About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

EFAMA Publishes Briefing on the European Fund Classification (EFC)

Subscribe to our newsletter

The European Fund and Asset Management Association (EFAMA) has published the second edition of its “European Fund Classification” (EFC) Forum Briefing which updates on progress made towards the adoption and enhancement of the EFC so far this year.

The EFC has been launched with a view to enhancing the integrity of European investment funds. The primary goal of the EFC is to make available to all industry stakeholders a classification structure which will address transparency issues. In the short-term it aims to classify and regularly monitor every investment fund available for sale in multiple jurisdictions and the long-term plan is to have complete coverage of UCITS.

The EFC Forum reports that it has now finalised the ‘high level’ categories under which the detailed sector classifications will be grouped. Under this methodology, the universe of equity, bond, mixed and money market funds is segmented according to eight criteria: country/region, sector, market capitalization, currency, credit quality, interest rate, emerging market exposure and asset allocation. EFAMA will publish a report presenting and defining all high level categories in 2012 Q1.

The EFC has made significant progress having classified 5,822 funds incorporating 14,559 shares on the basis of the portfolio holdings at end June 2011. This is a considerable increase compared to the 2,847 funds and 10,155 shares classes classified at end March 2011. Furthermore, 30 EFAMA corporate members are now submitting their cross-border funds to the EFC classification process; the list is provided in the Briefing.

Looking forward, a number of fund distributing platforms will incorporate the EFC within their selection system – Allfunds Bank is already committed to that – and a number of fund managers will start providing portfolio data for the classification of their home domiciled funds. These developments will further enhance the profile of the EFC in 2012.

Peter de Proft, Director General of EFAMA commented: “The financial crisis highlighted the need for the fund industry to inform, protect and listen to investors and the EFC initiative to improve transparency is a message to European authorities, investor associations and the public that the industry is taking action to advance the protection of investors.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Streamlining trading and investment processes with data standards and identifiers

Financial institutions are integrating not only greater volumes of data for use across their organisation but also more varieties of data. As well, that data is being applied to more use cases than ever before, especially regulatory compliance and ESG integration. Due to this increased complexity of institutions’ data needs, however, information often arrives into...

BLOG

EU’s AI Act Loads Data Responsibilities on Institutions but also Offers Opportunities

Financial institutions are under pressure to put their data estates in order as the European Union’s artificial intelligence regulation comes into force this week, threatening huge fines for failures to observe its tough rules on the safe and fair use of the technology. Nevertheless, the introduction of stringent measures that will place new compliance burdens...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit New York

Our TradingTech Briefing in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

Corporate Actions USA 2010

The US corporate actions market has long been characterised as paper-based and manually intensive, but it seems that much progress is being made of late to tackle the lack of automation due to the introduction of four little letters: XBRL. According to a survey by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and standards...