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IMF Analysis Ignores 2010 Money Market Fund Reforms and Exaggerates Run Risk
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
April 26, 2013
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s comprehensive 2010 reforms for money market funds are a proven success. As ICI research has shown, the reforms strengthened the funds and enhanced financial stability.
Unfortunately, this success continues to be overlooked or ignored by regulators and academics who persist in raising alarm that money market funds are prone to destabilizing runs.
For example, the International Monetary Fund’s recent Global Financial Stability Report speculates that “another run on MMMFs [money market mutual funds] may occur if downside credit risks materialize or securities lending suddenly halts, fueling investors’ fear of MMMFs ‘breaking the buck’ (that is, failing to maintain the expected stable net asset value).” The IMF states that “an outright run would be undesirable and could have systemic consequences if the funding that these institutions provide to banks—directly and through overnight securities lending—dries up.”
The IMF’s analysis, however, displays a surprising lack of understanding of the laws governing, and institutional details surrounding, money market funds.
- The IMF’s analysis does not once mention the SEC’s 2010 reforms to money market funds.
- The IMF’s analysis invites the reader to assume that money market funds use leverage (they do not) and that they can boost their yields by adding credit risk as desired (in fact, money market fund credit risks are highly constrained by SEC rules).
- The IMF suggests that money market funds engage in securities lending (they don’t). Money market funds do engage in repurchase agreements to invest in highly liquid securities that are overcollateralized by Treasury and agency securities.
- Contrary to the IMF’s analysis, it is extremely unlikely that U.S. banks could face a liquidity crisis caused solely by a run on money market funds. For one, lending by money market funds to U.S. banks is a miniscule part of overall bank liabilities. Also, U.S. banks can borrow from the Federal Reserve if they need liquidity (unlike Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers during the financial crisis).
In this blog post, we fill in gaps in the IMF analysis and discuss how the application of bank-like prudential reforms to money market funds could increase risks to financial stability—just the opposite of the IMF’s claims.
The 2010 Reforms Reduced Risks
In 2010, the SEC undertook sweeping reforms of money market funds. These reforms reduced risks and the potential that a fund might “break the dollar.” How so?
One new provision is that money market funds are now required to hold substantial amounts of liquid assets to meet redemptions. Taxable funds must hold at least 30 percent of assets in securities that are liquid within a week, and at least 10 percent of assets in daily liquidity. Since those requirements were adopted, money market funds have consistently maintained liquidity well in excess of the minimums; prime money market funds held more than $600 billion in weekly liquid assets during the summer of 2011 (see chart below). As we discussed in “Money Market Mutual Funds, Risk, and Financial Stability in the Wake of the 2010 Reforms,” these 2010 money market fund reforms allowed prime money market funds to easily meet redemptions associated with the eurozone debt crisis and 2011 debt ceiling debate, and to adjust their portfolios away from European banks most affected by the eurozone debt crisis. As the figure below shows, the level of weekly liquidity held by prime money market funds is more than double the outflows seen during the tumultuous week of September 15, 2008, when Lehman Brothers failed.
Prime Fund Liquidity Versus Maximum Outflows
Billions of dollars, May–August 2011

*Weekly liquid assets include securities with a remaining maturity of five business days, Treasury securities, and agency securities with a remaining maturity of 60 days or less.
Sources: Investment Company Institute tabulations of SEC Form N-MFP and iMoneyNet data
Another reform the SEC enacted in 2010 was to reduce from 90 days to 60 days the maximum weighted average portfolio maturity (WAM) a money market fund can maintain. This change significantly reduced interest rate risk and the likelihood that any money market fund would break the buck. As the chart below shows, it would take an instantaneous rise in interest rates of more than 300 basis points to cause a money market fund with a 60 day WAM to break the buck or to move its mark-to-market value below $0.9950. For a money market fund with a WAM of 45 days, rates would have to increase by 400 basis points in one day for the fund to break the buck.
Sensitivity of a Fund's Mark-to-Market Value to Changes in Interest Rates

*No longer permitted under Rule 2a-7.
