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As we enjoy the Holiday season and approach the New Year, Crane Data is ramping up preparations for its 2025 conference calendar. We just finished our "basic training" Money Fund University event last week, and we're getting ready for our next show, Bond Fund Symposium, which is March 27-28, 2025, in Newport Beach, Calif. But our focus will soon shift to our big show, Crane's Money Fund Symposium, which will take place June 23-25, 2025 at The Renaissance Boston Seaport, in Boston, Mass. The preliminary draft agenda for the largest gathering of money market fund managers and cash investors in the world is now available and registrations are now being taken. Money Fund Symposium attracts money fund managers, marketers and servicers, cash investors, money market securities dealers, issuers, and regulators. We review the MFS preliminary agenda, as well as Crane Data's other 2025 conferences, below. (Thanks once more to those who supported our Money Fund University in Providence last week! Attendees and subscribers may access the recordings and conference materials at the bottom of our "Content" page or via our "Money Fund University 2024 Download Center.")
Our Money Fund Symposium Agenda kicks off on Monday, June 23 with a "Keynote: Will the Money Fund Party Keep Going?" featuring Yie-Hsin Hung of State Street Global Advisors. The rest of the Day 1 Agenda includes: "Repo, Fed RRP & Treasury Clearing Issues," with Travis Keltner of State Street, Dina Marchioni of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Nathaniel Wuerffel of BNY Mellon; "New Frontier: Tokenized MMFs & MM ETFs" with Teresa Ho of J.P. Morgan Securities and Adam Ackermann of Paxos; and, a "Major Money Fund Issues 2025" panel with moderator Peter Crane of Crane Data, Laurie Brignac of Invesco, Kevin Gaffney of Fidelity Investments and Dan LaRocco, of Northern Trust A.M. The evening's reception is sponsored by Bank of America.
Day 2 of Money Fund Symposium 2025 begins with "Strategists Speak '25: Rates, Repo & Risks," with Joseph Abate of Barclays, Mark Cabana of BofA Securities and Gennadiy Goldberg of TD Securities; followed by a "Senior Portfolio Manager Perspectives" panel with Deborah Cunningham of Federated Hermes, Doris Grillo of J.P. Morgan Asset Mgmt, and John Tobin of Dreyfus. Next up is "Treasury & Government Money Fund Issues," with Tom Katzenbach of the US Dept of Treasury, Mike Bird of Allspring Global Investments and Nafis Smith of Vanguard. The morning concludes with a "Muni & Tax Exempt Money Fund Update," featuring John Vetter of Fidelity, Cameron Ullyatt of Schwab Asset Mgmt and David Elmquist of J.P. Morgan Securities.
The Afternoon of Day 2 (after a Dreyfus-sponsored lunch) features the segments: "Dealer's Choice: Supply, New Securities & CP" with moderator Rob Sabatino of UBS A.M., Robe Crowe of Citi Global Markets, John Kodweis of J.P. Morgan and Stewart Cutler of Barclays; "Local Government Investment Pool Briefing" with Laura Glenn of Public Trust Advisors, and Jeffrey Rowe of PFM Asset Management; "Deposits, Brokerage Sweeps & Retail Cash" with Michael Berkowitz of Citi Treasury & Trade Solutions; and "Investors, Portals & Distribution Topics" with Greg Fortuna of State Street Fund Connect and Vanessa McMichael of Wells Fargo Securities (The Day 2 reception is sponsored by Barclays.)
The third day of the Symposium features the sessions: "Regulations: Money Fund Reforms Round III" with Brenden Carroll of Dechert LLP, Jon-Luc Dupuy of K&L Gates LLP and Jamie Gershkow of Stradley Ronon; "Ratings Agency Outlook & Trend Review" with Robert Callagy of Moody’s Investors, Peter Gargiulo of Fitch Ratings and Michael Masih of S&P Global Ratings; "State of the Money Market Fund Industry" with Peter Crane and Pia McCusker of SSGA; and, "Money Fund Wisdom Demo & Training" with Peter Crane.
