Today's Boston Globe has a good article, Money Market Funds Battered, which goes into some detail about how the recent economic activity in this country is affecting money market accounts.
The Reserve Primary Fund, a pioneer of money market funds, was the first this week to announce it had reduced the value of its shares to below $1. The fund cut its share value by 3 cents to 97 cents, which means a loss for investors, unthinkable for funds that were long regarded as safe havens. Only once before, in 1994, did a money market fund "break the buck," as the industry calls it.
What this means, essentially, is that for every dollar you have invested in a money market fund right now, you're only getting credit for 97 cents of that dollar. It's like earning reverse interest.
One person quoted in the article, 27-year-old Gokmen Kilincarslan, went so far as to transfer his money out of his money market account and into a bank savings account.
If this trend continues, I can see several consumers opting for safer investments (it's amazing that right now money market accounts, which once were considered "safe investments", is even a part of this conversation!) such as CDs or High-Yield Savings accounts.
What do you think? Is this a blip on the financial radar or a sign of worse things to come. Regardless, keeping some of your money in an airtight FDIC-insured account would seem to be one of the best ways to weather this current storm.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Money Market Funds Break the Buck
Posted by
Kevin Cafferty
at
10:06 AM
Labels: CD rates, high-yield savings accounts, money market account
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