Note: Figure indicates the resulting mark-to-market value for a given change in interest rates. The initial mark-to-market value is $1.0000.
Source: Investment Company Institute
So just how stringent are the SEC’s 2010 reforms of money market funds? Answer: very.
In our recent paper, we analyzed how much credit risk prime money market funds took during the summer of 2011 compared to a money market fund that invested only in Treasuries. Using credit default swaps and adjusting for the short maturity of money market fund assets, we calculated an implied annual cost of insuring against default for the average holdings of prime money market funds and a Treasury only money market fund with the same maturity structure. We found that prime money market funds were not much riskier than Treasury-only money market funds based on this analysis (see chart below).
Prime Money Market Funds Take Minimal Credit Risk
Annual cost of insuring against default, basis points

Sources: ICI, SEC, and Bloomberg
Further Reform and Money Market Fund Assets
In yet another misstatement, the IMF suggests that the assets of money market funds “are already shrinking in the low interest rate environment.” In fact, despite low interest rates, investors remain committed to using money market funds, and money market fund assets have been relatively stable over the past two years, ranging from $2.5 to $2.7 trillion in the United States.
In our view, the biggest risk to money market fund assets in the United States and Europe is the desire by some regulators to impose bank-like prudential regulations on money market funds. These efforts could lead to a real contraction in the money market fund industry, thus reducing transparency and concentrating systemic risk in large banks or less regulated cash alternatives.
For more on money market funds, please visit ICI’s Money Market Funds Resource Center.
Sean Collins is the Senior Director of ICI’s Financial Industry and Analysis and Chris Plantier is an ICI Senior Economist.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
U.S. Prime Money Market Funds’ Eurozone Holdings Remain Low and Limited in Scope
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
March 28, 2013
Given February’s elections in Italy and recent developments in Cyprus, questions have resurfaced about the eurozone debt crisis and how it might affect the U.S. economy.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Narrowing the Focus to Prime Money Market Funds
By Brian Reid
March 25, 2013
One of ICI’s key points in our responses to recent policy proposals for money market funds is that no case can be made for applying fundamental changes to Treasury, government, and tax-exempt money market funds.
The New York Fed’s Flawed Approach to Fixing the Money Market
By Brian Reid
March 4, 2013
William C. Dudley, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, recently delivered a speech, “Fixing Wholesale Funding to Build a More Stable Financial System.” I was interested to read his remarks, as the New York Fed has been instrumental in pursuing reforms to strengthen the financial markets, particularly in the market for tri-party repurchase agreements.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Money Market Funds and the Expiration of Unlimited Deposit Insurance
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
January 28, 2013
As stipulated in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s unlimited insurance coverage on non-interest bearing transaction accounts, also known as the Transaction Account Guarantee (TAG), expired on December 31, 2012.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
The Reasonable Balance of the 2010 Reforms for Money Market Funds
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
January 15, 2013
Financial intermediaries—banks, hedge funds, insurance companies, investment companies, and private equity companies—exist to bring together those who have excess funds with those who need funds. This process naturally entails risk.
In Case You Missed It: “Don't Enact Financial Transaction Taxes”
By Ianthé Zabel
December 21, 2012
The Hill has just posted a commentary from ICI President and CEO Paul Schott Stevens in which he discusses financial transaction taxes (FTTs) and why U.S. policymakers would be well-advised to avoid enacting them.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial MarketsGovernment Affairs
Fund Industry Leaders Urge “Sustainable Course” for U.S. Finances
By Mike McNamee
December 18, 2012
For the good of investors and all Americans, leaders across the fund industry have been outspoken about the necessity of the U.S. government taking a sound and sustainable approach to its finances.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial Markets
One Step Forward for Cross-Border OTC Derivative Regulatory Reform
By Giles Swan
December 6, 2012
International regulators recently published a statement updating the discussions amongst the main global financial centers about the framework that should regulate cross-border over-the-counter (OTC) derivative transactions.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsICI Global
ICI Supports Legislation to Shield U.S. Investors from Foreign Financial Taxes
By Ianthé Zabel
November 30, 2012
ICI issued the following statement in support of H.R. 6616, a bill introduced by Representative Tom Price (R-GA) and designed to protect American investors from the application of extraterritorial financial transaction taxes.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial MarketsGovernment Affairs
Do U.S. Banks Rely Heavily on Money Market Funds? No.
