From: Wesley Wolf
Sent: January 30, 2007
To: rule-comments@sec.gov
Subject: File No. S7-25-06

To Whom It May Concern:

It has been brought to my attention that the SEC is considering changing the accredited investor definition by raising the minimum net worth requirements from $1,000,000.00 to $2,500,000.00. This change would make it even harder for the average investor to invest in hedge funds and other private equity offerings. It is wrong to limit the choices of investors based simply upon the amount of assets they have. The rich have enough advantage without limiting the choices of those with less assets. John Mauldin (President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC) states “It is my contention that the positive values that hedge funds offer to rich investors should also be offered to everyone, within a proper regulatory structure. The current two-class structure (rich or not rich) limits the investment choices of average Americans and makes the pursuit of affordable retirement more difficult than it should be. The rich have a considerable advantage in growing assets for retirement, in that they simply have more assets to begin with. They should not also have an advantage in better investment choices. Why should 95% (or maybe soon to be 99%!) of Americans, simply because they have less than $1,000,000 (or $2,500,000?), be precluded from the same choices available to the rich? Why do we assume those with less than $1,000,000 to be sophisticated enough to understand the risks in stocks (which have lost trillions of investor dollars), stock options (the vast majority of which expire worthless), futures (where 95 % of retail investors lose money), mutual funds (80% of which underperform the market), and a whole host of very high-risk investments, yet deem them to be incapable of understanding the risks in hedge funds?”

Please reconsider your decision and please decide to open up hedge funds to all investors. Thanks.

Wesley Wolf