New Regulation On Money Market Funds

In December 2016, after several years of negotiations, the European institutions agreed on a compromise text on how the money market fund landscape should be structured in Europe through a Regulation following the financial crisis. Further to the approval of the compromise text by the European Parliament on 5 April 2017, the adoption by the Council should come very soon.

The Regulation will apply to all UCITS and AIFs (and their sub-funds) investing in short-term assets and the investment objective of which is to (i) offer return in line with money market rates and/or (ii) preserve the value of their investment. It is worth noting that the scope is broader than the current CESR guidelines (ESMA predecessor) on money market funds CESR/10-049 which is only applicable to funds which label or market themselves as money market funds.

Only three types of money market funds will be allowed, each subject to a strict corpus of rules:

public debt constant net asset value funds; low volatility net asset value funds; and variable net asset value funds (VNAV) (which can be short-term VNAV and standard VNAV). For the three types of funds, no sponsor support will be permitted in the future but on the other hand, the industry has avoided the implementation of a capital buffer to be maintained at the level of the fund.

Conceptually, the idea is to permit constant net asset value funds...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT