
Fundamentals for Newer Directors 2014 (pdf)
The latest edition of ICI’s flagship publication shares a wealth of research and data on trends in the investment company industry.
Securities lending is one of the myriad investment techniques used by funds to improve the return on their portfolios for the benefit of their shareholders. The term refers to the lending of a security by one party (sometimes called the beneficial owner) to another (the borrower) in exchange for collateral. In the United States, the collateral for securities loans is almost always cash.
Due to strict regulatory limits, securities lending is a relatively minor strategy for most funds in the United States, designed to add incremental returns with minimal additional risk
Not all investment companies registered under the Investment Company Act lend securities. Mutual funds, closed-end funds, and ETFs (collectively, funds) may engage in securities lending. UITs do not. [1]
Large funds with relatively low turnover, such as ETFs and index funds, often are the most likely types of funds to lend securities. The nature of their portfolios allow the funds to have more securities out on loan for longer periods of time, making them a favored counterparty and allowing them to obtain the best terms for their loans.
As noted above, the borrower posts cash collateral for the loan, which is invested to produce income. The income from the collateral investment pays for the securities lending program, with the net income (after expenses) directly benefitting the fund and its investors.
The cash collateral typically is reinvested in very high quality, highly liquid investments. These are often U.S. money market funds managed pursuant to Rule 2a-7 or other funds managed with very conservative short-term investment strategies.
All securities lending programs have related expenses, many of which are paid from the income from the collateral investment. The most common expense is the use of a lending agent. Most agents are independent, although some funds use affiliated lending agents subject to additional regulatory restrictions.
The investment of the collateral, as with any investment, also has related expenses. For example, if the collateral is invested in a money market fund, the beneficial owner pays the money market fund’s expenses, including its management fee.
A U.S. fund may lend securities only if it is permitted by its organizing documents, disclosed to investors in the fund’s prospectus or statement of additional information (SAI), and subject to approval and oversight by its board of directors.
In addition, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) staff has established guidelines for securities lending activities for funds registered under the Investment Company Act. Among other things, these guidelines restrict the types of collateral that are permissible and how that collateral may be treated, impose limitations on the amount of lending, ensure the ability of a fund to recall securities in a timely manner, and address potential conflicts of interest.
Specifically, the guidelines contain these investor protections:
Funds are required to provide a high degree of corporate disclosure to investors about their securities lending and repo activities. As noted above, a fund must disclose that it may lend securities. This disclosure appears in the fund’s prospectus and SAI, both of which are available to investors, the SEC, and the public.
Twice a year, funds also prepare financial statements that are filed with the SEC and sent to shareholders. The fund’s financial statements identify securities out on loan, investment of cash collateral received, a liability reflecting the obligation to return the cash collateral at the conclusion of the loan, and income earned from securities loans. In addition to the semiannual financials in these shareholder reports, funds also file Form N-Q after the first and third quarters, which includes a detailed listing of the fund’s portfolio. The filings on Form N-Q identify those securities out on loan.
Many funds employ a securities lending agent, which is often independent but sometimes affiliated with the fund. Securities lending agents offer their clients limited indemnification. The precise terms of the indemnity are negotiated between the fund and agent, but generally, the indemnification is triggered only if the borrower fails to return the lent securities and the value of those securities exceed the value of the collateral. Given the daily marked-to-market overcollateralization of the securities loan, as described above, the potential for an indemnified loss is considered a very minor risk.
Endnote
[1] A unit investment trust (UIT) is a fund with an unmanaged fixed portfolio of assets. It does not have an investment adviser and may only change the composition of the fund under limited circumstances (e.g., a UIT that replicates an index may adjust its portfolio when that index is rebalanced). It may not select or lend securities or otherwise engage in activities that require an investment adviser.
May 2014
Latest Comment Letters:
TEST - ICI Comment Letter Opposing Sales Tax on Additional Services in Maryland
ICI Comment Letter Opposing Sales Tax on Additional Services in Maryland
ICI Response to the European Commission on the Savings and Investments Union