Visit the Money Fund Symposium website at www.cranesmfsymposium.com for more details. Registration is $1,000, and discounted hotel reservations are available. We hope you'll join us in Boston this June! Note that some of our speakers have yet to confirm their participation, and the agenda is still in the process of being finalized, so watch for tweaks in coming weeks. E-mail us at info@cranedata.com to request the full brochure.
We're also making plans for our eighth annual ultra-short bond fund event, Bond Fund Symposium, which will take place March 27-28, 2025 <b:>`_in `Newport Beach, Calif. at the Hyatt Regency. Crane's Bond Fund Symposium offers a concentrated and affordable educational experience, as well as an excellent networking venue, for bond fund and fixed-income professionals. Registrations are now being accepted ($1,000) and sponsorship opportunities are available. See the latest agenda here and details here.
Portfolio managers, analysts, investors, issuers, service providers, and anyone interested in expanding their knowledge of bond funds and fixed-income investing will benefit from our comprehensive program. A block of rooms has been reserved at the Newport Beach Hyatt Regency. We'd like to thank our past sponsors and exhibitors -- Wells Fargo Securities, Fitch Ratings, Fidelity Investments, J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Allspring Global, S&P Global Ratings, StoneX, Invesco, BofA Securities, Northern Trust, Bloomberg Intelligence, Goldman Sachs, Federated, GLMX, Payden & Rygel, PIMCO and Dechert -- for their support. (We'd love to get some new ones!) E-mail us for more details.
Finally, mark your calendars for our next European Money Fund Symposium, which is scheduled for Sept. 25-26, 2025, in Dublin, Ireland, and for our next Crane's Money Fund University, which is scheduled for Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 18-19, 2025. Let us know if you'd like more details on any of our events, and we hope to see you in Newport Beach in March, in Boston in June, in Dublin in September or in Pittsburgh in December 2025. Thanks for your patience and support in 2024, Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!
The December issue of our flagship Money Fund Intelligence newsletter, which was sent to subscribers Friday morning, features the articles: "Money Fund Assets Break Over $7.0 Trillion; Still Going," which reviews the continued jump in MMF assets; "Top 10 Stories of 2024: Asset Surge Continues, Yields Peak," which looks back at some of Crane Data's top stories of the year; and, "BlackRock Files for Money Market ETFs: Will They Fly?" which looks at the new ETF filing. We also sent out our MFI XLS spreadsheet Friday a.m., and we've updated our Money Fund Wisdom database with 11/30/24 data. Our Dec. Money Fund Portfolio Holdings are scheduled to ship on Tuesday, December 10, and our Dec. Bond Fund Intelligence is scheduled to go out on Friday, December 13. (Note: We're still taking registrations for our "basic training" event, Money Fund University, which is Dec. 19-20 in Providence, R.I.)
MFI's "$7.0 Trillion" article says, “Money market mutual fund assets broke the $7.0 trillion barrier for the first time ever on Wednesday, Nov. 13, according to our Money Fund Intelligence Daily. Assets jumped following the Federal Reserve's Nov. 7 25 basis point rate cut, and they've continued surging higher in December, rising $58.0 billion month-to-date (through 12/3) to a record $7.121 trillion. Money fund assets have increased by $816.0 billion (13.0%) year-to-date in 2024 (through 12/4).
It continues, "According to our monthly MFI XLS, money fund assets increased by $196.1 billion in November to a record $7.066 trillion. Assets rose by $97.5 billion in October, $149.8 billion in September, $109.7 billion in August, $16.6 billion in July, $15.7 billion in June and $91.4 billion in May. They declined by $15.8 billion in April and $68.8 billion in March. They rose $72.1 billion in February, $93.9 billion in Jan., $32.7 billion in December and $226.4 billion last November."
