Financial Times FT.com

Regulators see dangers in hedge fund collateral

By Ben White in New Yorkand Jeremy Grant in Washington

Published: January 30 2007 02:00 | Last updated: January 30 2007 02:00

US, UK and European regulators have expressed concern in recent meetings that investment banks may be allowing hedge funds to increase their borrowing capacity using collateral that could lose its value rapidly in a financial crisis.

The regulators have asked banking executives in the meetings on Wall Street to detail exactly how they use portfolio netting, a practice that allows hedge funds to use relatively illiquid securities such as credit default and total return swaps as collateral to reduce overall margin requirements.

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