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
November 14, 2012
Money market funds provide important short-term funding for the U.S. economy: these funds hold a total of $2.5 trillion in Treasury and agency securities, repurchase agreements, and other financial instruments.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
U.S. Prime Money Market Funds Remain Cautious with Respect to Eurozone Holdings
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
September 21, 2012
Over the summer, prime money market funds marginally increased their holdings of eurozone issuers: from 12.2 percent of assets in June (chart) to 14.0 percent of assets in August. This increase was driven primarily by a rise in holdings of French assets (up to 5.1 percent from 4.3 percent in June) and in holdings of German assets (up to 5.1 percent from 4.1 percent in June).
Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings Update—Eurozone Holdings Drop Close to December Levels
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
July 25, 2012
Prime money market funds reduced their holdings of eurozone issuers to 12.2 percent of assets in June from 15.5 percent of assets in May.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Three Gaps in the FSOC’s Account of Money Market Funds in the Financial Crisis
By Paul Schott Stevens
July 25, 2012
Given money market funds’ critical role in the economy and markets, the policy discussion around these funds should be precise and should demonstrate a clear understanding of the facts.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
The Wall Street Journal Paints a False Picture of Money Market Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 22, 2012
No one with actual expertise in the money market could recognize the false picture of money market funds that the Wall Street Journal paints in a recent editorial (“A History of Money Funds,” June 22).
An Outcome for Money Market Funds That We Must Avoid
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 21, 2012
Today, I provided ICI’s views on the state of the money market fund industry at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee, “Perspectives on Money Market Mutual Fund Reforms.” My message to legislators was clear: Persistently viewing money market funds through the narrow prism of 2008, regulators are advancing plans for structural changes that would destroy money market funds, at great cost to investors, state and local governments, business, and the economy. We must avoid this outcome.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
What a Difference a Year Makes—Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings Update
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
June 14, 2012
As the eurozone debt crisis began to intensify last summer, prime money market funds took steps to gradually reduce their overall holdings of eurozone issuers.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Forcing Money Market Funds to “Float”: Hurting Investors, Increasing Risk
Paul Schott Stevens
June 11, 2012
It’s rare to see the Wall Street Journal editorializing in favor of regulation for regulation’s sake.
The Importance of Context in the Discussion Around Money Market Funds
By Karrie McMillan
May 31, 2012
In the debate around money market funds, we’ve seen too many instances of participants in the discussion taking positions or making assertions without properly putting things in context. This is troubling, because a poor sense of the big picture can increase the risk of bad policy outcomes for funds and investors.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Prime Money Market Funds’ Eurozone Holdings Down 50 Percent over The Last Year
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
May 21, 2012
Securities of eurozone issuers accounted for 15.7 percent of assets of U.S. prime money market funds in April, up from 14.6 percent in March.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Our Commitment to Advancing the Interests of Investors
By Paul Schott Stevens
May 9, 2012
This week, the fund industry gathers in Washington, DC, for ICI’s General Membership Meeting. This annual conference, which draws together several robust programs, offers us a chance to engage with colleagues across the industry landscape, to deepen our understanding of our businesses, and reaffirm the values that have made this industry one that serves more than 90 million shareholders.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsEvents
Data Update: Prime Money Market Funds’ Holdings
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
April 20, 2012
In October and December, we discussed how portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds have addressed the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone. In February, we responded to commentators’ suggestions that U.S. prime money market funds’ increase in eurozone holdings in January reflected a renewed appetite for risk.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Key Data Undercut Critics’ Arguments on ETFs and Intraday Volatility
By Rochelle Antoniewicz
April 19, 2012
Over the past year, several news stories have focused on stock market volatility, particularly the price swings that occur in the hour prior to the U.S. market’s 4:00 p.m. close. “What’s Behind That Wild Final Hour of Trading?” asked CNNMoney last November.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded Funds
Commodity Price Trends: It’s Fundamentals, Not Funds
By Chris Plantier
April 17, 2012
As gasoline prices approach a national average of $4 per gallon, the role that financial investment flows into commodities markets play is once again in focus. In a forthcoming paper, I examine the relative importance of economic fundamentals and financial investment flows in explaining broad commodity price movements.
