Tom Stabile reports that StepStone and Nomura Capital Management have removed accredited investor requirements from their flagship semi-liquid alternative funds, following recent SEC guidance that effectively ends enforcement of a staff position limiting access to such products. The updates, made via prospectus “stickers,” immediately open these funds to a broader pool of investors, mirroring a similar move by Cliffwater in recent days.
StepStone’s $4.5 billion Private Markets Fund and Nomura’s Alternative Income Fund had previously restricted access due to the rule, which applied to registered investment vehicles investing in private funds. The SEC’s informal reversal has prompted other managers to consider similar changes.
“Other interval fund sponsors likely have [prospectus updates] in the works right now,” said Kimberly Flynn, President of XA Investments. “We are likely to see a wave of other interval funds of funds make the registration statement… change to lower suitability and investment minimums.”
Flynn noted that funds of funds represent about 20% of the semi-liquid alternatives market—a share that’s growing—and expects the change to accelerate product development efforts. “Well-established fund of fund managers… that have not yet entered the marketplace will now likely be accelerating their internal product development efforts,” she said.
Still, Flynn cautioned that wirehouse platforms may maintain their own suitability thresholds, despite the SEC’s stance. “It is unlikely that this change… precipitates a change in most wirehouse firms,” she said, pointing to operational processes already in place via platforms like iCapital.
Broker-dealers may also lean on Regulation Best Interest when deciding whether to uphold investor limits. “Certainly, for most broker-dealers, Reg BI will come into play, and they may very well… stick with accredited investor requirements for all alternatives,” Flynn added.
Despite these distribution challenges, Flynn believes the change could significantly expand investor access—particularly among independent RIAs already active in the space.
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