Open-ended funds that invest in illiquid assets can encounter difficulties if significant numbers of investors simultaneously try to withdraw their money at short notice. An example of this occurred following the result of the UK referendum on EU membership in June 2016.
On this occasion, it resulted in several property funds being temporarily suspended. The FCA was pleased that suspensions and other liquidity management tools generally worked as they were intended to and prevented wider market disruption. Dealing in the affected funds resumed before the end of the year. However, the FCA considered that improvements could be made in the use of certain liquidity management tools, contingency planning, oversight arrangements and disclosure to retail clients.
Feedback to a subsequent Discussion Paper and further supervisory work confirmed that a major overhaul of the regulatory framework in this area was not needed but there were improvements that could be made.
As a result, the FCA is consulting on a package of measures that will require:
-
Funds to suspend trading when the independent valuer expresses uncertainty about the value of ’immovables’, such as commercial property, that account for a significant part of the fund’s assets.
-
Managers of funds investing mostly in inherently illiquid assets to produce contingency plans in case of a liquidity risk crystallising.
-
Depositaries to oversee the liquidity management process in these funds.
-
More information to be disclosed about the liquidity risks in these funds, the liquidity management tools available to the fund manager, the circumstances in which they may be used and what impact they may have on investors.
The FCA will consider feedback to this consultation and will publish a Policy Statement with its final rules and guidance next year. The consultation remains open to responses until 31 January 2019.
Full news
Consultation paper
© FCA - Financial Conduct Authority
Key

Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning

Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article