All Funds and Investors Have a Stake in Our Challenge to CFTC
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 17, 2012
ICI and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have joined together in a legal challenge to a rule by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). We are asking the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to vacate and set aside the CFTC’s recent amendments to its Rule 4.5.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsCommodity Investments
Money Market Funds and Financial Stability: Reason and the Facts Must Guide Regulators
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 4, 2012
We are pleased to see that the Financial Stability Oversight Council continues to take a thoughtful approach on the issue of designating “systemically important financial institutions.” That’s in stark contrast to some commentators, who would have regulators rush to put money market funds under that designation. As ICI has argued in a number of venues, a “SIFI” designation is inappropriate for these funds and plainly would run counter to facts and reason. Let’s review why.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Addressing the Economic and National Security Implications of Our Fiscal Crisis
By Paul Schott Stevens
March 30, 2012
As expressed forcefully by a group of fund industry leaders last November, America’s current budgetary overreach has clear and dire implications for the 90 million investors that ICI member companies serve. Today, I elaborated on those implications in a speech before a gathering of the National Strategy Forum in Chicago. What does our recent and unprecedented buildup of debt mean for our economy and our national security?
TOPICS: Financial Markets
What Happens If ‘Floating’ Funds Don’t Float?
By Jane Heinrichs and Greg Smith
March 29, 2012
Some recent coverage—including the CFOJournal blog of the Wall Street Journal—suggests that worries about the impact on investors of forcing money market funds to float their net asset value (NAV) may be overblown. The story goes like this: the mark-to-market prices of money market funds, and the experience of a few money market funds that already operate with a floating NAV, show that fluctuations in the “floating” value would be minuscule—rarely large enough to change the penny-rounded per-share price of the fund. So if floating funds don’t float, what’s the harm?
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
Bringing Money Market Funds’ European Investments into Focus
By Brian Reid
March 21, 2012
In his written testimony on Capitol Hill today, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke created a fuzzy and incomplete picture of money market funds and their investments in European-headquartered financial institutions. Whether by intent or not, the Fed testimony left the impression—magnified by media accounts—that these funds have a unique and substantial vulnerability to any future turmoil in overseas markets.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Regulating Funds’ Use of Derivatives: Striking a Fine Balance
By Robert C. Grohowski and Mara L. Shreck
February 23, 2012
Much has been written about the dangers of derivatives, from Warren Buffett’s quote about “financial weapons of mass destruction” to media coverage of derivatives’ role in various aspects of the financial crisis, such as the downfall of AIG. Far less attention has been paid to the benefits that derivatives can provide for mutual funds and their investors—allowing funds to mitigate risks, manage portfolios more efficiently, and access new strategies.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
The (Dis)Connection Between ETFs and Market Volatility
By Rochelle Antoniewicz
February 23, 2012
In the past year, many commentators have charged that exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are responsible for driving stock market volatility to unprecedented extremes.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded Funds
Prime Money Market Funds’ Eurozone Holdings Remain Low
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
February 23, 2012
Securities of eurozone issuers accounted for 14.0 percent of assets of U.S. prime money market funds in January, up from 11.9 percent in December (chart). This increase was driven by a rise in French assets (up from 3.2 percent to 4.6 percent) and by a rise in asset holdings of other eurozone issuers (up from 8.7 percent to 9.4 percent).
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Proposal to Implement the Volcker Rule Raises Deep Concerns for U.S. Registered Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 14, 2012
Congress enacted the provision of the Dodd-Frank Act known as the Volcker Rule to restrict banks from using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients—something known as “proprietary trading.”
