ESMA assesses leverage risks in AIFs and UCITS funds sectors

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU’s financial markets regulator and supervisor, published its annual risk assessment of leveraged alternative investment funds (AIFs) and its first analysis on risks in UCITS using the absolute Value-at-Risk (VaR) approach. Both articles represent ESMA’s work to identify highly leveraged funds in the EU investment sector and assess their potential systemic relevance.

While most EU investment funds make limited use of leverage, a subset of AIFs are substantially leveraged, and a group UCITS using the absolute VaR approach has very high levels of gross leverage.

Risk assessment of leveraged AIFs shows that hedge funds display the highest levels of leverage, even though they represent a small part of the EU fund industry. The real estate (RE) funds are under pressure in some jurisdictions due to the combination of declining real estate prices and outflows from some funds, but in general the RE fund sector has been resilient at EU level. The assessment of GBP Liability-Driven Investment (LDI) funds, which gain leveraged exposures to the UK government bond market, shows that imposing limits to the interest rate risk they can take successfully increased the resilience of the sector, and even resulted in a decline of leverage for some funds.

In a new analysis, ESMA reports that UCITS using the absolute VaR approach to manage their risk profile account for around 8% of the UCITS universe. These funds follow a heterogeneous range of investment strategies and can increase their exposures using derivatives. Within this group, a subset of funds shows risk profiles and characteristics more commonly associated with hedge funds, such as complex derivative exposures with high levels of gross leverage and heightened sensitivity to market conditions. These funds tend to be exposed to risks related to liquidity imbalances and complexity, and some have higher risks than hedge funds. While this subset is small (2% of the UCITS segment), they have a larger volume of assets than EU hedge funds.

Related Posts

Previous Post
MLex: EU chair wants deal exempting SFTs from T+1
Next Post
US regional banks should consolidate amid recession risk, says fintech expert

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

X

Reset password

Create an account