Compliance
Singapore Aims To Boost Venture Capital By Cutting Red Tape

The jurisdiction has set out plans to make venture capital a more vibrant sector.
Singapore’s financial regulator has set out ideas on how to make
the Asian city-state a venture capital powerhouse by cutting back
on red tape.
A consultation paper is being issued by the Monetary
Authority of Singapore. Under its proposed new system,
the MAS will not demand that VC managers have directors and
managers with at least five years of relevant experience; new VC
managers could expect a much shorter application process, the MAS
said in a statement this week.
The jurisdiction is in competition with rivals such as Hong Kong
to encourage VC, which is an incubator of future business and
also a source of high net worth entrepreneurs in the
future.
MAS said its proposed simplified regime accounts for the extent
of contractual safeguards that already exist in typical fund
management contracts negotiated by VC managers’ sophisticated
investor base.
At present, VC managers are regulated in the same way as other
fund managers even though, in the case of the former, they
typically only hold unlisted, young firms, do not accept new
money after the close of a fund, and are usually only offered to
accredited investors and/or institutions.
The base capital requirements and risk-based capital requirements
that apply to VC managers in Singapore will be removed under the
proposed new regime, MAS said. The requirement for independent
valuation, internal audits and submission to MAS of audited
financial statements will not be imposed, it said.
“The proposed simplified regulatory regime for VC managers
recognises the lower risks they pose, given their business model
and sophisticated investor base. It will allow new VC managers a
faster time-to-market and reduce their ongoing compliance
burden,” said Lee Boon Ngiap, assistant managing director,
capital markets, at MAS.
One factor that can help dictate the success or otherwise of
venture capital is how many private firms are floated on the
stock exchange, thereby giving VC investors an exit. Last year,
Hong Kong set the hottest pace for IPOs (see
here). However, Singapore's fortunes improved last
year. Fundraising via IPOs in Singapore hit $1.7 billion
(S$2.43 billion) last year, up fivefold from 2015 when it slumped
to its lowest since 1998 (source: Thomson Reuters data,
Straits Times).
In Hong Kong's case, it was reported that Prime Minister Lee
Hsien Loong has given approval to dual-class shares and other
measures proposed by a panel to drive economic growth. The
city-state’s stock exchange this week started a public
consultation (source: Bloomberg).