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded FundsFund Regulation
Fund Investment in Commodities Provides Opportunity and Diversification for Investors
By Karen Lau Gibian and Rachel H. Graham
January 26, 2012
On Capitol Hill, a hearing at the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI) raises questions about mutual fund investors’ ability to get commodity exposure in their portfolios and suggests the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) should no longer allow this type of investment.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial MarketsFund RegulationCommodity Investments
ICI Registers Deep Concerns with the Volcker Rule Proposal
By Rachel H. Graham
January 18, 2012
The “Volcker Rule” provision in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was written to restrict banks from using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients. While the Volcker Rule was not directed at U.S. mutual funds and other registered investment companies, its proposed implementation raises deep concerns for the U.S. registered fund industry.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
Volcker Rule Implementation Threatens Global Investment Funds and Their Shareholders
By Dan Waters
January 18, 2012
The proposed implementation of the so-called Volcker Rule has serious implications for global investment funds and their shareholders. Like our U.S.-based ICI colleagues, ICI Global has today voiced concerns about this rule in a statement to the U.S. House subcommittees examining how the rule will impact markets and investors.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
Data Update: Money Market Funds and the Eurozone Debt Crisis
By Emily Gallagher and Chris Plantier
January 13, 2012
In October and December, we discussed how portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds have addressed the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone. Here is a look at the latest monthly data on these funds’ holdings by home country of issuer. Holdings of French issuers continued to fall in December, and almost 80 percent of these French holdings are either short-dated collateralized repurchase agreements or other instruments that mature in seven days or less.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Money Market Funds Continued to Reduce Eurozone Holdings in November
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
December 16, 2011
Over the last year, U.S. money market funds have significantly reduced their holdings of debt securities issued by banks and other businesses headquartered in the 17 countries that use the euro as their currency. That trend continued in November.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Time to Stamp Out the Confusion Around ‘Shadow Banking’
By Brian Reid
December 6, 2011
In the United States, money market funds are governed by tight risk-limiting rules, rules that have become considerably tighter since 2008. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has indicated further changes are forthcoming.
Yet some recent commentary and reporting on money market funds misses this fact, substituting instead the vague notion that these funds lurk in a seemingly unregulated world of “shadow banking,” an epithet used to debase a large group of nonbank financial intermediaries and activities. A recent Wall Street Journal column, for example, characterized money market funds as “one of the riskiest participants in shadow banking.” Last May, a Reuters story described shadow banking as “a network of loosely regulated private equity, hedge, and money funds that together are large enough to topple the global financial system.”
Data Update: Money Market Funds and the Eurozone Debt Crisis
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
December 2, 2011
In October, we discussed how portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds have addressed the ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone. Here is a look at the latest monthly data on these funds’ holdings by home country of issuer. We will revisit the topic in mid-December with updated analysis once November figures become available.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
Now Is the Time to Put America on a Path of Fiscal Responsibility
By Paul Schott Stevens
November 21, 2011
On behalf of funds and the 90 million investors that they serve, fund industry leaders are sending a simple but urgent message to Congress and the White House: the time has arrived to put America’s fiscal house in order.
Thirty executives of companies represented on ICI’s Board of Governors, the chair of the Independent Directors Council, and I are joining together to send a letter to the co-chairs of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction—known as the “Super Committee”—every other member of Congress, and the President.
TOPICS: TaxesFinancial Markets
Washington Post Columnist Ignores Regulation, Transparency of Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
November 7, 2011
Today I submitted the following letter to the editor of the Washington Post: Mutual funds are among the most regulated and transparent investment vehicles available, with investor protection as a defining principle. In his Sunday column, Steven Pearlstein chose to ignore that record.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
ICI Responds to Hearing on Excessive Speculation
By Stephanie Ortbals-Tibbs
November 3, 2011
ICI issued the following statement in response to today’s hearing, “Excessive Speculation and Compliance with the Dodd-Frank Act,” before the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded FundsFund RegulationCommodity Investments
ICI Responds to Hearing on Exchange-Traded Funds
By Stephanie Ortbals-Tibbs
October 19, 2011
ICI issued the following statement in response to today’s hearing in the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance, and Investment, “Market Microstructure: Examination of Exchange-Traded Funds.”
