Learned via Bill Fleckenstein today that Jim Grant, in his most recent newsletter, has observed that US money market funds have substantial fractions of their assets invested in European bank debt. Many money fund managers have been extending themselves abroad in search of yield, given the Fed's suppression of short rates to essentially zero.
The five largest domestic money market funds (three at Fidelity, one at Vanguard, one at Blackrock) with about $400 billion under management have about 45% of their assets in Euro bank paper.
If a credit crisis commences in Europe on the back of sovereign debt probs, then the spectre is raised that collapsing Euro bank paper could pressure net asset values of US money market funds to the point where they could 'break the buck' (fall below the $1 unit value). This occured to a small degree two years ago here in the US.
The implication is that US investors should make sure that they understand the nature of their cash holdings. Some funds may be FDIC insured. Current insurance amount, which was raised during the recent credit crisis, is $250,000 per depositor per insured bank.
For cash holdings that exceed the insurance limit or that are not covered, then the strategy should be locating the safest principal preserving vehicle possible. For those who are capable, this might mean parking cash in 1 to 3 month T-bills. They yield next to nothing but likely reflect the surest bet on preservation of principal.
Some believe that the US government would intervene should US money market funds begin to feel stress. Based on history, that may be a good bet. It is also one of the reasons why moral hazard is so high among bank depositors. As a class, depositors are largely clueless of the issues discussed here since they figure that the government has their back.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.