at ask prices). The price difference between the highest bid price (the best bid price) and the lowest offer (the best ask price) is the bid-ask spread. Market making is a practice whereby an investment bank or another market participant deals securities by regularly offering to buy securities and sell securities. The market maker seeks to receive the bid-ask spread through regularly selling at the ask price and buying at the bid price. The bid-ask spread compensates investment banks for providing liquidity to the market. Market participants that wish to have transactions executed without delay may place market orders, which cause immediate execution at the best available price. Participants that place market orders are market takers, which buy at ask prices and sell at bid prices, generally paying the bid-ask spread for taking liquidity.
The primary listing markets in the United States are the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the NASDAQ. The NYSE has physically centralized trading, while the NASDAQ uses computer networks between dealers. The largest markets outside the United States include the Tokyo Stock Exchange (Japan), the Euronext (several locations), the London Stock Exchange (United Kingdom), and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (China).
2.2.3 Third and Fourth Private Markets
Third markets are regional exchanges where stocks listed in primary secondary markets can also be traded. In the United States, third markets allow brokers and dealers to set up trades away from an exchange by listing their prices on the NASDAQ Intermarket. Third markets represent a segment of the OTC market where nonmember investment firms can make markets in and trade securities without going through the exchange.
Fourth markets are electronic exchanges that allow traders to quickly buy and sell exchange-listed stocks via the electronic communications systems offered by these markets. Because of the anonymity of traders within these electronic networks, registered broker-dealers provide sponsorship for these systems so that traders have an alternative system to physical exchanges to buy and sell stocks. These alternative trading systems are computerized trading systems that do not formally list stocks but include electronic communication networks serving retail brokers and small institutional traders, as well as electronic crossing systems that match large buy and sell orders. This system is also called the fourth market system. These private financial markets are non-regulated markets that are neither exchanges nor OTC.
Much of the high-frequency trading takes place in the fourth market. The advantages of private markets may include lower transaction costs, ease of completing a transaction directly between a buyer and a seller (which may or may not involve a broker), and the ability to expedite the consummation of a transaction. Conversely, the disadvantages may include the existence of asymmetrical information (between the participants), lack of transparency, and lack of regulatory protections.
2.3 Regulatory Environment
Regulation of investments is motivated by concern for the participants directly involved as well as by concern for the overall economy. Privately organized investment vehicles, such as hedge funds, have generally received reduced regulatory scrutiny because the participants involved tend to be sophisticated institutions or individuals perceived to be less in need of regulatory protection than the general public.
Especially since the financial crisis that began in 2007, regulators throughout the world have become increasingly concerned about the role of hedge funds and other investment vehicles in exacerbating systemic risk. Systemic risk is the potential for economy-wide losses attributable to failures or concerns over potential failures in financial markets, financial institutions, or major participants. For example, the collapse of a very large hedge fund may lead to a sequence of collapses and failures that disrupt the financial system and cause widespread economic losses, not so much from the direct asset losses of the collapse as from the inability of the other market participants to trade and manage risks due to the uncertainty that is generated. Regulators are concerned that very large investment funds, such as some hedge funds, or highly complex alternative investment products, such as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), may increase systemic risk.
2.3.1 Five Primary Forms of Hedge Fund Regulation
Regulations of hedge funds take four primary forms:
1. Requirements regarding establishing a hedge fund, including registration, licensing, minimum capital, and waiting periods
2. Registrations or restrictions on investment advisers and hedge fund managers
3. Restrictions on distribution and marketing of hedge funds, including which marketing channels may be used (e.g., banks), whether advertising is permitted, and to whom funds may be sold
4. Restrictions on operation of a hedge fund, including leverage, liquidity, risk, reporting, and location of outside service providers
5. Requirements regarding ongoing reporting
Hedge funds may also be subject to varying levels of taxation and to special taxes, fees, or licensing costs. Understanding regulations is a crucial aspect of alternative investing. The rest of this section provides an overview of global regulatory matters. The first part focuses on U.S. regulations, for which there is much detail due to the extensive history of alternative investing in the United States. The second part briefly discusses regulatory matters of other jurisdictions, including Europe.
2.3.2 U.S. Hedge Fund Regulations
The U.S. regulation of hedge fund registrations may be divided into two areas. The first area is regulation of securities issued to the public (the primary market), and the second is regulation of advisers to investment pools. Offers to sell securities are regulated by the U.S. Securities Act of 1933 (the Securities Act), and investment advisers are regulated by the U.S. Investment Company Act of 1940 (the ’40 Act).
In the United States, hedge funds may be unregistered, but the hedge fund manager must register as an investment adviser with the SEC. The only exemption from investment adviser registration is based on size. A manager that is too small for required SEC registration must register with its state regulator.
Hedge funds and other alternative investment pools typically avoid registration through exemptions, such as sections 3(c)1 and 3(c)7 of the ’40 Act. Both sections delineate conditions under which registration may be waived based on the perceived financial sophistication of the investors and the number of accredited investors or qualified purchasers.
The effects of using these exemptions regarding private securities include tight restriction of each fund's marketing efforts so that the fund is not viewed as offering securities to the public. Hedge funds offered to U.S. taxable investors are most commonly established as limited partnerships or limited liability companies organized in the state of Delaware. The favorable characteristics of these entity types include limited liability protection for the fund investors and pass-through of gains and losses for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Hedge funds offered to U.S. tax-exempt investors and non-U.S. investors are most commonly established as exempt companies organized offshore.
Under U.S. law, investment advisers owe a fiduciary duty to the clients they advise. The practical consequence is that advisers have an obligation to act in the best interests of the client, disclose to the client all facts that the client might consider relevant, employ a reasonable degree of care in the provision of their advice, and avoid misleading clients through either misstatements or omissions of relevant facts. In addition, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 sets out a series of antifraud provisions to which all investment advisers operating in the United States or serving U.S. clients are subject.
Trading practices, including soft dollar arrangements, must be disclosed to clients. A soft dollar arrangement generally refers to an agreement or an understanding by which an investment adviser receives research services from a broker-dealer in exchange for a fee (such as a commission) paid out of the fund or client account. In effect, the investment adviser can receive research services, such as those provided by computerized financial information systems, by using the broker-dealer to execute the trades of its clients. Because the adviser is receiving research services in addition to brokerage services, the total commission paid by the client through the investment adviser may exceed the