TOPICS: Financial MarketsExchange-Traded FundsFund Regulation
Money Market Funds’ Prudent Response to European Challenges
By Sean Collins and Chris Plantier
October 14, 2011
The ongoing debt crisis in the eurozone poses challenges for portfolio managers of U.S. prime money market funds, as those managers actively continue to adjust their holdings to meet new developments. The latest monthly data on money market funds’ holdings demonstrate that these funds are carefully managing their risks in Europe, and have been gradually reducing eurozone holdings for some time now.
Investors and Their Long-Term Commitment to Saving
By Paul Schott Stevens
October 14, 2011
This week, I had the pleasure of addressing members of the Rotary Club of Seattle on “The Outlook for Investors and Investing.” My speech approached this subject in part by examining our present situation in the historical context of past market bubbles and downturns.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Global Markets: ICI Urges Measured Policy Approaches to Reforms
By Ari Burstein
October 12, 2011
Across the globe, regulators remain active in examining possible rule changes and other initiatives to bolster the integrity of financial markets. As these efforts proceed, ICI has urged balanced policy responses that can strengthen markets while preserving and enhancing efficiency that benefits funds and their shareholders.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Mutual Fund Investors Remain Steady Despite Volatile Market
By Brian Reid and Chris Plantier
September 30, 2011
Each month, ICI reports definitive long-term mutual fund flows, made up of stock, bond, and hybrid funds. The Institute also provides an estimate of weekly flows for those funds. It’s important to consider both weekly and monthly data when interpreting the activity of fund investors. Despite sizable August outflows, more-recent weekly data suggest that investors remain cautious but steady.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
ICI Economists Provide Long-Term Mutual Fund Flow Analysis
By Brian Reid and Chris Plantier
August 17, 2011
All eyes were on the markets in early August just after Standard & Poor’s Corp. downgraded the long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States of America to AA+ from AAA and as Europe’s ongoing fiscal challenges dominated the news.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Standard & Poor’s Downgrades U.S. Government Debt
By Mike McNamee
August 6, 2011
On Friday, August 5, Standard & Poor’s Corp. downgraded the long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States of America to AA+ from AAA. The agency reaffirmed the U.S. government’s A-1+ short-term rating, which is the rating that money market funds rely upon in making their investment decisions. Moody’s Investor Services and Fitch Ratings Ltd. have reaffirmed their Aaa and AAA ratings for long-term U.S. government debt.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
ICI Recommends Fixes to Margin Proposals for Uncleared Swaps
By Heather L. Traeger
July 22, 2011
Proposals on margin requirements for uncleared swaps could create regulatory gaps that would work against the goal of ensuring fair and orderly swap markets, ICI said in recent comment letters. We recommended changes to the proposals, which come from both banking regulators and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Let’s Preserve America’s Financial Standing in the World
By Paul Schott Stevens
July 18, 2011
The impasse between Congress and the Administration over increasing the U.S. Treasury’s borrowing limit and dealing with long-term budget deficits has raised many questions about the impact on American investors and investments, including mutual funds. At ICI, we share the deep concern that many feel about policy actions that could undermine the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market Funds
ICI Supports Treasury Proposal to Maintain Efficiency and Transparency of Foreign Exchange Swaps and Forwards Market
By Heather L. Traeger
June 16, 2011
Foreign exchange swaps and forwards are contracts that mutual funds and other investors use to help manage their portfolios. ICI members therefore have a strong interest in ensuring the market for foreign exchange (FX) swaps and forwards is highly competitive, efficient, transparent, and fair.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
SEC Chairman: SEC Examining Role of High Frequency Traders
By Rachel McTague
May 6, 2011
On the first anniversary of the 2010 “flash crash,” Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Mary Schapiro highlighted the role of high frequency traders that day and said there is cause for the SEC to examine their role.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsEvents
CFTC Proposal Would Subject Funds to Duplicative, Conflicting Regulatory Requirements
By Sarah Bessin and Rachel Graham
April 15, 2011
Funds use swaps and other derivatives in a variety of ways to manage their investment portfolios, and many of these uses are unrelated to speculation. This is why we have been particularly concerned by a proposal from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to revise Rule 4.5, which provides an exclusion for funds and certain “otherwise regulated” entities from regulation as commodity pool operators (CPOs).
