Germany-Watching: Economics (U.S. Money Market Fund Reform)

from Deutsche Bundesbank Eurosystem’s Bundesbank Research Centre:

You Can’t Always Get What You Want (Where You Want It): Cross-Border Effects of the U.S. Money Market Fund Reform [PDF]

Authors: Daniel Fricke, Stefan Greppmair, Karol Paludkiewicz

Non-technical summary
Research Question

Money market funds (MMFs) are an important part of the growing segment of non-bank financial intermediaries. This paper contributes to this literature by analyzing the cross-border effects of the 2014 U.S. MMF reform, which was implemented several years prior to the EU Regulation. We study whether euro area MMFs received inflows as a consequence of the reform and investigate the (unintended) economic effects on the basis of the non-synchronized implementation dates of the regulatory changes in the U.S. and the EU.

Contribution

To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to examine the cross-border effects of the 2014 U.S. MMF reform. Prior work has shown that the reform led to a substantial decline of the institutional prime segment in the U.S. (MMFs that invest primarily in non-sovereign debt instruments). Moreover, these funds increased their risk-taking due to the increased competition and newly imposed liquidity restrictions left these funds more prone to large outflows (run risks).

Results

We document both positive and negative effects of the U.S. reform on institutional MMFs in the euro area. These funds, particularly those from the prime segment, experienced substantial inflows from foreign investors around the implementation of the U.S. reform and we show that these cross-border flows were largely motivated by the search for money-like instruments. While euro area MMFs reduced their risk-taking, the industry as a whole has become more concentrated and possibly more exposed to run risks. This risk materialized in the COVID-19 induced stress period during which these funds faced large outflows by foreign investors.

Read the full discussion paper [archived PDF].

European Central Bank’s Macroprudential Bulletin

The European Central Bank’s Macroprudential Bulletin provides insight into the work they are currently doing in the field of macroprudential policy. Their goal is to raise awareness of macroprudential policy issues in the euro area by making their ongoing work and thinking in this field more transparent, and to encourage broader discussion on these key issues.

January 2022, Issue 16

Reforming money market funds

Money market funds perform a key function for the financial system by linking the short-term funding and cash-management needs of various market participants. Proposals to reform the regulation of these funds and enhance the sector’s resilience are assessed in this issue of the Macroprudential Bulletin.

Assessing possible reform proposals

At the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, money market funds proved particularly vulnerable when faced with severe market disruption. This article looks at specific policies to address the liquidity risk of these funds and ensure they can deal with large and unexpected outflows under similar periods of stress.

[Archived PDF of full article]

The impact of a public debt quota on money market funds

Public debt assets tend to be easier to draw down and sell during market stress than private sector debt. Having a minimum public debt quota for private debt money market funds could increase their shock-absorbing capacity. What are the costs and benefits of such a proposal?

[Archived PDF of full article]