Compliance
Baird Welcomes SEC's Accredited Investor Move

A major wealth management house has weighed in about the SEC's move last week to adopt changes to how the "accredited investor" rules work - with the impact of widening access to private capital markets.
US wealth management firm Baird has welcomed last week’s
decision by US regulators to widen access to private capital
assets.
The Securities
and Exchange Commission has adopted amendments to the
“accredited investor” definition, one of the principal tests for
determining who is eligible to invest in private capital markets.
For example, people can qualify as accredited investors based on
professional certifications, designations or other credentials
from an educational body. Historically, individual investors who
do not meet specific income or net worth tests, regardless of
their financial sophistication, have been barred from this
sector.
“I view this news from the SEC favorably. At a time when there
are fewer and fewer public companies, and when stock market
indices are highly concentrated and dominated by a few (mostly
technology) companies, and when equity valuations are
disconnected from the underlying economy, increasing the choices
available to American investors makes sense,” John Taft, vice
chairman of Baird,
said.
“Institutional investors are increasingly moving their
allocations away from public markets to private equity and
venture capital in order to improve their returns. Managers of
private equity are currently sitting on enormous war chests of
cash, which can be deployed at attractive valuations in private
companies (vs. public market indices),” Taft continued.
Earlier this week, the SEC’s move drew a cautious reaction from
John Bowman, senior managing director with the CAIA Association,
an educational organization in the alternative investments space.
He argued that while the accredited investor designation needed
to be modernized, he said the change happened at a time of
concern over whether the new Regulation Best Interest regime
would work as intended. (For more about Reg. BI, see here and
here.)
As noted before, the SEC’s move plays to how investment flows
into private capital markets (equity, debt, real estate and
infrastructure) .These have expanded in recent years, driven by a
perceived higher rate of return, albeit with less liquidity than
among listed equities and mainstream bond markets.
Baird’s Taft concluded: “The key, as always, is to make sure
investors are either able to understand the risk/reward
trade-offs associated with private equity. The SEC’s proposal
would do that, supplementing net worth and income tests with
credentials that evidence understanding of securities markets.”
Baird’s Private Wealth Management business has client assets of more than $215 billion, making it one of the largest such houses in the US.