Fed
eyes ability of asset managers to repay in a panic
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[April 23, 2015]
By Michael Flaherty and Jonathan Spicer
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sections of
the U.S. financial system that may be vulnerable to investor panic are
raising concerns inside the Federal Reserve, as policymakers preparing
for the first interest-rate hike in nearly a decade seek to ensure that
the market is ready and able to handle it whenever it happens.
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The Fed is particularly worried about whether the booming asset
management industry can withstand a run of redemptions in a
financial crisis.
Chief among the Fed's concerns, increasingly voiced in public
remarks, is that certain funds held by individuals and institutions
will not have the underlying assets sufficient to back investors
cashing out in a panic. The lack of liquidity would expose investors
and the economy to sharp price swings.
Bond inventories at primary dealers have plunged due to bank
regulations. The amount of Treasury securities in circulation also
has dropped after the Fed's three rounds of bond purchases.
The fall in liquidity across portions of the bond market comes amid
a jump in volatility, making it more important for Fed officials to
telegraph their tightening plans well ahead of time.
The Fed's nightmare scenario is in surprising markets, exposing
investors to the liquidity risks it fears, and causing a spike in
borrowing costs that hurts economic growth.
"Some open-ended mutual funds offer daily withdrawal privileges but
invest in assets that take longer to sell and settle," Fed Vice
Chair Stanley Fischer said in a speech last month. Fed Governor
Daniel Tarullo and Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart have
offered similar warnings about liquidity in the last few months.
Asset managers have said they are systemically safe. But Fed
officials have noted a surge in asset management inflows and
concentration. One example is fixed income exchange-traded-fund
assets, which reached $246 billion in 2013 from their inception in
2002, according to Greenwich Associates.
New York Fed President William Dudley has warned that investors are
less inclined to hold liquid assets as memories of the 2008 crisis
fade.
The Fed could slow or delay rate hikes "if financial conditions were
to tighten a lot," Dudley said this week. Still, the Fed will be as
clear as possible. "I'll be very surprised if, whenever
normalization occurs, it will be a big surprise to anyone - if we're
doing our job properly," he added.
TANTRUM WORRIES
The Fed has kept interest rates near zero since Dec. 2008 and
embarked on three rounds of large scale bond purchases to stimulate
the U.S. economic recovery following the 2007-9 financial crisis.
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While the Fed could hike rates in June, the economy's weak winter
performance has pushed expectations of a hike more toward September.
Futures traders are betting on a move as late as December.
That disconnect sets up a potential collision if the central bank
hikes faster than expected, a collision that could send ripples
across the asset management industry.
"Part of what's going on is (investors are) not being convinced that
we're going to raise interest rates," Loretta Mester, president of
the Cleveland Fed, told economists last week.
Bond markets are still susceptible to another "taper tantrum" such
as the one that happened in 2013 when then Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
caught investors off guard by suggesting the central bank could trim
bond purchases earlier than the market expected.
Deutsche Bank pointed out in an April note that the volume of
primary transactions in the Treasury market has dropped relative to
the overall scale of the notes held by the public, though it also
said the bank does not see "broad market impairment."
"But liquid markets could quickly turn illiquid in response to a
shift in Fed policy or some other shock, which could amplify any
adverse market response, as occurred during the taper tantrum,"
according to the note.
(Reporting by Michael Flaherty and Jonathan Spicer; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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