In
the clearest sign yet that changes to how funds are designed are
on the cards, the BoE's Financial Policy Committee published
principles on Wednesday to reduce "incentives" for investors to
redeem before others, which can trigger fire sales.
"The committee continued to judge that the mismatch between
redemption terms and the liquidity of some funds' assets had the
potential to become a systemic risk," the committee said in a
statement.
Woodford had to suspend his flagship fund in June, trapping
thousands of retail investors. The fund offered daily
redemptions to customers, but it ran out of cash because some of
the assets were unlisted and could not be quickly sold.
The BoE and the Financial Conduct Authority are looking at the
illiquidity mismatch in open-ended funds that contain
hard-to-trade assets and offer daily withdrawals.
"The progress of this review will be reported in the December
Financial Stability Report (FSR)," the FPC said. The FSR is due
to be published on Dec. 10.
The committee said that incentives for investors to redeem ahead
of others in the fund should be reduced through "greater
consistency in the design of the funds".
This would be between their liquidity - or how quickly assets
can be sold - and redemption frequency or length of notice
period, as well as the price offered to redeeming investors.
Investors often suffer a price discount if they withdraw when
the fund is struggling to sell assets.
"Consistency between these features of a fund could ensure that
investors redeeming their share could do so without placing a
cost on remaining investors," the FPC said.
Britain, however, may not be able to introduce all the fund rule
changes itself. Some will need backing from international
regulators, who have already signaled scepticism over the need
for an overhaul.
Open-ended funds like Woodford are regulated under European
Union rules.
The FCA last week published tougher rules for funds that invest
in hard-to-sell assets like property, as property funds with
more than 18 billion pounds in assets under management froze
shortly after the June 2016 Brexit vote.
But the new FCA rules did not cover funds like Woodford's and
did not tackle fund structure, leaving that to the separate BoE
and FCA review.
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn and Huw Jones)
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