We write in our Top 10 article, "Dramatic asset growth was again the biggest story of the year, as money market fund assets jumped by $800 billion to a record $7.0 trillion (after jumping by over $1.0 trillion last year). With still almost a month to go, money fund asset growth could approach $1.0 trillion by yearend. In 2023, rising yields were the big news. Though yields have begun declining, and are now below 4.5%, yields remained above 5% for most of the past year. So great yields were another theme of 2024. Other major headlines of 2024 included: the implementation (and minor impact) of the SEC's latest Money Fund Reforms, the birth of tokenized money market funds (and money fund ETFs), the continued growth of Social (and shrinkage of ESG) MMFs and the increase in assets and now decline in yields in European and other worldwide markets. Below, we excerpt from a number of our biggest and most representative news stories of 2024 to highlight the major trends of the past year."
It states, "Crane Data's Top 10 Stories of 2024 include (in chronological order): 'Dreyfus Liquid Assets Celebrates 50th Birthday; ICI Trends for December' (1/31/24); 'American Funds Central Cash to Convert to Govt to Avoid Liquidity Fees' (2/6/24); 'BlackRock Launches Private Tokenized Money Fund, BUIDL; BVI Domicile' (3/22/24); 'ICI: Worldwide MF Assets Jump in Q4'23, Break $10 Trillion; US Leads' (3/25/24); 'Goldman Files to Liquidate Prime Inst MMFs; Barron's: MMFs Tempting' (4/22/24); 'More AFP Liquidity Survey: Banks, MMFs, T-Bills Kings of Cash; MMFs Up' (6/27/24); 'WSJ, Investment News on Brokerage Deposit, Advisory Sweep Pressures' (7/19/24); 'SSGA Sticks w/Prime Inst Money Funds; Discusses Reforms; Benchmarks' (8/29/24); 'MMF Assets Break $6.7 Trillion; Crane 100 Falls Below 5.0%; FT on MMFs' (9/24/24); 'Bloomberg, ignites on Latest MMF Reforms; Prime Inst Shift a Nonevent' (10/3/24); and, 'Money Fund Assets Break Over $7.0 Trillion; S&P on AAA Rated MFs in Q3' (11/13/24)."
Our "BlackRock" piece says, "A Form N-1A Registration Statement for the BlackRock ETF Trust and its new iShares Prime Money Market ETF tells us, 'The iShares Prime Money Market ETF seeks as high a level of current income as is consistent with liquidity and stability of principal.... The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, under normal circumstances, in a broad range of U.S. dollar-denominated money market instruments, including government, U.S. and foreign bank, and commercial obligations and repurchase agreements. The Fund invests in securities maturing in 397 days or less (with certain exceptions) and the portfolio will have a dollar-weighted average maturity of 60 days or less and a dollar-weighted average life of 120 days or less.'"
The piece continues, "The Fund's Board of Trustees has determined that the Fund will qualify as a 'money market fund' pursuant to Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended ('Rule 2a-7'). The securities purchased by the Fund are subject to the quality, diversification, and other requirements of Rule 2a-7, and other rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC'). Unlike a traditional money market fund, the Fund operates as an exchange traded fund ('ETF'). As an ETF, the Fund's shares will be traded on [an exchange] and will generally fluctuate in accordance with changes in net asset value ('NAV') per share as well as the relative supply of, and demand for, shares on [the exchange]."
MFI also includes the News brief, "Reuters: 'America's $7 Trillion Cash Stash Isn't Going Anywhere.' They write, 'A record-high $7 trillion of cash is currently sitting 'on the sidelines' in money market funds.... Anyone hoping to see a significant chunk of this flooding the wider investment field in the coming months may be disappointed. Many strategists assume this massive pile of cash will start to shrink now that the Federal Reserve is cutting interest rates as investors seek a more profitable home for their capital in the face of diminishing cash yields.... Not so fast.'"
Another News brief, "Money Fund Yields Dip Below 4.5%," states, "Money fund yields declined by 20 basis points to 4.44% on average during the month ended November 30 (as measured by our Crane 100 Money Fund Index), after falling 11 bps in October and 35 bps in September. Yields now reflect the majority of the Fed's 25 bps cut on November 7, but they should continue inching lower this week and next. They've declined by 58 bps since the Fed cut its target rate by 50 bps on Sept. 18 and by 15 bps since the Fed cut rates by 1/4 point on 11/7."
