Bank of England pushes for shake-up of $6.9 trillion money market funds business
The Bank of England is pushing for a shake-up of the $6.9 trillion money market fund industry, saying the business amplified strains during the global financial crisis and in the COVID-19 pandemic.
The U.K. central bank's Governor Andrew Bailey said the
Financial Stability Board soon will consult on changes to the market, which
covers short-term debt securities like commercial paper. At the height of
turmoil in the early days of the pandemic, those funds were not resilient, he
said.
The remarks, including some detailed options for what
regulators could do, are the clearest sign yet that action is coming for money
market funds, which are supposed to have cash-like liquidity but instead froze
up when the global system was under strain.
"We are very much in the world of having a second
chance to deal with the issue of how to structure money market funds consistent
with their role," Mr. Bailey said in a text of a speech to the
International Swaps & Derivatives Association.
Mr. Bailey said there's a need to improve the resilience and
functioning of the funds so they didn't contribute to stress in short-term
funding markets.
Sterling money market funds saw outflows of about £25
billion ($35 billion), or 10% of their total assets, in the eight days between
March 12 and 20 last year — a period known as the dash for cash.
To mitigate the damage, the Bank of England and other
central banks pumped billions into the financial system in quantitative easing,
and also activated repo and other liquidity facilities. Turning "the fire
hoses on at full blast" helped bring rates to more normal level, Mr.
Bailey said.
"The dash for cash provided an unwelcome reminder that
the post financial crisis did not finish the job and left a dangerous gap in
our exposure to the risk of financial instability," Mr. Bailey said.
"We must finish the task this time."
Mr. Bailey suggested a number of possible reforms, including
limited asset holdings to government instruments, removing the liquidity
mismatch by making funds non-daily dealing, or "a middle option whereby a
combination of measures are used to reduce the risks to a sufficiently low
level."
The FSB has said money market funds supporting the economy
both by giving investors a cash management tool and working as a source of
funding for companies and governments. After 2008, standards were strengthened
on valuation, maturities and risk management requirements.
The turmoil in March 2020 mainly hit funds based in the U.S.
and European Union, the FSB said. Other jurisdictions did not report a big impact.
Comments
Post a Comment