As the coronavirus pandemic and its effects continue to spread, the country's lender of last resort is trying to boost a certain type of mutual fund.
 |  |  |  | Eric S. Rosengren Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
 President, CEO
 |  | 
 
Yesterday, the board of the Federal Reserve 
created a 
Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (MMLF). The Fed team likens the program to the Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (AMLF) that it 
created in 2008, during the financial crisis, and 
shut down in 2010.
Barron's, 
Bloomberg, 
Reuters, and the 
Wall Street Journal all reported on the news.
"The Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility is a reaction to large redemptions in prime MMFs last week," writes 
Credit Suisse analyst 
Craig Siegenthaler, who covers asset managers.
"The Global Money Market Funds Outlook has been revised to negative from stable, owing to unprecedented market volatility and economic uncertainty amid the coronavirus pandemic," writes the team at 
Moody's. "Over the last few days, the US prime institutional money market fund segment has lost more than 10% of total portfolio assets. This sharp rise in daily outflow rates has reduced funds' liquidity levels and placed downward pressure on funds' NAVs."
Through MMLF, the Boston Fed will lend money to banks to buy securities from prime money funds, to keep those funds liquid. The program is backed by $10 billion of credit protection from the Treasury Department. (By comparison, from 2008-2010 the Fed 
pumped $217 billion into money funds, all of which was paid back. 
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