A third News brief, "Northern Trust A.M.'s 'Global Investment Outlook 2025," quotes NTAM, "Money fund assets up while rates go down.... Importantly for money market investors, we and the markets see little chance rates return to the zero lower bound anytime soon -- a welcome change from much of the past 15 years of very low yields on cash."
A sidebar says, "Barron's asks, 'Can Cash Be King Again? Suddenly, T-Bills Look More Attractive.' Subtitled, 'The potential for higher-for-longer rates means cash vehicles, including Treasury bills, money market funds and savings accounts, could continue to offer attractive yields into next year,' the article says, 'Cash could be the best game in town. That’s the argument of one prominent Wall Street analyst after market shifts make short-term investments look a lot more attractive.'"
Our December MFI XLS, with Nov. 30 data, shows total assets increased $196.1 billion to a record $7.066 trillion, after increasing $89.9 billion in October, $155.2 billion in September, $105.6 billion in August, $19.7 billion in July, $11.8 billion in June and $79.7 billion in May. They decreased $17.6 billion in April and $66.7 billion in March, but increased $50.0 billion in February, $87.0 billion in January and $24.5 billion last December.
Our broad Crane Money Fund Average 7-Day Yield was down 20 bps at 4.34%, and our Crane 100 Money Fund Index (the 100 largest taxable funds) was also down 20 bps at 4.44% in November. On a Gross Yield Basis (7-Day) (before expenses are taken out), the Crane MFA and the Crane 100 averaged 4.71% and 4.71%. Charged Expenses averaged 0.38% and 0.27% for the Crane MFA and the Crane 100. (We'll revise expenses once we upload the SEC's Form N-MFP data for 11/30/24 on Monday, 12/9.) The average WAM (weighted average maturity) for the Crane MFA was 36 days (up 1 bp) and the Crane 100 WAM was up 1 bp from the previous month at 37 days. (See our Crane Index or craneindexes.xlsx history file for more on our averages.)
The November issue of our flagship Money Fund Intelligence newsletter, which was sent to subscribers Thursday morning, features the articles: "Tokenized Money Funds Gain Momentum; Issues Remain," which reviews the latest releases and news on MMFs on the blockchain; "Federated Hermes, Schwab Earnings Calls Highlight MMFs," which quotes from recent earnings call MMF comments; and, "BNY, UBS Latest to Liquidate Municipal Money Funds," which recaps the thinning among Tax-Exempt Money Funds. We also sent out our MFI XLS spreadsheet Thursday a.m., and we've updated our Money Fund Wisdom database with 10/31/24 data. Our Nov. Money Fund Portfolio Holdings are scheduled to ship on Tuesday, November 12, and our Nov. Bond Fund Intelligence is scheduled to go out on Friday, November 15 (a day late due to the Veterans Day Holiday). (Note: Please join us for our "basic training" event, Money Fund University, which takes place Dec. 19-20 in Providence, R.I.)
MFI's "Tokenized Money Funds" article says, "We've seen more `press releases and articles on tokenized money market funds in the last month than we've seen over the previous year. While most tout the promise, major obstacles remain before tokenized money funds become more than just an experiment. The Block writes, 'Regulatory uncertainty is a barrier to the institutional adoption of tokenized money market funds: analyst,' which says, 'The risk of adverse regulatory intervention remains a major obstacle to the broader adoption of tokenized money market funds among institutional players, an analyst said.'"
It continues, "They quote, 'Tokenized money market funds are under constant threat of adverse regulatory action, curbing investors' appetite,' Rho Labs founder Alex Ryvkin told The Block.... I can confirm that widespread tokenized RWA-readiness is, although inevitable, still a couple of years away.' Ryvkin explained that while awareness and interest in tokenized real-world assets have grown, progress on regulatory clarity and infrastructure development will be necessary before these products achieve mass adoption. He noted that the current adoption stage remains in the 'experimentation phase,' with the usage of tokenized money market products still lagging far behind their traditional finance counterparts."
