Fund Management
UK Needs New Fund Model For Post-Brexit World, Must Deepen Asia Links - NCI

The think tank has set out a number of proposals and ideas on how to keep London's fund management sector internationally competitive following Brexit, given that the UK's ability to tap into EU fund markets will change.
A UK-based wealth and asset management think tank has reiterated
its call for a new UK fund structure to rival those registered in
the European Union for a post-Brexit world; it called for more
efforts to deepen Asian trade links.
New City
Initiative, which comprises 46 asset management firms from
the UK and continental Europe, managing approximately £500
billion ($668 billion), set out a number of ideas that
policymakers should adopt to promote London’s financial
sector.
At present, structures such as the European Union’s UCITS regime
and its Alternative Investment Funds model, are established
investment industry features. UCITS funds can be bought and sold
across national borders without separate local registrations.
Following the UK’s departure from the European Union, it needs to
reconsider how it taps into international fund markets.
“NCI is calling for the development of a new UK fund structure
that could rival UCITS and AIFs, while decentralising fund
management in the country and encouraging regional growth,” Toby
Illingworth, executive director at New City Initiative, said in a
report. “As the UK government works towards economic recovery and
seeks to `level up’ prosperity and opportunity across the
country, NCI is advocating the development of a bespoke UK fund
structure that could facilitate the on-shoring of more asset
servicing roles that have traditionally been based in Ireland and
Luxembourg, many of which do not necessarily need to be carried
out in London.”
Illingworth said that a new fund structure would give retail and
institutional investors more choice and encourage
competition.
As
reported earlier this year, a study by NCI says that the UK
should make use of the Mutual Recognition of Funds scheme
operated in Hong Kong, and regulators should examine other mutual
recognition programmes in other markets, such as those of
mainland China. The UK should also sign at least one or both of
the Asia Region Funds Passport (ARFP) or ASEAN Collective
Investment Scheme (CIS) systems.
The think tank said that a number of steps must be taken to
smooth out any speed bumps as the UK moves out of the EU’s
regulatory orbit.
“Although fund managers are confident that existing distribution
channels will not be disrupted after the end of the transition
period, there are some more longer-term concerns about the ease
with which investment firms will be able to sell into the EU,”
Illingworth said.
“Any attempt to impose additional barriers around delegation is
likely to frustrate third country asset managers - including
those located in the UK post-Brexit, as it could force them to
increase their operations and headcount inside the EU at
significant cost. In the past, there have been attempts by some
member states to restrict delegation, but these efforts came to
nothing, owing to effective lobbying by industry groups and
representatives from onshore fund domiciles such as Ireland and
Luxembourg,” he continued.
Illingworth said attempts to roll back on delegation by European
policymakers could potentially accelerate in the next 18 to 24
months.
Asset management authorisation hub
He also spoke of how, in 2017, the Financial Conduct Authority,
the UK regulator, launched the first phase of its new asset
management authorisation hub, designed to help new entrants to
the market by supporting new firms throughout the authorisation
process and afterwards. Further phases were expected to roll out
but aspects of this have been put on hold amid the pandemic.
“As we now head out of the [EU] transition period, we urge the
FCA to extend this initiative to create a regulatory environment
for new asset managers similar to the `Project Innovate’ sandbox
environment for fintech and the joint PRA/FCA `New Bank Start-up
Unit’,” he said (referring to Prudential Regulation Authority as
well as the FCA).
“The idea behind this is to have an easier and faster process of
registration, with a lighter touch regime for start-up firms that
are targeting sophisticated institutional investors until they
grow to a larger size or start to take on retail customers, at
which point they would graduate to the `full’ regulatory
environment - like an adolescent becoming an adult,” it
said.
“We believe that greater allowance for proportionality, rather
than new rules, is the key. This would promote yet more
competition in the financial services space, increase consumer
choice and support innovation and entrepreneurialism.
Simultaneously, it would enhance the attractiveness of the UK as
a jurisdiction for the establishment of financial services and
corollary areas,” Illingworth said.
Asia connections
More work must be done to strengthen fund management sector ties
with Asia, NCI said.
“NCI believes that UK policymakers/regulators should capitalise
on the UK funds industry’s opportunity to further cement its
presence in APAC, where a number of our members see large growth
potential. By developing a UK-own fund brand, to compete with
UCITS and AIFs, we can strengthen the global distribution
footprint of UK funds in the region and benefit both the UK and
Asian economies,” Illingworth said.
The UK should sign up to at least one or both of the Asia Region
Funds Passport (ARFP) or ASEAN Collective Investment Scheme (CIS)
to boost its APAC distribution footprint, he continued.
Last year, the think tank created NCI Singapore, to spread its
message and work in Asia. Some time ago,
this publication wrote about the development of pan-Asian
fund markets and how a number of jurisdictions have sought to
emulate the perceived success of the UCITS fund model.