U.S. Money Fund Exposure to Eurozone Banks Rises Fifth Straight
Month
Location: New York
Date: 2013-01-03
U.S. prime money market fund (MMF) exposure to Eurozone banks
rose for the fifth consecutive month although exposures remain
well-below previous levels, according to Fitch Ratings.
As of end-November 2012, Eurozone bank allocations accounted for
13.7% of total U.S. MMF holdings, an 8% increase on a dollar basis
since end-October 2012. During the same period MMF allocations to
German and French banks increased by 26% and 6%, respectively.
Despite these recent increases, MMF exposure to Eurozone banks
remains 60% below end-May 2011 levels.
Fitch believes a return to end-May 2011 eurozone exposures in the
near term is unlikely, particularly given European banking
supervisors' efforts to limit banks' use of short-term USD funding.
New Basel liquidity rules will likely also discourage banks' use of
short-term wholesale funding. These regulatory pressures could
constrain the future issuance of shorter-term bank debt, which has
historically been an important asset class for MMFs.
The proportion of European and Eurozone exposure in the form of
repos rose slightly, indicating a preference for secured exposure
that might signify lingering MMF risk aversion to the sector.
Aggregate repo exposure continues to represent about 20% of total
MMF assets.
The 15 largest exposures to individual banks, as a group,
comprise approximately 42% of total MMF assets, with only one
Eurozone bank within the top-15.
The full report 'U.S. Money Fund Exposure and
European Banks: Eurozone Rises for Fifth-Straight Month' is
available at 'www.fitchratings.com'.

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