Fund Audit
What is the purpose of a fund audit?
The main purpose of a fund audit is to confirm that the fund’s general partners (GP) are operating in accordance with the fund’s limited partnership agreement (LPA), and that the fund’s financials reflect this compliance. A clean audit is one that doesn’t turn up any surprises: It reassures the fund’s limited partners (LPs) that the GPs are managing the fund as agreed. A second purpose of an audit is to confirm the fund’s valuations of its portfolio companies, as well as the fund’s ownership position in them. An audit assures your fund’s investors that a neutral, third-party accounting firm has confirmed not only the fund’s financial statements, but also its assessment of its own success.
What are the fund structures available in Hong Kong?
Hong Kong provides various legal fund vehicles catered to the industry, with a corporate structure in the form of Open-ended Fund Companies (OFC) and a limited partnership model in the form of Limited Partnership Funds (LPF), complementing the long standing unit trust structure.
| Key features | Open-ended Fund Company (OFC) | Limited Partnership Fund (LPF) |
| Number of Directors required | 2, with at least 1 director independent of the custodian | 1 general partner and at least 1 limited partner |
| Directors’ residence requirement | No | No residence requirement for general partner or limited partner |
| Fund manager | Requires a Type 9 (asset management) licensed Investment Manager under SFC | If no regulated activities under SFO is involved, there is no need to appoint an external licensed investment manager |
| Auditor | An auditor must be appointed | An auditor must be appointed |
| Custodian | A custodian must be appointed | No requirement to appoint a custodian, but the GP is under duty to ensure the proper custody of LPF’s assets |
| Public availability of Shareholder lists | No | No |
| Re-domiciliation | Yes | Yes |
