Notice that the first
part of the curve has a negative yield? Currently, the yields on 3 month,
six month, nine month, and one to four year debt securities are negative, as
low as -0.116 percent.
This is what the same
yield curve looked like back in October 2013:
This is giving money
market funds in Europe a bit of a nightmare. With the ECB having imposted
a negative deposit rate of -0.2 percent on reserves held at the bank, it
becomes increasingly difficult for money market funds to keep depositors
interested in investing. Investors who don't want to see their deposits reduced by the
negative interest rates are forced to withdraw their funds and hold cash.
The purpose of a money
market fund is to give investors a completely risk-free instrument for their
cash. Money market funds invest in short-term securities, generally with
terms of less than one year and are generally of the highest quality to protect the value of the
fund. These investments include commercial paper, certificates of
deposit, bankers' acceptances and federal treasuries. The maximum
maturity of a money market fund is 364 days. Money market fund shares are
issued with a fixed unit value (the net asset value) and always maintain that
value, paying out interest to unit holders so there is no capital gain (or
loss) on the value of a unit since the value is fixed.
According to the
Telegraph, €500 billion held in money market funds is now in jeopardy because
negative interest rates are preventing the funds from making a profit.
In fact, one fund, BlackRock, the world's largest money manager, has
invoked its reverse distribution mechanism in mid-September, a proposal that
was introduced at a shareholders' meeting on February 11, 2013. The reverse distribution
mechanism allows BlackRock to "maintain a stable net asset value (NAV) for
distributing shares, with shareholders having a reduced number of shares".
By triggering the reverse distribution mechanism, investors in
BlackRock's €1.4 billion ICS Euro Government Liquidity Fund will
receive fewer shares than they originally purchased so that BlackRock can
protect the remaining assets in the fund. This erosion of capital will
certainly affect money market investors who expected a risk-free investment,
however, the less palatable alternative to invoking the reverse distribution mechanism is to
close the fund.
As the geopolitical and
economic risks in the Eurozone rise, the current negative interest rate
environment in Europe could put a significant strain on the continent's money
market business. This is also one of the key reasons why the Federal
Reserve never cut rates below the zero percent mark; the affect on America's $2.591 trillion money market fund business
would be catastrophic.
The tangled web of experimental monetary policies that the world's key central banks have woven in a desperate
attempt to keep the world's economy afloat since the Great Recession is a
ticking time bomb. Sooner or later that bomb will go off, leaving another
financial catastrophe in its wake. Even those investors who thought that they were investing in the safest of instruments may be shocked to find that their portfolios were not as safe as they expected.
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