Crane Data's latest monthly Money Fund Portfolio Holdings statistics will be sent out Wednesday, and we'll be writing our regular monthly update on the new December 31 data for Thursday's News. But we also already uploaded a separate and broader Portfolio Holdings data set based on the SEC's Form N-MFP filings on Tuesday. (We continue to merge the two series, and the N-MFP version is now available via our Portfolio Holdings file listings to Money Fund Wisdom subscribers.) Our new N-MFP summary, with data as of Dec. 31, includes holdings information from 933 money funds (down 40 from last month), representing assets of $6.401 trillion (up from $6.353 trillion). Prime MMFs now total $1.306 trillion, or 20.4% of the total. We review the new N-MFP data, and we also look at our revised MMF expense data, which shows charged expenses flat and money fund revenues seeing a rebound in December. (Note: The latest Form N-MFP cut is missing First American Funds filing, so this data will be revised later this week once they're posted.)

Our latest Form N-MFP Summary for All Funds (taxable and tax-exempt) shows Repurchase Agreement (Repo) holdings in money market funds totaling $2.666 trillion (up from $2.592 trillion), or 41.6% of all assets. Treasury holdings totaled $2.270 trillion (up from $2.198 billion), or 35.5% of all holdings, and Government Agency securities totaled $708.2 billion (down from $731.1 billion), or 11.1%. Holdings of Treasuries, Government agencies and Repo (almost all of which is backed by Treasuries and agencies) combined total $5.644 trillion, or a massive 88.2% of all holdings.

Commercial paper (CP) totals $301.3 billion (down from $316.6 billion), or 4.7% of all holdings, and the Other category (primarily Time Deposits) totals $110.9 billion (down from $167.0 billion), or 1.7%. Certificates of Deposit (CDs) total $215.8 billion (down from $221.2 billion), 3.4%, and VRDNs account for $129.6 billion (up from $126.4 billion last month), or 2.0% of money fund securities.

Broken out into the SEC's more detailed categories, the CP totals were comprised of: $189.0 billion, or 3.0%, in Financial Company Commercial Paper; $71.5 billion or 1.1%, in Asset Backed Commercial Paper; and, $40.8 billion, or 0.6%, in Non-Financial Company Commercial Paper. The Repo totals were made up of: U.S. Treasury Repo ($1.899 trillion, or 29.7%), U.S. Govt Agency Repo ($698.9B, or 10.9%) and Other Repo ($68.5B, or 1.1%).

The N-MFP Holdings summary for the Prime Money Market Funds shows: CP holdings of $294.1 billion (down from $309.5 billion), or 22.5%; Repo holdings of $504.9 billion (up from $437.6 billion), or 38.7%; Treasury holdings of $130.4 billion (up from $120.3 billion), or 10.0%; CD holdings of $215.8 billion (down from $221.2 billion), or 16.5%; Other (primarily Time Deposits) holdings of $102.4 billion (down from $154.7 billion), or 7.8%; Government Agency holdings of $49.5 billion (down from $61.9 billion), or 3.8% and VRDN holdings of $9.3 billion (up from $8.6 billion), or 0.7%.

The SEC's more detailed categories show CP in Prime MMFs made up of: $188.9 billion (down from $206.2 billion), or 14.5%, in Financial Company Commercial Paper; $71.5 billion (up from $63.0 billion), or 5.5%, in Asset Backed Commercial Paper; and $33.7 billion (down from $40.3 billion), or 2.6%, in Non-Financial Company Commercial Paper. The Repo totals include: U.S. Treasury Repo ($328.0 billion, or 25.1%), U.S. Govt Agency Repo ($110.3 billion, or 8.4%), and Other Repo ($66.6 billion, or 5.1%).

In related news, money fund charged expense ratios (Exp%) were flat in December. Our Crane 100 Money Fund Index and Crane Money Fund Average were 0.26% and 0.37%, respectively, as of Dec. 31, 2023. Crane Data revises its monthly expense data and gross yield information after the SEC updates its latest Form N-MFP data the morning of the 6th business day of the new month. (They posted this info Tuesday morning, so we revised our monthly MFI XLS spreadsheet and historical craneindexes.xlsx averages file to reflect the latest expenses, gross yields, portfolio composition and maturity breakout, then.) Visit our "Content" page for the latest files.

Our Crane 100 Money Fund Index, a simple average of the 100 largest taxable money funds, shows an average charged expense ratio of 0.26%, unchanged from last month's level (but 18 bps higher than 12/31/21's 0.08%). The average is now back around the level (0.27%) it was on Dec. 31, 2019, so we estimate that funds are charging normal expenses (though they are waiving a minimal amount of fees for competitive purposes). The Crane Money Fund Average, a simple average of all taxable MMFs, showed a charged expense ratio of 0.37% as of Dec. 31, 2023, unchanged from the month prior and slightly below the 0.40% at year-end 2019.

Prime Inst MFs expense ratios (annualized) average 0.28% (unchanged from last month), Government Inst MFs expenses average 0.27% (unchanged from last month), Treasury Inst MFs expenses average 0.28% (down 1 bp from last month). Treasury Retail MFs expenses currently sit at 0.52%, (unchanged from last month), Government Retail MFs expenses yield 0.53% (down 1 bp from last month). Prime Retail MF expenses averaged 0.48% (unchanged from last month). Tax-exempt expenses were also unchanged at 0.40% on average.

Gross 7-day yields were mixed during the month ended Dec. 31, 2023. The Crane Money Fund Average, which includes all taxable funds tracked by Crane Data (currently 754), shows a 7-day gross yield of 5.45%, down 1 bp from the prior month. The Crane Money Fund Average was 1.72% at the end of 2019, 0.15% at the end of 2020 and 0.09% at the end of 2021. Our Crane 100's 7-day gross yield was unchanged, ending the month at 5.46%.

According to our revised MFI XLS and Crane Index numbers, we now estimate that annualized revenue for all money funds is $16.573 billion (as of 12/31/23). Our estimated annualized revenue totals decreased from the record $16.600B last month but are still up from $15.892B two months ago. Revenue levels are more than five times larger than May's 2021's record-low $2.927B level. Charged expenses and gross yields are driven by a number of variables, but revenues should continue their climb higher as money funds continue to see inflows in the last month of the year.

Email This Article




Use a comma or a semicolon to separate

captcha image

Money Market News Archive

2024 2023 2022
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2021 2020 2019
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2018 2017 2016
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2015 2014 2013
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2012 2011 2010
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2009 2008 2007
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2006
December
November
October
September