We write in our Earnings Calls article, "On Federated Hermes' Q3'24 earnings call, CEO J. Christopher Donahue, comments, 'We reached another record high for money market fund assets of $440 billion and total money market assets of ... $593 billion.... We believe a late quarter jump in SOFR rates led to certain investors shifting some assets into the direct market. We also saw certain large clients using money fund assets to pay down debt going into quarter end.'"
It states, "He explains, 'Q3 saw the first of several expected reductions in the Fed funds target rate, driving substantial growth in industry money market fund asset levels, particularly in August and September. Looking ahead for the rest of '24 and into '25, we believe that market conditions for money market strategies will continue to be favorable and that money market fund yields will continue to be attractive compared to the direct market and bank deposit rates.'"
Our "BNY, UBS Liquidate" piece says, "The number of Tax-Exempt and Muni Money Funds, particularly Institutional T-E MMFs, continues to shrink. A Prospectus Supplement filing for BNY Mellon National Municipal Money Market Fund states, 'The Board of Trustees of BNY Mellon Funds Trust has approved the liquidation of BNY Mellon National Municipal Money Market Fund, a series of the Trust, effective on or about October 21, 2024. Before the Liquidation Date, and at the discretion of Fund management, the Fund's portfolio securities will be sold and/or allowed to mature in their normal course and the Fund may cease to pursue its investment objective and policies. The liquidation of the Fund may result in one or more taxable events for shareholders subject to federal income tax.'"
The piece states, "It says, 'Accordingly, effective on or about Sept. 18, 2024, the Fund will be closed to any investments for new accounts, except that new accounts may be established for 'sweep accounts' and by participants in group retirement plans, provided the plan sponsor has been approved by BNY Mellon Investment Adviser, in the case of BNYM Adviser-sponsored retirement plans, or BNY Wealth, in the case of BNYW-sponsored retirement plans, and has established the Fund as an investment option in the plan before the Closing Date.'"
MFI also includes the News brief, "Money Fund Assets Break $6.9 Tril.," which says, "Crane Data's MFI Daily asset series broke $6.9 trillion for the first time ever, hitting a record $6.919 trillion on Tuesday (11/5). Our monthly MFI XLS series shows MMFs rising $89.9 billion in October to a record $6.865 trillion. ICI's last weekly 'Money Market Fund Assets' report shows money funds dipping $2.2 billion to $6.506 trillion in the week ended 10/30 after breaking the $6.5 trillion barrier the prior week."
Another News brief, "The WSJ Says, 'Cash Is No Longer King, but It's Hardly Trash. That's Trouble for Brokers,' tells us, 'Since the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates in 2022, brokerages have seen a key revenue source come under big pressure: What they can earn on customers' uninvested cash. When rates were super low, brokers could earn a good margin by sweeping that money into banks.'"
A third News brief, "Yahoo Writes, 'Cash Doesn't Always Come Off The Sidelines,' They explain, 'The Federal Reserve held interest rates ... high for more than a year. Investors took notice, piling into money market accounts to grab yields that haven't been available in more than a decade. But since the Fed slashed rates by 0.5% on Sept. 18, the flows into money market accounts haven't stopped. In fact, through Oct. 10, ... assets have increased by ... $180 billion since the Fed began cutting.' (See also, Reuters' 'The peculiar 'no show' from US cash funds.')"
A sidebar, "NYT: Money Funds Still Hot," says, "The New York Times writes, 'Money Market Rates Are Lower, Yes. But Compared to What?' Subtitled, 'Even with further Fed rate cuts likely, money market funds are a good alternative for stashing cash, and investors are still flocking to them, our columnist says,' the piece states, 'When money market interest rates broke above 5% last year, it was a wake-up call for many investors who had grown accustomed to getting almost nothing for their money at banks. Hundreds of billions of dollars flowed into the funds…. Now that the Federal Reserve has begun cutting short-term interest rates ... you may expect that these funds would be less appealing. But nothing could be further from the truth. The 'wall of cash' in money market funds isn't flowing into the stock market or other risky investments. It is, for the most part, staying where it is -- and growing larger.'"
