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Patenting biomarker-related AI / machine-learning innovations
Defining patent-eligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101 is an ongoing struggle for the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Global | Publication | June 2025
The German special investment fund (Special Fund) is a widely used investment vehicle that is very popular amongst German institutional investors. Special Funds are AIF-managed typically by German AIFM known as “KVG” or Kapitalverwaltungsgesellschaften. Compared to directly investing into assets such as shares and bonds as well as alternative assets such as real estate, an investment into a Special Fund, besides professional management by an asset manager, may also have accounting and tax benefits for the investor.
Many investors have appointed so-called Master-KVGs, which are AIFM that focus on fund administration and risk control, but which delegate portfolio and risk management functions to third-party asset managers (TPAM) chosen by their investors. From the investors’ perspective, this gives them a large degree of flexibility, as they can maintain their fund investments with the administrating AIFM, but can relatively easily replace the entity that is supposed to take and implement the investment decision.
So far, another advantage, from the perspective of the investor, is their de facto ability to influence investment decisions being taken either by the KVG or – in the case of Master-KVGs – the TPAM. As the Special Fund units are typically held only by one investor (or several affiliated investors), such investors may have strong opinions not just about the overall investment strategy, but also about specific investments, the purchase or sale of specific shares or bonds.
Typically, investors of Special Funds are members in a so-called investment committee, in which in addition to representatives of the AIFM, the TPAM and the depositary are supposed to exercise an advisory function.
As regards the role and competencies of such investment committees, already in 1997, the predecessor of the Federal Financial Services Supervisory Authority (BaFin) stated the following in a letter to the German Investment and Asset Management Association (BVI):
“The KAG's [=KVG’s] management obligation includes its sole management right and thus any right of third parties to issue instructions, including that of the unit holder...is excluded.
With regard to the customary activities of investment committees, particularly in the case of special funds, it should be noted in this context that the investment committee is not a body of the KAG provided for under investment law, but a body of experts developed from the practice of fund management with an exclusively advisory function for the fund management. The recommendations of the investment committee regarding the selection of individual securities can only be based on the current economic circumstances of the issuer, but cannot introduce new essential criteria for the selection. The responsibility for selecting the securities to be acquired within the framework of the investment principles and investment limits lies without restriction with the management of the KAG.”
This is in line with the views expressed by ESMA1, whereby investors in an AIF must not have any day-to-day control over the activities of such AIF.
In March this year, BaFin published a draft circular which on the one hand reiterated the guidance given already in 1997, but which at the same time imposes new and very strict documentation rules on AIFM and their TPAM regarding communications with Special Fund investors.
The circular explains whether and to what extent Special Fund investors, which may also include banks and insurers supervised by BaFin, may influence the investment decisions of the AIFM. It contains provisions on the question of whether and up to what limit such influence is permitted under the Capital Investment Code (KAGB). According to BaFin, the boundary between permissible and impermissible influence by investors under supervisory law is fluid, which is why it is to be further specified by way of a circular.
It is not an exaggeration to say that this consultation is a real bombshell that has caused considerable concern among (Master-)KVGs and their investors. If the draft circular were officially adopted by BaFin, this would have a tremendous impact also on TPAM and it would potentially negatively affect their relationship with the Special Fund investors. This is why we shall, in the following, provide a detailed summary of the draft circular.
While AIFM and their TPAM will find the documentation obligations quite strenuous, they also oppose quite vigorously the view of the BaFin that the investors’ influence is too significant.
Four principal arguments are being put forward against the draft circular:
Insurance companies and other investors that are bound by the Investment Ordinance (AnlageVO) claim that they have to be able to give specific instructions, also to enable them to comply with the Asset-Liability Management (ALM) obligations:
Insurance companies may only invest in assets and instruments whose risks they can adequately identify, assess, monitor, manage, control and include in their reporting, as well as adequately take into account when assessing their solvency requirements. With regard to investments in investment funds, institutional investors are only able to adequately identify, assess, monitor, manage and control the associated risks if they have knowledge of the risks involved and the investments contained therein and have dealt with them intensively. The exchange between the regulated investor and the portfolio manager should therefore also be seen against this background.
Following discussions with the concerned parties, it appears that the BaFin might be amenable to take this argument into account.
It is argued that, in the context of (closed-end) investment funds that are organized as investment limited partnerships, investors can decide on the approval of investment decisions through the partners' meeting, among other things. It remains unclear, the argument goes, how such shareholder resolutions could be reconciled with the inadmissibility of veto rights, reservations of consent and instructions by investors provided for in the draft information sheet. In order to avoid possible conflicts in the event of conflicting investment decisions by the AIFM as portfolio manager, an exception is required here that takes into account the special circumstances of the investment limited partnership.
This argument does not withstand closer scrutiny, as German partnership law does not require limited partners to have veto rights with respect to investments made by an AIFM.
The purely quantitative view taken by the draft circular – how many investment ideas were brought up by the investor, and how many by the manager? – obscures the KVG's fiduciary duty to act exclusively in the interests of the investor in accordance with Section 26 KAGB, as communication with the investor may be required under both supervisory law and civil law, but would always be considered an indirect instruction.
It is asked how else the KVG is supposed to ascertain the best interests of the special fund investor and, in case of doubt, be able to prove that its decisions were in the best interests of the investor? In order to be able to act in the best interests of the investor (Section 26 KAGB), it must, according to the BVI, be permissible for the KVG to take into account considerations relevant to the investor and put forward by the investor when making the (final) decision, which should be clarified in the information sheet.
Germany is already playing second fiddle compared to Luxemburg when it comes to public mutual funds. However, the German Special Fund has been a success model and is – at least when it comes to liquid investments – going from strength to strength.
Imposing the new documentation requirements can ultimately only lead to a situation where those investors that either consider themselves obliged to exercise significant influence or that just wish to do so will transfer their holdings to a Luxembourg AIFM. Already real estate funds and private debt funds are very often established in Luxembourg as this jurisdiction – while having finally brought its house in order with strict substance requirements for AIFM – is known for the flexibility and business acumen of its regulator.
The investment management industry in Germany is up in arms against an initiative by BaFin that is widely considered as completely unnecessary.
In fairness, one could say that BaFin merely reiterated a position it has taken already almost 30 years ago and that, in addition, is in line with the AIFMD as interpreted by ESMA.
However, while nobody will deny that there is always room for improvement when it comes to investor protection, who does the BaFin think it protects when it limits an institutional investor’s right to determine how its assets shall be invested? At a time when the investment industry still suffers from PTSD after implementing chaotic ESG requirements and now prepares to implement equally unpractical liquidity management tools under AIFMD II, is it sensible to impose requirements that neither AIFMs nor their investors want?
It is too soon to guess what will be the ultimate outcome of the consultation, but it is certainly worthwhile to watch this space.
Publication
Defining patent-eligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101 is an ongoing struggle for the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
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