Money market turmoil in March shows past reforms may be
insufficient-U.S. Treasury official
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[September 30, 2020] By
David Lawder and Ross Kerber
WASHINGTON/BOSTON (Reuters) - Turmoil in
money market mutual funds sparked by the coronavirus pandemic shows that
decade-old reforms to the $4.4 trillion industry may not be enough to
avert major outflows during a future crisis, Deputy U.S. Treasury
Secretary Justin Muzinich said on Tuesday.
The remarks were the latest to raise expectations a new round of
rulemaking may be on the way for money funds, which faced turbulence
this spring as the COVID-19 pandemic shook Wall Street before Washington
officials stepped in.
Muzinich told a New York Federal Reserve conference that the Money
Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility created in March was critical to
restoring financial market functioning as broad shutdowns of the U.S.
economy got underway.
But high demand for fund withdrawals was due to different metrics than
those operating during the 2008 financial crisis, he said.
In 2008, the Reserve Primary Fund "broke the buck" when its net asset
value fell below $1 as a banking crisis accelerated, causing a stampede
of fund withdrawals that were quelled only by a U.S. Treasury backstop
for over $3 trillion in fund assets.
The 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation required money market
mutual funds to hold 30% of their assets in instruments that are liquid
within a week, among other reforms. But Muzinich said that when some
funds neared this threshold in March, withdrawal requests accelerated.
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"The events of this past March show that those reforms may not be enough,"
Muzinich said. "For example, one might ask whether we have exchanged one
psychological bright line for another."
Muzinich said such lines have the potential to create "run dynamics" in markets
as they are approached. But he stopped short of calling for further specific
reforms.
"While policymakers were able to avert a run, it is worth asking whether there
are ways to enhance the liquidity resources available to funds without using a
bright-line test, or whether there are ways to draw a line without creating a
first-mover advantage," Muzinich added.
Peter Crane, founder of money fund research company Crane Data, said the remarks
add to expectations new rules will be created for money funds, sometimes seen as
rivals by more closely-regulated banks.
"Certainly from the looks of it new money fund regulations might be coming,"
Crane said.
He also noted a Sept. 24 speech by Dalia Blass, the top fund regulator of the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, who said her division will analyze the
events of March and look to build a resilient market "while preserving the
important role of money market funds in the short-term funding markets."
Low yields on U.S Treasuries and other debt have forced big money fund sponsors
to waive fees just to keep investors in their products this year, or to close
them to new investors.
(Reporting by David Lawder and by Ross Kerber; editing by John Stonestreet and
Richard Pullin)
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