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Agenda. Background. Fitch MMF Ratings. Criteria. Beyond the Rating
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1. 0 Fitch: Money Market Fund Criteria Update and Funds SMART Tool Roxana MahboubianDirector, London
2. Agenda
3. Agenda
4. 3 Background Market events of 2007 and 2008 fundamentally challenged the way money market funds (MMF) operate globally
Credit deterioration lead to near or actual fund failures
Sudden and significant rise in redemption requests
Illiquid secondary markets
Absent sponsor support more fund losses likely
Heterogeneous MMF universe in Europe
To date country regulations provided no precise and risk-limiting provisions
Risk profiles vary
5. 4 Growth in Offshore ‘AAA’ Rated Money Market Funds
6. 5 Evolution of Asset Class Breakdown ‘AAA’ Rated Money Market Funds
7. 6 Variance Among Money Market Funds
8. Agenda
9. 8 Fitch’s MMF Rating Highlights Only rating agency to update criteria post financial crisis
New money market fund rating scale
Provides clear definitions and improved transparency
Better differentiates MMF ratings from ratings on debt instruments and higher-risk bond funds
Addresses credit, market and liquidity risks
Speaks to full repayment of principal upon demand
10. 9 Value of a Fitch’s Money Market Fund Rating For investors
A standardized measure of risk on capital and liquidity
Regular surveillance (of portfolios and managers)
Independent publications (paper and online)
For fund providers
An international benchmark in an increasingly global market
A factual risk analysis in a moving regulatory environment
An independent opinion
11. Agenda
12. 11 Criteria Highlights Only highest credit quality, short-term investments
Portfolio credit factor (PCF) matrix – evaluates portfolio credit risk on the basis of asset maturity and credit quality
Enhanced diversification criteria accounting for both direct and indirect (ABCP, repo, etc) exposures
Updated criteria for measuring portfolio liquidity and ability to meet redemptions
Weighted average days to final maturity (WAMF) introduced as spread risk metric. Complements existing weighted average days to reset (WAMR) measure of interest rate risk
Limits on counterparty risk and leverage
Revised framework for evaluating the role of the fund’s sponsor, including possibility of implicit support, if needed in times of stress
13. 12 Summary of ‘AAAmmf’ Global MMF Rating Guidelines
14. 13 Evaluating the Roles of Fund’s Sponsor and Investment Advisor Differentiating factor in Fitch MMF ratings vs. other MMF ratings
Intrinsic quality of the fund on a stand alone basis remains the primary source of protection for investors
However, the sponsor/investment advisor is an important rating consideration
Fund sponsor’s role is multifaceted and includes
Operational oversight and controls
Infrastructure capabilities
Potential support during periods of severe stress
A weak sponsor or a tightly resourced manager may lead to more conservative guidelines at the same rating level
Support is viewed as implicit since there is no contractual guarantee
Evaluated in the context of implicit willingness and ability
15. 14 Criteria Highlights at ‘AAmmf’ and ‘Ammf’ Levels
16. 15 Fitch’s Short-Term Bond Fund Ratings Short-term bond fund rating criteria updated in Q110
Two measures of risk: A fund credit rating and a complementary fund volatility rating
Fund credit rating is an opinion as to the vulnerability to losses as a result of defaults in a bond fund portfolio
Fund volatility rating is an opinion as to the relative sensitivity of a portfolio’s total return and/or net asset value to assumed changes in market risk parameters
While highly rated funds (ie ‘V1’ rated) are expected to offer good liquidity and limited risk on NAV, they are not comparable to Fitch-rated money market funds, where the core investment objective is capital preservation and liquidity
Generally, short term bond funds (incl. higher risk broad MMF under CESR definition) are rated ‘AAA’ or ‘AA’/‘V1’ or ‘V2’
17. 16 Profiling European MMF (Under New CESR Rules)
18. Agenda
19. 18 Surveillance: Integral Part of the Rating Surveillance process is critical to ensure existing fund ratings remain appropriate
Weekly to monthly surveillance checks against Fitch’s rating guidelines
Based on portfolio holdings and key credit, market and liquidity risk metrics
Monitor mark-to-market valuation and investor concentrations
Frequency increased during periods of stress
Annual onsite reviews to assess sponsor, processes, procedures and systems
Fund profiles and commentaries
20. 19 Beyond the Rating: Funds SMART Consistent portfolio analytical framework covers all Fitch-rated MMF
Provides fund-level summaries and analytical metrics, including
Rating history, rating rationale and fund general information
Portfolio composition by asset type and credit quality
Portfolio maturity distribution, WAMf and WAMr
Evolution of portfolio credit factor, PCF (from January 2010)
Evolution of fund’s total assets and yield
Updated on a monthly basis
Based on fund surveillance reports submitted to Fitch
Available to investors on Fitch web-site at no charge
www.fitchratings.com/surveillance/funds
On top of rating actions and fund profiles (currently published annually)
21. 20 Funds SMART – Rating Transparency and Surveillance
22. 21 Funds SMART – Rating Transparency and Surveillance (cont.)
23. Agenda
24. 23 Research Activity European money market funds quarterly
US money market funds quarterly
Investors’ Q&A
Topical reports and commentaries
25. Agenda
26. 25 Why Fitch?
27. Appendices
28. 27 Appendix 1: Fitch Today Majority-owned subsidiary of Fimalac S.A., an international business support services group headquartered in Paris, France
Dual Headquarters in London and New York
2,104 employees, across 51 offices
29. 28 Appendix 2: Global Presence (March 2010)
30. 29 Appendix 3: Recent Criteria Reports, Research Notes and Commentaries
31. 30 Appendix 3: Recent Criteria Reports, Research Notes and Commentaries (cont.)
32. 31 Appendix 3: Recent Criteria Reports, Research Notes and Commentaries (cont.)
33. 32 Appendix 4: Fitch’s FAM Group Contacts in EMEA