A THOROUGH UNDERSTANDING OF PRIVATE EQUITY
RETOUR SOMMAIRE
A CACEIS PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT PUBLICATION - 2010
MAIN ACTORS AND STRUCTURES
Figure 31: Evolution of capital under management and number of US venture capi- tal funds (1980-2008) The last decade witnessed a significant growth in terms of US venture funds capital under management, while the number of venture capital funds in existence nearly doubled (see figure 31).
300
Number of US venture capital funds in existence: 1988: 715 funds
250
1998: 1,085 funds 2008: 1,366 funds
200
150
100 Capital under mangement in $bn
50
2.2
0
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Source: NVCA, 2009
As it is the case in Europe (refer to adequate part of brochure), an increasing pressure on regulation of private funds and/or their advisers emerged in the wake of the economic cri- sis. The United States did not escape this trend with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner speak- ing in favor of measures according to which all advisers to private funds with assets under management over a certain threshold would be required to register with the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) and therefore be subject to some regulatory supervision. Two legislative proposals have been introduced in the US Congress early 2009 in that respect: the Hedge Fund Transparency Act (Grassley/Levin Bill) that would require all - and not only hedge funds - privately offered funds with at least $50 million in assets to register with the SEC (among other), and the Hedge Fund Advisor Registration Act that would remove the exemption from SEC registration for investment advisers with fewer than 15 clients on any 12 months period and would also apply to private equity funds.
2.2.5
Switzerland
Although most of the venture capital funds active in the Swiss market are offshore LPs, governed under the laws of Guernsey, Jersey, Cayman Islands, Scotland and other Anglo- Saxon jurisdictions 41 , it should be noted that since 2007, it is possible under Swiss law to incorporate Limited Partnerships for Collective Investment Schemes investing in private equity, with the new SCPC (“Société en Commandite de Placements Collectifs”) vehicle.
41 Source: Practical Law Company, “Private equity 2009 Volume 2: Venture Capital”, 2009
A thorough understanding of PE | page 51
Made with FlippingBook Annual report