Our November MFI XLS, with Oct. 31 data, shows total assets increased $89.9 billion to a record $6.865 trillion, after increasing $155.2 billion in September, $105.6 billion in August, $19.7 billion in July, $11.8 billion in June and $79.7 billion in May. They decreased $17.6 billion in April and $66.7 billion in March, but increased $50.0 billion in February, $87.0 billion in January, $24.5 billion in December and $219.8 billion in November.
Our broad Crane Money Fund Average 7-Day Yield was down 10 bps at 4.55%, and our Crane 100 Money Fund Index (the 100 largest taxable funds) was also down 11 bps at 4.64% in October. On a Gross Yield Basis (7-Day) (before expenses are taken out), the Crane MFA and the Crane 100 averaged 4.93% and 4.91%. Charged Expenses averaged 0.38% and 0.27% for the Crane MFA and the Crane 100. (We'll revise expenses once we upload the SEC's Form N-MFP data for 10/31/24 on Friday, 11/8.) The average WAM (weighted average maturity) for the Crane MFA was 34 days (up 3 bps) and the Crane 100 WAM was up 6 bps from the previous month at 36 days. (See our Crane Index or craneindexes.xlsx history file for more on our averages.)
The October issue of our flagship Money Fund Intelligence newsletter, which was sent to subscribers Monday morning, features the articles: "Assets Spike to Record $6.8T; Yields Plunge to 4.7% on Cut," which reviews the jump in assets and drop in yields following the big Fed cut; "European MF Symposium: Breaking Records in London," which quotes from our recent offshore MMF conference; and, "Worldwide MMFs Jump in Q2'24, Hit Record $10.6 Tril.," which recaps the latest statistics on money fund markets outside the U.S. We also sent out our MFI XLS spreadsheet Monday a.m., and we've updated our Money Fund Wisdom database with 9/30/24 data. Our Oct. Money Fund Portfolio Holdings are scheduled to ship on Wednesday, October 9, and our Oct. Bond Fund Intelligence is scheduled to go out on Tuesday, October 15 (a day late due to the Columbus Day Holiday). (Note: Please join us for our "basic training" event, Money Fund University, which takes place Dec. 19-20 in Providence, R.I.)
MFI's "Assets Spike" article says, "Money fund yields moved sharply lower following the Federal Reserve's Sept. 18 50 basis point rate cut. They quickly fell below 5.0% and are now stabilizing at around 4.75% on average. Meanwhile, money market mutual fund assets jumped to all-time records, rising $155.2 billion in September to a record $6.777 trillion, according to MFI. They've continued rising in October, breaking the $6.8 trillion level on Thursday (10/3)."
It continues, "Money fund yields fell 35 basis points to 4.75% on average in September (as measured by our Crane 100 Money Fund Index, an average of 7-day yields for the 100 largest taxable money funds). Yields were 5.10% on 8/31, 5.13% on 7/31 and 6/28, 5.14% on 5/31, 5.13% on 4/30, 5.14% on 3/31 and 2/29/24, 5.17% on 1/31/24, 5.20% on 12/31/23. Yields should continue to inch lower as they digest the final remnants of the Fed cut, then they should stabilize until the next cut."
We write in our European MF Symposium article, "Crane Data recently hosted its 10th annual European Money Fund Symposium in London, England, which featured record attendance (210) and two days of discussions on offshore money funds denominated in USD, EUR and GBP. Veronica Iommi, Secretary General of IMMFA, the Institutional Money Market Funds Association, presented on 'The State of MMFs in Europe.' She began by looking at the current MMF landscape in Europe, including a brief reminder of how IMMFA MMFs have performed in recent years followed by a review of where we are on the regulatory front, what this might mean for us looking forwards and IMMFA's role as a voice of the Money Market Fund industry."
It states, "She tells the audience, 'Since last year, there have also been some developments at IMMFA ... including the decision to increase our focus on technology and the tokenization of money market funds. We welcomed four new associate members specializing in fin-tech to the IMMFA family, namely Cachematrix, Calastone, Fund Connect and Morgan Money. These new associate members joined existing members in a working group which has already been very actively engaged in discussions with regulators and policymakers.'"
