In 2007 a Code of Conduct for transparency and disclosure was drawn up for the private equity industry in the United Kingdom. It was created, and still remains, as a voluntary code that firms can agree to sign onto at their leisure. Unfortunately, even after signing up voluntarily, many firms didn’t fully comply with the guidelines.
In January, the Guidelines Monitoring Group (GMG), the group established to verify compliance with the code, released its first report and the results were less than impressive.
The report states “almost all of the firms” complied with many of the guidelines/requirements, though the method in which the firms “complied” varied drastically. Overall, the report claimed that fewer than 50 percent of the firms which voluntarily signed onto the Code complied with 100 percent of the guidelines.


