Mar. 1, 
1983). In 1989, legislation was introduced in Congress to provide SEC 
with authority to designate one or more SROs for investment advisers 
that would have rulemaking, examination, and enforcement authority (S. 
1410, 101st Cong. (1989)). In 1993, the House of Representatives 
passed a bill that, among other things, would have amended the 
Advisers Act to authorized designating one or more SROs to conduct 
periodic examinations of investment advisers (H.R. 578, 103rd Cong. 
(1993)). Most recently, in 2003 SEC asked for comment on the formation 
of one or more SROs for registered investment advisers, including 
whether such an SRO should be limited to conducting examinations. 
Compliance Programs of Investment Companies and Investment Advisers, 
Release Nos. IC-25925, IA-2107, 68 Fed. Reg. 7038, 7044 (Feb. 11, 
2003). 

[28] H.R. 578, 103rd Cong. (1993). 

[29] Over-the-Counter Market Act, ch. 677, 52 Stat. 1070 (1938), 
codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78o-3. 

[30] Securities Acts Amendments of 1975, Pub. L. No. 94-29, § 13, 89 
Stat. 97 (1975) (codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78o-4). Section 975(b)(4) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act provides the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board 
with limited enforcement and examination authority to provide guidance 
and assistance for compliance with its rules to SEC, a registered 
securities association, or any other appropriate regulatory agency. 

[31] Pub. L. No. 107-204, 116 Stat. 745 (2002) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 
§ 7211). 

[32] Whether the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board is an SRO 
is an open question. Certain academics have noted that characteristics 
such as it being a private corporation with regulatory powers similar 
to other securities SROs and being subject to SEC oversight make it 
similar to existing securities SROs. They also note differences such 
as Congress's creation of the Public Company Accounting Oversight 
Board and SEC's selection of the board members. A Public Company 
Accounting Oversight Board official noted that although the 
organization has similar regulatory authorities as securities SROs, it 
is not an SRO because the accountants it regulates are not its members. 

[33] See, for example, S. 1410, 101st Cong. (1989) and H.R. 578, 103rd 
Cong. (1993). 

[34] See SEC, Division of Investment Management, Study on Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations. 

[35] Neither the Securities Exchange Act nor the Maloney Act compelled 
broker-dealers to become SRO members. In 1978, Congress amended the 
Commodity Exchange Act to permit NFA to require mandatory membership. 
Similarly in 1983, Congress amended the Securities Exchange Act to 
impose compulsory SRO membership on broker-dealers. According to SEC, 
before the 1983 change, certain broker-dealers were allowed to choose 
between direct SEC oversight and NASD oversight. This SEC program, 
known as SEC Only, was designed to provide participating firms with a 
regulatory alternative to NASD. When SEC ended the program, also in 
1983, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce reported that the 
program was unnecessarily costly and diverted SEC's limited resources 
away from areas of major concern, merely to duplicate the functions of 
NASD. See SEC, Concept Release Concerning Self-Regulation, Release No. 
34-50700, 69 Fed. Reg. 71256, 71267 (Dec. 8, 2004). 

[36] According to FINRA's 2009 Annual Report, its total operating 
expenses were nearly $877 million, and it oversaw around 4,700 
brokerage firms, 167,000 branch offices, and 633,000 registered 
securities representatives, and employed about 2,800 persons. In 
comparison, NFA's 2009 Annual Report states that its total operating 
expenses were nearly $40 million, and it oversaw around 4,200 firms 
and 55,000 associates and employed about 270 persons. 

[37] We recognize that a private fund adviser SRO could differ 
considerably from the SROs used in the examples. As a result, these 
examples may not be illustrative of the range of start-up costs for a 
private fund adviser SRO. 

[38] As private fund advisers have been exempt from registration with 
SEC, data on the number of these advisers, the size of their funds, or 
the size of the industry as a whole do not exist. However, hedge fund 
associations we spoke with noted that parts of the private fund 
industry are concentrated. For example, as of the second quarter of 
2010, approximately 86 percent of hedge fund assets under management 
were controlled by approximately 16 percent of private fund adviser 
firms, according to Hedge Fund Research, Inc. 

[39] SEC staff also noted SEC promulgates rules regarding investment 
advisers under the Advisers Act. 

[40] See SEC, Compliance Programs of Investment Companies and 
Investment Advisers, Release Nos. IA-2204, IC-26299, 68 Fed. Reg. 
74714 (Dec. 24, 2003). 

[41] SEC, Division of Investment Management, Study on Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations. 

[42] GAO, SEC Operations: Increased Workload Creates Challenges, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-302] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 5, 2002). 

[43] GAO, Securities and Exchange Commission: Steps Being Taken to 
Make Examination Program More Risk-Based and Transparent, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1053] (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 14, 
2007). 

[44] GAO, Mutual Fund Industry: SEC's Revised Examination Approach 
Offers Potential Benefits, but Significant Oversight Challenges 
Remain, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-415] 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 17, 2005). 

[45] According to the section 914 study, SEC examined 13 percent of 
the 11,294 and 11 percent of the 11,452 registered investment advisers 
in 2008 and 2009, respectively. FINRA examined 57 percent of its 5,564 
and 54 percent of its 5,272 member broker-dealers during the same 
years, respectively. According to NFA officials, NFA examined 28 
percent of its 481 and 32 percent of its 460 active commodity trading 
adviser members in 2008 and 2009, respectively. Similarly, during the 
same years, NFA examined 33 percent of its 727 and 30 percent of its 
656 active commodity pool operator members. 

[46] SEC Commissioner Elisse B. Walter, Statement on Study Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations, January 2011. 

[47] See, for example, GAO, Investment Advisers: Current Level of 
Oversight Puts Investors at Risk, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-90-83] (Washington, D.C.: June 26, 
1990); SEC, Division of Investment Management, Study on Enhancing 
Investment Adviser Examinations, SEC, Compliance Programs of 
Investment Companies and Investment Advisers; and letters to SEC on 
its section 914 study found at [hyperlink, 
http://www.sec.gov/comments/df-title-ix/enhancing-ia-
examinations/enhancing-ia-examinations.shtml] (accessed May 18, 2011). 

[48] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-415]. 

[49] These estimates are based on data as of April 1, 2011. When the 
Dodd-Frank Act's new registration provisions take effect, the 
composition of investment advisers registered with SEC will change-- 
reducing the number of registered investment advisers and changing the 
number of registered investment advisers with private fund clients. 
See the background section of this report for a more detailed 
discussion of the change in composition. 

[50] 15 U.S.C. §§ 78a-78pp; 15 U.S.C. §§ 7201-78d-3, 18 U.S.C. §§ 
1519, 1520, 1514A, 1348-1350; 7 U.S.C. §§ 1-26. 

[End of section] 

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