Our "Worldwide" piece says, "The Investment Company Institute's 'Worldwide Regulated Open-Fund Assets and Flows, Second Quarter 2024,' shows that money fund assets globally rose by $201.6 billion, or 1.9%, in Q2’24 to $10.643 trillion. Increases were led by a sharp jump in money funds in U.S. and China, while Luxembourg and India also rose. Meanwhile, money funds in Brazil and Japan were lower. MMF assets worldwide increased by $923.8 billion, or 9.5%, in the 12 months through 6/30/24."
The piece states, "According to Crane Data's analysis of ICI's 'Worldwide' fund data, the U.S. sustained its position as the largest money fund market in Q2'24 with $6.092 trillion, or 57.2% of all global MMF assets. U.S. MMF assets increased by $172.7 billion (2.9%) in Q2'24 and have increased by $642.1 billion (11.8%) in the 12 months through June 30, 2024. China remained in second place among countries overall. China saw assets increase $226.3 billion (14.2%) in Q2 to $1.815 trillion (17.1% of worldwide assets). Over the 12 months through June 30, 2024, Chinese MMFs have increased $231.3 billion, or 14.6%."
MFI also includes the News brief, "Fed Goes Big, Cuts Rates by 50 Bps. A release titled, 'Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement,' tells us, 'In light of the progress on inflation and the balance of risks, the Committee decided to lower the target range for the federal funds rate by 1/2 percentage point to 4-3/4 to 5 percent.'"
Another News brief, "Bloomberg Says, 'Money-Market Funds Stay in Vogue Even as Reforms Go Into Effect.' They write, 'Money-market funds are attracting record amounts of cash, even as a regulatory overhaul [goes live].... The [SEC] approved measures last year.... The final piece of the reform requiring fund managers to impose mandatory liquidity fees went into effect [Oct. 2]."
A third News brief, "Texas Capital Launches Govt MM ETF," states, "A release, 'Texas Capital Launches Government Money Market Exchange Traded Fund,' claims, 'Texas Capital Bank Private Wealth Advisors, a subsidiary of Texas Capital Bank, and the Texas Capital Funds Trust … announced the launch of the Texas Capital Government Money Market ETF (MMKT).'"
A sidebar, "Janus MMF to Support ACS," says, "A press release titled, 'Janus Henderson Offers Money Market Fund to Support the American Cancer Society,' states, 'Janus Henderson ... and the American Cancer Society (ACS) ... announced an innovative partnership to support cancer research, advocacy, and patient support. Through this pioneering initiative, Janus Henderson will donate an amount equal to half of its management fees for all assets under management from Janus Henderson’s Government Money Market Fund to ACS. Janus Henderson has committed to donating a minimum of $1 million per year to ACS for the next three years through this innovative partnership to support the fight against cancer.'"
Our October MFI XLS, with Sept. 30 data, shows total assets increased $155.2 billion to a record $6.777 trillion, after increasing $105.6 billion in August, $19.7 billion in July, $11.8 billion in June and $79.7 billion in May. They decreased $17.6 billion in April and $66.7 billion in March, but increased $50.0 billion in February, $87.0 billion in January, $24.5 billion in December and $219.8 billion in November. Assets decreased $39.3 billion last October and increased $77.8 billion last September.
Our broad Crane Money Fund Average 7-Day Yield was down 34 bps at 4.65%, and our Crane 100 Money Fund Index (the 100 largest taxable funds) was also down 35 bps at 4.75% in September. On a Gross Yield Basis (7-Day) (before expenses are taken out), the Crane MFA and the Crane 100 averaged 5.04% and 5.01%. Charged Expenses averaged 0.38% and 0.27% for the Crane MFA and the Crane 100. (We'll revise expenses once we upload the SEC's Form N-MFP data for 9/30/24 on Tuesday, 10/8.) The average WAM (weighted average maturity) for the Crane MFA was 31 days (down 2 bp) and the Crane 100 WAM was down 3 bps from the previous month at 30 days. (See our Crane Index or craneindexes.xlsx history file for more on our averages.)