This Is The Government: Your Legal Right To Redeem Your Money Market Account Has Been Denied - The Sequel
Two years ago, in January 2010, Zero Hedge wrote "This
Is The Government: Your Legal Right To Redeem Your Money Market Account Has Been
Denied" which became one of our most read stories of the year. The reason?
Perhaps something to do with an implicit attempt at capital controls by the
government on one of the primary forms of cash aggregation available: $2.7
trillion in US money market funds. The proximal catalyst back then were new
proposed regulations seeking to pull one of these three core pillars (these
being no volatility, instantaneous liquidity, and
redeemability) from the foundation of the entire money market industry,
by changing the
primary assumptions of the key Money Market Rule 2a-7. A key proposal would
give money market fund managers the option to "suspend
redemptions to allow for the orderly liquidation of
fund assets." In other words: an attempt to prevent money market runs
(the same thing that crushed Lehman when the Reserve Fund broke the buck). This
idea, which previously had been implicitly backed by the all important Group of
30 which is basically the shadow central planners of the world (don't believe
us? check out the roster of current members), did not get
too far, and was quickly forgotten. Until today, when the New York Fed decided
to bring it back from the dead by publishing "The Minimum Balance
At Risk: A Proposal to Mitigate the Systemic Risks Posed by Money Market
FUnds". Now it is well known that any attempt to prevent a bank runs
achieves nothing but merely accelerating just that (as Europe recently learned).
But this coming from central planners - who never can accurately predict a
rational response - is not surprising. What is surprising is that this
proposal is reincarnated now. The question becomes: why now?
What does the Fed know about market liquidity conditions that it does not want
to share, and more importantly, is the Fed seeing a rapid deterioration in
liquidity conditions in the future, that may and/or will prompt retail investors
to pull their money in another Lehman-like bank run repeat?
Here is how the Fed frames the problem in the abstract:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/government-your-legal-right-redeem-your-money-market-account-has-been-denied-sequel
Here is how the Fed frames the problem in the abstract:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/government-your-legal-right-redeem-your-money-market-account-has-been-denied-sequel
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