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After the Crisis: The Regulation of Hedge Funds and Private Equity in the EU

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 October 2011

Eilís Ferran
Affiliation:
Professor of Company and Securities Law, University of Cambridge; Centre for Corporate and Commercial Law (3CL) and Cambridge Finance, University of Cambridge; European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI). Email: evf1000@cam.ac.uk.
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Abstract

This article examines the recent development of EU regulatory policy with respect to the alternative investment industry up to and including the adoption of a major new Directive. This Directive is just one part of a much larger package of new EU measures relating to the financial markets but its emergence merits being singled out for three reasons. First, the account of how it came about and what it sets out to do touches upon two overarching concerns that are frequently expressed about laws that are made in the immediate aftermath of a crisis: opportunistic use of crisis situations to achieve unrelated goals, and crisis-induced regulatory overreaction. Second, with the regulation of alternative investments being addressed internationally as well as in Europe, close examination of this area provides revealing glimpses of ways in which key players in the EU policy formation process have simultaneously used the financial crisis to exert influence internationally and used international developments to further an internal agenda. Finally, out of the exceptional level of controversy that surrounded the legislative process for the Directive come some important insights on relations between the EU Institutions and, in particular, on the European Parliament's increasing deftness in putting its mark on EU financial market regulation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © T.M.C. Asser Press and the Authors 2011

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