European regulators are targeting $17.5 billion of cat bonds held in UCITS funds. ESMA considers these securities, exposed to natural disasters, too complex and risky for retail investors. If the European Commission follows this recommendation, a wave of forced sales could shake an already strained market.
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) sent a strong signal to the European Commission regarding the legitimacy of catastrophe bonds (cat bonds) in UCITS portfolios, these funds known as safe and intended for a wide audience of retail investors, while it had already warned against tokenized stocks .
The institution believes these instruments, linked to extreme natural events, present an inappropriate level of risk for non-professional savers. To date, about $17.5 billion of these securities are exposed to possible regulatory reclassification, representing nearly one-third of a global market estimated at $56 billion. This request comes as hurricane season is already underway in the United States, a period during which these bonds can be triggered.
ESMA cites technical and structural reasons to justify its warning. Cat bonds require a deep understanding of catastrophe modeling, climate physics, and risk transfer mechanisms between insurers and financial markets. Here are some key points :
A rushed divestment could destabilize the secondary market for cat bonds, whose liquidity is still largely untested.
The warning issued by ESMA is not unanimous within the industry. Some large institutions, like Neuberger Berman or the Dutch PGGM, agree with the regulator.
For Peter DiFiore, CEO at Neuberger Berman, believing these products are liquid is a dangerous illusion. “We have not yet seen a real liquidity event in this market”, he stated , noting that his fund, which manages $1.3 billion in cat bonds, holds none in UCITS vehicles.
At PGGM, Eveline Takken-Somers also points to systemic risks : “An earthquake in San Francisco could wipe out 30 to 40% of a portfolio all at once. If you are not aware of this, you could regret it.”
Conversely, some managers argue for keeping cat bonds in portfolios accessible to the public via UCITS, citing their exceptional performance. Daniel Grieger, CIO at Plenum Investments, strongly defends this asset class : “Cat bonds delivered solid returns during the Covid pandemic, the interest rate shock, and even disruptions caused by Trump’s tariffs.”
For him, ESMA is looking in the wrong direction, and its position contradicts the ambitions of the European Union for savings and investment (SIU), which aims to broaden financial options for small savers.
While some traditional products like catastrophe bonds are challenged for their opacity, bitcoin, though still criticized, benefits from total transparency thanks to its public blockchain.
At the market level, an unfavorable decision could lead to massive sales, reducing liquidity and affecting reinsurers’ financing conditions. The risk also includes some managers withdrawing entirely from this asset class, causing a contraction of supply.
For now, the European Commission has not decided. A consultation period is expected, during which technical and political arguments will be reviewed. The outcome of this debate could redefine investment boundaries in the European Union and lay the foundation for a new regulatory architecture for so-called alternative products, as evidenced by enhanced crypto company oversight on the Old Continent .