overview of mutual funds and financial sector development

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1

Overview of Mutual Funds andFinancial Sector Development

Mike Lubrano, IFC

NBFI Video Conference28 February - 1 March 2001

Washington DC

2

Introduction and overview

• The role of investment funds• How they work; structures• The scale of the funds market• How they developed internationally

3

What is an investment fund?• Entity publicly offering shares or

units• Invests the money attracted mainly in

publicly offered securities• Manages money as a single pooled

portfolio• Investors have no control over

portfolio decisions

4

What Investment Funds are Not

• Risk taking intermediaries• Banks / Quasi-banks• Captive Finance Subsidiaries• Instant Liquidity Generators• Alter Egos

5

What funds do: intermediate

Savers: individuals, companies, governments

Intermediaries: banks; insurance, pension and investment funds

Brokers, dealers

Markets

Primary dealers, investment banks

Borrowers: governments, companies, individuals

moneybondssharesloans

6

What funds do for investors

• Diversify risk• Reduce costs• Offer professional management• Protect investors: highly transparent• Increase savings choice

– Can be base for personal pensions• More flexible than contractual savings• Lower cost than contractual savings

7

What funds do for economies

• Mobilize savings• Widen and deepen capital markets• Balance foreign capital flows• Provide longer term financing• Pressure for risk reduction, improved

performance• Create demand for

– innovation, new products (derivatives)– better infrastructure– better disclosure– corporate governance

8

How Funds Work

Investor Fund Issuers

Gains from sales of Assets

Distributions Dividends;Interest

MoneyMoney

FundShares

Securities

9

Key Players and Their Roles• Sponsor - creates fund• Portfolio manager – chooses assets• Administration – operates fund• Custody – safekeeps assets• Marketing – sells the fund to investors• Oversight – checks the fund operates

legally and in the interests of investors

10

One Common Approach

Fund

Management Company

Auditor

Regulator

Custodian

safekeeps assets

operates regulates

audits

regulates

11

Legal Structures of Funds

CustodianManagementCompany

UnitsContractual

TrusteeTrusteeUnitsTrust

CustodianDirectorsSharesCompany

Safekeepingof assets

Responsibleto Investors

IssueStructure

12

Types of FundsType Capital Issuance Trading

Open end Variable Continuous At NAV viamanagementcompany

Closed end Fixed One off At marketprice onexchange

Interval Variable One off /periodic

On exchange /periodicredemptions

Open end/Exchangetraded

Variable Continuous On exchange /alsoredeemable

13

Open versus closed

Issue A15.0%

Issue B15.0%

Issue C15.0%

Issue D10.0%

Issue E10.0%

Issue F10.0%

Issue G10.0%

Issue H10.0%

Cash5.0%

Issue A15.0%

Issue B15.0%

Issue C15.0%

Issue E10.0%

Issue F10.0%

Issue G10.0%

|ssue H10.0%

Issue I10.0%

Cash5.0%

14

Open end funds need liquidmarkets

• Constantly buy and sell assets to meetpurchases and sales of fund shares orunits

• Must be able to value assets correctly toset a correct price on shares or units

• Can present problem in emerging markets• Closed ended funds suit illiquid markets

better

15

Significance of open ended funds(Source: BIS 1998)

618415As % ofmarketcap

1634946As % ofGDP

UKFranceJapanUSAs atend1996

16

Size of open end fund markets:End 1998 (source: ICI, Cadogan)

7,3825,766US1,680297UK

13,442202Korea4,344359Japan

721.4Hungary6,335621France1053.4Chile

Number offunds

Value of funds- $ billion

Country

17

% ownership of mutual funds byincome groups in the US

(source: ICI)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

< $25,000$25,000 - 34,999$35,000 - $49,999$50,000 - $74,999$75,000 - $99,999>$100,000

18

How funds developedinternationally

Spontaneously• First fund enabled

the investor ofmodest means toaccess adiversifiedportfolio: 1868 inthe UK

Artificially• Created to serve

specific need – eg– Assist privatisation– Bypass poor

banking system– Kick start stock

markets– Retail government

bonds

19

FeaturesSpontaneous• More sustainable

since develop oncemarkets andexpertise exist

• Market unregulatedat start

Artificial• Less sustainable

unless consistenteffort made: often pre-date markets soexpertise lacking andoperation hindered

• Market often poorlyregulated at start

20

Outcomes – not dissimilarSpontaneous• Scandals occur so

regulation isintroduced

• New scandals occur• Regulation and

markets are improved• Examples: US

Investment CompaniesAct 1940, UK FinancialServices Act 1986

Artificial• Scandals occur eg

Czech PrivatisationFunds, Korea, Mexico

• Regulation andmarkets are improved

• Or market fails todevelop

21

Candidates for Regulation

• Funds (securities regulator)• Fund management company (securities

regulator)• Custodian or trustee (securities

regulator and banking regulator – oftenbanks)

• Fund salespeople (securities regulator)• Auditor (professional ethics – additional

standards may be needed)

22

Measures & ObjectivesRegulatory Measure Anti-

competitiveBehavior

MarketMisconduct

AsymmetricInformation

SystemicInstability

Competition RegulationAntitrust/competition policy ✓✓✓✓

Market Conduct RegulationDisclosure standards (assets;fees) ✓✓✓✓

Comparable presentation of results ✓✓✓✓

Marketing/advertising rules (KYC rules) ✓✓✓✓ ✓ ✓✓✓

Valuation (NAV at MTM) ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Limits on permitted activities ✓✓✓✓

(conflict of interest; self-dealing)Limit basis for calculating fees ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Prudential RegulationLicensing; fit and proper ✓✓✓✓ ✓ ✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Legal separation; segreg. of assets ✓✓✓✓ ✓ ✓✓✓ ??(Korea)[Minimum capital requirements] ✓✓✓✓ ✓ ✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Legal investment ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Liquidity requirements ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Leverage limitations ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Diversification -concentration limits ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Private oversight (custodians, audit) ✓✓✓✓ ??(Korea)Redundant RegulationsFee Caps ??[Minimum Capital Requirement] ??(Korea)

23

To make funds work, you need:• Sufficient demand (savings)• Adequate supply of quality assets• Appropriate legal framework• Competent regulatory body with

sufficient resources• Capacity to effectively enforce law• Distribution channels

24

.. And ..• Competent fund operators with

sufficient capital• Operational infrastructure

(exchanges, custody, brokerage,etc)

• Reliable money transmission• Appropriate accounting standards• Neutral or beneficial tax• Efficient disclosure mechanisms

25

If you don’t have some or all of these…• Does the political will exist to create

them?It should, because:• Funds mobilize savings, deepening

markets• Savings finance corporate and

government borrowing• Domestic savings reduce impact of

foreign flows• Use for private pension provisionNeed political stability: long haul

26

Where to start?

• Training all those relevant to tasks• Create strategy with tasks - clear

leadership and accountability• Create legal, regulatory framework, fiscal

and accounting framework• Create regulatory body• Brief potential fund managers, custodians,

etc. on opportunities

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