Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities Directive 2009


The Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities Directive is a consolidated EU Directive, that allows collective investment schemes to operate freely throughout the EU on the basis of a single authorisation from one member state. EU member states are entitled to have additional regulatory requirements for the benefit of investors.

Evolution

The objective of the original UCITS Directive 85/611/EEC, adopted in 1985, was to allow for open-ended funds investing in transferable securities to be subject to the same regulation in every Member State. It was hoped that once such legislative uniformity was established throughout Europe, funds authorised in one Member State could be sold to the public in each Member State without further authorisation, thereby furthering the EU's goal of a single market for financial services in Europe.
The reality differed somewhat from the expectation due primarily to individual marketing rules in each Member State that created obstacles to cross-border marketing of UCITS. In addition, the limited definition of permitted investments for UCITS weakened the marketing possibilities of a UCITS. Accordingly, in the early 1990s proposals were developed to amend the 1985 Directive and more successfully harmonise laws throughout Europe. These discussions, although leading to a draft UCITS II directive, were subsequently abandoned as being too ambitious when the Council of Ministers could not reach a common position.
In July 1998 the EU Commission published a new proposal which was drafted in two parts, which sought to amend the 1985 Directive. These proposals were finally adopted in December 2001, and are known as "UCITS III", which are now in force. LuxAlpha, an alleged "feeder fund" to Bernard Madoff's firm, was a UCITS-regulated fund.

Management Directive

The Management Directive 2001/107/EC, seeks to give management companies a "European passport" to operate throughout the EU, and widens the activities which they are allowed to undertake. It also introduces the concept of a simplified prospectus, which is intended to provide more accessible and comprehensive information in a simplified format to assist the cross-border marketing of UCITS throughout Europe.

Product Directive

The primary aim of the Product Directive 2001/108/EC is to remove barriers to the cross-border marketing of units of collective investment funds by allowing funds to invest in a wider range of financial instruments, which subject the same regulation in every Member state. All UCITS funds must comply with the same investment limits.
A collective investment fund may apply for UCITS status in order to allow EU-wide marketing. The concept is to create a single funds market across the EU. The aim is that with a larger market the economies of scale will reduce costs for investment managers which can be passed on to consumers.
Throughout Europe approximately €6.8 trillion are invested in collective investments. Of these funds about 76% are UCITS.

UCITS IV

The proposal of UCITS IV Directive was approved by the European Parliament on 13 January 2009 and also by the Council of the European Union as the Directive 2009/65/EC, to be implemented on 1 July 2011. This updated the UCITS III Directives by introducing the following changes,
On 23 July 2014 the European Union adopted directive 2014/91/EU on the co-ordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities as regards depositary functions, remuneration policies and sanctions.
UCITS V can be compared with the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive , which is a parallel regulation for hedge funds and alternative investments.
UCITS V introduces new rules on UCITS depositaries, such as the entities eligible to assume this role, their tasks, delegation arrangements and the depositaries’ liability as well as general remuneration principles that apply to fund managers.
The depositary as a specific function under UCITS legislation. The depositary may delegate its safekeeping functions
Luxembourg transposed the UCITS V directive with the law of 10 May 2016 applied since 1 June 2016. This law of 10 May 2016 amended the Luxembourg law of 17 December 2010 on undertakings for collective investment, as amended, in particular, Parts I, IV and V of the 2010 Law.

UCITS VI

The proposals concern areas other than those addressed by UCITS V. In summary, these are the topics raised:
1. eligible assets and the use of derivatives – whether it is necessary to limit the scope of eligible derivatives of those traded on multilateral platforms and cleared by a central counterparty;
2. efficient portfolio management techniques – whether the current criteria requires amendment;
3. over-the-counter derivatives – how OTC derivative transactions should be dealt with when assessing UCITS limits on counterparty
4. extraordinary liquidity management rules – whether there is a need for a common framework for dealing with liquidity bottlenecks in exceptional cases or otherwise;
5. depositary passport – whether a depositary passport should be introduced and how this would work in practice;
6. money market funds1 – whether they present a source of systemic risk and/or do they need harmonised regulation at EU level;
7. long-term investments – how access can be afforded to retail investors and how this could be implemented and regulated; what proportion of a fund's portfolio should be dedicated to such assets; and whether
diversification rules are necessary to secure adequate liquidity;
8. improvements to the UCITS IV framework – for example Article 64 of the UCITS Directive requires UCITS to provide information to investors in the following two cases: where an ordinary UCITS converts into a feeder
UCITS; and where a master UCITS changes. As it stands, this does not cover a third possible scenario, namely where a feeder UCITS converts into an ordinary UCITS. Such conversions may lead to a significant
change in the investment strategy.

Contents

As of 2019, the 5/10/40 rule states that funds can only invest up to 10% in a single issuer, and that concentrated investments in excess of 5% must not exceed 40% of the total portfolio, with some exceptions.
UCITS III in 2003 allowed funds to invest up to 10% their funds in illiquid investments.