Osfi Liquidity Rules Are Now In Effect, Impacting Hisa Etfs

 | Feb 14, 2024 09:26

h2 Overview/h2

As mentioned in a previous article, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) initiated a change in the liquidity requirements for high interest savings account (HISA) ETFs as of January 31, 2024. According to these new rules, banks that hold deposits for high-interest savings account funds will have to hold “sufficient high-quality liquid assets, such as government bonds, to support all HISA ETF balances that can be withdrawn within 30 days”. As a result of these new rules, banks now must classify deposits from HISA ETFs as unsecured wholesale funding with 100% run-off; this stricter classification means lower rates for deposits from the funds. As a result, the combination of lower rates offered by deposit-taking banks and changes to the underlying holdings of HISA ETFs is affecting the yield of these solutions.

h2 Looking below the surface/h2

The material nature of the changes implemented by OSFI is evident when looking at the composition of some of the most notable HISA ETFs, as their holdings have adjusted to reflect the new reality. For example, in contrasting the December 31st, 2022, vs. February 2nd, 2024, holdings of the Purpose High Interest Savings ETF (TSX:PSA) (Ticker: PSA), there is now a 30 per cent allocation to Canadian Treasury bills (see below).