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| September 18, 2008 - "Is Your Money Market Account Safe?"
Summary: Money market accounts are supposed to be super safe assets that are as good as cash. Many money market accounts have been affected by this market crisis and lost a lot of money. Is your money market account safe? Money market funds are considered a safe place to park your cash and with rare and infrequent exceptions, they have lived up to that promise. However, they are not guaranteed or backed by the FDIC, so the risk of losing some capital in a money market fund is there. That risk hit him home yesterday when one of the country's oldest and largest money market funds, The Reserve Primary Money Market Fund, broke the buck. Rather than keeping its net asset value stable, at $1.00, its NAV dropped to $0.97. That, in turn, immediately put that fund's future on shaky ground--and money market investors on high alert.Here are answers to some of the key questions surrounding this event. What Happened at The Reserve Primary Money Market Fund? Are Other Money Market Funds at Risk? A failed money market operation can exact a steep toll on a firm's brand and future business. Investors stand to lose pennies on the dollar, but asset management companies that are in the money market business stand to lose everything. For that reason, we'd be surprised to see this problem spread to too many other money market funds, and we would be shocked to see it extend to funds run by larger more diversified institutions. (The Reserve was only in the business of money markets and thus didn't have other business lines or enough cash it could tap.) How Can I Tell If My Money Market Fund Is at Risk? Vanguard reports its funds didn't own any Lehman paper, and it is instead heavily invested in U.S. Treasuries, Agency bonds, and certificates of deposit, all of which carry a government guarantee. That profile fits Vanguard's value proposition to a T; it competes by being the low-cost provider and therefore has no need to reach for extra yield by taking undue risks. Fidelity also released some information on its homepage assuring money market fund shareholders that maintaining a $1.00 NAV is a top priority. Fidelity is a huge company with a lot of cash at its disposal, so we're confident it would stick to this promise even if it means that the firm would have to step in with its own cash to keep the NAV stable. As part of its Web site update, Fidelity also provided up-to-date information on the funds' holdings in Lehman, AIG, and Merrill Lynch, none of which seem large enough to raise any red flags. Other fund firms are putting information out on their Web sites regarding their money market funds, so it is worth checking into what the firm backing your money market fund is saying. The second consideration is whether or not the fund you own pays a yield that seems to be too good to be true. Morningstar has data on just over 2,100 money market funds, and the Reserve Primary Fund clocked in at an average trailing 12-month yield of 4.04%--the highest in our universe--while the average was 2.75%. Although there are rules in place intended to prevent money market funds from taking undue risk, there is still no free lunch, and funds that pay out higher yields (unless the yield advantage is a sole function of their lower expense ratios) are likely to be stretching further out on the risk spectrum than are funds with more modest yields. In all, your best bet is to stick with low-cost money market funds that don't need to stretch for yield from large reputable shops that have the resources to fulfill their promise. Source: Karen Dolan, CFA Morningstar.com |
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