If the financial crisis has taught us anything, it has
shown that regulators have the ability to make structural changes to products
that corporate treasurers frequently use to manage liquidity. From Dodd-Frank
to Basel III, meaningful changes have been made to the financial sector in an
effort to mitigate any perceived risk. Money Market Mutual Fund Reform, which
was officially enacted in October 2016, is another significant regulatory
change affecting how treasurers manage liquidity. With meaningful changes to
this traditional bulwark of short-term liquidity including a floating Net Asset
Value (NAV) and redemption fees and gates, more than half a trillion dollars
left Institutional Prime Money Market Mutual Funds (Prime Funds) just prior to
the official date of the change.
The Regulatory change in money funds has many corporate treasurers seeking alternatives that produce increased yield with cash accessible until later in the day