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund RegulationCommodity Investments
America’s Fiscal Challenge
By Paul Schott Stevens
April 12, 2011
Friends and colleagues sometimes ask me, “What keeps you awake at night?” In recent months, it’s the nightmarish level of debt that the federal government is accruing.
Put all politics aside: it is impossible to deny that Americans face an acute problem of budgetary overreach. Even before the financial crisis, our position as the world’s leading economy made us forgetful of basic principles of fiscal discipline—particularly the notion of balancing spending and revenues over the course of an economic cycle.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
The Challenges of Dodd-Frank Implementation
By Paul Schott Stevens
March 31, 2011
Even though our industry was not a direct target of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, funds face challenges in coping with the law’s implementation. At the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Fifth Annual Capital Markets Summit yesterday, I had a chance to discuss several of these challenges and their implications for funds and regulators alike.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
For the Fund Industry, “Sunlight Through the Clouds”
By Karrie McMillan
March 29, 2011
The U.S. financial system is emerging from the global crisis. Financial markets have regained their footing. The Federal Reserve has significantly reduced its emergency facilities. The Securities and Exchange Commission has adopted its amendments to Rule 2a-7 for money market funds.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsEvents
“Systemically Important” Designation is a Tool That Should Be Used Sparingly
By Paul Schott Stevens
February 25, 2011
This morning, I participated in a panel discussion addressing the business community’s concerns with the Financial Stability Oversight Council’s (FSOC) proposal on the criteria to measure a company’s systemic risk. It was a lively and timely conversation; I wanted to share here some of the perspective that I brought to the panel on behalf of ICI.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
Pursuing Sound Financial Regulation for International Markets
By Ari Burstein
February 25, 2011
Whether at home or overseas, ICI works to ensure that regulators pursue the creation of consistent and sensible rules for the financial markets. Internationally, we recently provided input to the European Commission, which is taking a comprehensive look at ways to reform regulation of European financial markets.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsInternational
SEC Proposal on Municipal Advisor Registration Could Create Unnecessary Regulatory Burden
By Heather L. Traeger
February 24, 2011
This week, we wrote a letter to the SEC to air our concern that its proposed registration regime for “municipal advisors” is too broad and will subject many well-regulated entities and individuals, including advisers to funds, to duplicative regulatory requirements.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
ICI Letter Details Benefits of Having Diversified Funds Investing in the Futures and Swaps Markets
By Heather L. Traeger
January 12, 2011
We’ve just filed a letter to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on the use of position limits for derivatives. Our letter urges the CFTC to establish an exemption from position limits for funds that comply with the diversification and leverage requirements of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsCommodity Investments
Equity Market Issues: Our Industry Must Be Challenged, Too
By Karrie McMillan
December 9, 2010
ICI is hosting its annual Equity Markets Conference in New York City today. To get the conference started, I urged everyone to keep one number in mind: 90 million. That’s the number of investors who are saving for their futures through the funds that ICI members offer.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
ICI Warns Against “Piecemeal” Approach to Municipal Securities Disclosure
By ICI Viewpoints
November 16, 2010
The Institute filed a comment letter today with the Securities and Exchange Commission on its proposals to improve disclosure for asset-backed securities. Our view broadly is that the proposals will help mutual funds assess risks.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Kauffman Foundation Paper Makes Accusations That Are Not Plausible
By ICI Viewpoints
November 15, 2010
A November 2010 paper on U.S. capital markets from the Kauffman Foundation shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how exchange-traded funds (ETFs) operate. The authors are respected industry authorities, and they offer some ideas that merit further consideration. But the paper levels several accusations against ETFs that are just not plausible.
TOPICS: Financial Markets
Companies Should Be Designated as “Systemically Significant” Only in Limited Circumstances
By ICI Viewpoints
November 5, 2010
The newly-created Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) has been tasked with determining which nonbank financial companies are systemically significant and therefore require additional regulatory scrutiny. The FSOC has asked for input regarding the specific criteria and analytical framework it should use in making those designations.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsFund Regulation
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