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New EU rules slightly strengthen money market fund business

Marina Cremonese Moody's VPSenior Analyst London 19 September 2019

New EU rules slightly strengthen money market fund business

The European Union has brought in new rules to make its €1.3-trillion money market fund industry more resilient.

Prime constant net asset value (CNAV) funds that converted themselves into low-volatility net asset value (LVNAV) funds as a result of the rules have moderately improved the overall quality of credit.

LVNAV funds include new minimum liquidity and stress-testing requirements that will make the sector more able to withstand shocks; this is good for credit. However, converted funds' portfolio characteristics have not changed much. This is probably because there was a long transition period in the run-up to implementation.

The frequency of redemptions did not change after the reform, which suggests that investors are behaving in the same ways. Euro-denominated CNAV funds that became LVNAVs reported a 7% increase in assets under management between last June and this, compared with 6% and 1% for sterling- and dollar-denominated funds respectively. The EU designed the rules that introduced LVNAV funds to make the market more resilient and applied them to all new money-market funds (MMFs) on 21 July last year. Existing funds had to make the switch by 21 January this year. The EU generously granted Euro CNAV funds a two-month extension to 21 March. CNAV funds accounted for about half the industry's assets under management.

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