7 MIN READ 
Cayman fund independent director INED appointments should not be treated as a launch checklist item. The right independent director can strengthen governance, investor confidence and regulatory readiness. The wrong appointment can leave the fund with weak oversight, poor challenge and thin board records.
For Cayman funds, independence is not only about being outside the investment manager. It is about judgement, availability, relevant experience and the ability to ask difficult questions before problems become regulatory issues.
| Area | What Sponsors Should Check |
| Independence | No relationship that weakens objective judgement |
| Experience | Fund governance, valuation, audit, AML or strategy knowledge |
| Capacity | Enough time to review papers and attend meetings |
| DRLA Status | Registration or licence position checked before appointment |
| Conflicts | Other appointments and manager links reviewed |
| Fees | Compensation matches role, complexity and time needed |
| Oversight | Ability to challenge service providers and the manager |
| Records | Board packs, minutes and follow-up actions are clear |
A director may be called independent, but the real question is how they behave in board discussions.
An INED should be able to challenge the investment manager when needed. This matters during valuation disputes, side letter approvals, liquidity stress, audit delays, NAV errors, AML findings or conflicts.
If the director always agrees with the manager without review, independence becomes weak. If the director does not receive proper board packs, independence also becomes hard to use.
The best independent directors ask direct questions. They also make sure answers are recorded. This creates a governance trail that can help during investor reviews or CIMA questions.
Cayman fund INED selection criteria should start with the fund’s strategy.
A liquid hedge fund may need a director who understands daily dealing, leverage, derivatives and NAV controls. A private equity fund may need experience with capital calls, advisory committees, valuation policy and long-term illiquid assets.
A digital asset fund may need someone who understands custody, exchange risk, wallet controls and VASP-linked issues. A credit fund may need comfort with loan valuation, impairment and borrower concentration.
The sponsor should also check the director’s workload. A strong CV is not useful if the director has no time to review materials properly.
Selection should also include references, conflict checks, DRLA status and fee expectations. The process should be documented.
DRLA professional director licence requirements can affect appointment timing.
The Directors Registration and Licensing Law applies to directors of covered entities. The law refers to registered directors, professional directors and corporate directors. In practice, a director who acts for many covered entities may need a professional director licence.
Sponsors should not leave this check until the fund launch date. If the proposed director is not properly registered or licensed where required, the appointment may delay fund setup.
The director should also understand renewal and update duties. The fund file should keep evidence of the director’s DRLA position, appointment letter and any required confirmations.
DRLA compliance is not the same as good governance. It only confirms that the director fits the regulatory registration or licensing framework. The sponsor still needs to assess skill, time and independence.
Independent director fees Cayman fund discussions should be handled with care.
A very low fee can look attractive at launch, but it may not support the level of time and review the fund needs. A very high fee should also be justified by complexity, experience and expected workload.
Fees can depend on fund size, strategy, meeting frequency, investor base, number of entities, regulatory complexity and expected time commitment.
A simple fund with few assets may need a lighter fee model. A complex fund with side pockets, leverage, hard-to-value assets or frequent board actions may need a more involved director.
The fee agreement should be clear. It should state annual fee, extra meeting fees, launch review fees, expense reimbursement and any additional charge for special work.
The CIMA corporate governance rule fund framework makes evidence important.
It is not enough to say that the board supervises the fund. The board should be able to show meeting papers, minutes, approvals, service provider reports and follow-up actions.
The Statement of Guidance for mutual funds and private funds supports a practical governance approach. It expects operators to oversee the fund’s activities and service providers based on the fund’s size, complexity and risk profile.
An INED should help make this process stronger. They should ask if the fund receives useful reports and check if unresolved points are followed up. They should also make sure decisions are not approved without enough information.
Good governance is visible in records.
Conflicts can change after appointment. A director may join another related fund. A service provider relationship may change. The investment manager may launch a parallel vehicle.
That is why conflict checks should not happen only at onboarding. They should be reviewed regularly.
Capacity is similar. A director may have enough time at appointment but later take on more board seats. The sponsor should be comfortable that the director can still respond quickly during urgent issues.
Capacity matters most during difficult periods. If the fund has gating decisions, audit issues, valuation questions or investor disputes, the INED must be available.
A director who cannot respond during pressure adds little value.
The best Cayman fund INEDs bring more than independence on paper. They bring judgement, time, challenge and clean governance habits. A fund with the right director can manage service providers better and respond to issues faster. The professional team at Arnifi helps fund sponsors build this governance layer with a practical view of selection, compensation and board readiness.
A Cayman fund INED is an independent non-executive director appointed to support oversight of the fund. The role usually focuses on governance, review, challenge and board-level decision making.
Common criteria include independence, fund experience, strategy knowledge, DRLA status, availability, conflict profile, reputation and ability to review service provider reports properly.
Fees usually depend on fund complexity, meeting frequency, number of entities, strategy, investor expectations and time commitment. Extra work may be charged separately.
A DRLA professional director licence may be needed for directors who act for many covered entities. Sponsors should check the director’s registration or licence status before appointment.
CIMA governance expectations require funds to show proper oversight, records and control. A strong INED helps the fund evidence board review, challenge and service provider supervision.
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