Money is continuing to flow into money-market funds, with total assets climbing to a record high amid renewed stock market volatility and geopolitical concerns.
As of the week ending Wednesday, April 2, money-market fund assets reached $7.03 trillion, up from $7.01 trillion the previous week, according to data from the Investment Company Institute (ICI).
This trend reflects a clear investor preference for safety and yield. With average yields at 4.15%—per the Crane 100 Money Fund Index—money-market funds are offering compelling returns relative to the current risk environment.
Retail clients are fueling the latest growth. ICI reports that retail money-market fund assets grew by $17.7 billion in the past week, even as institutional assets declined by $101 million. The shift underscores a growing conservatism among individual investors responding to market noise and uncertainty.
Money-market funds invest primarily in highly liquid, short-term debt instruments like U.S. Treasury bills. Their combination of stability, liquidity, and yield continues to appeal to clients wary of equity market swings.
According to ICI Chief Economist Shelly Antoniewicz, the persistent inflows reflect heightened sensitivity to market volatility. That volatility intensified after President Donald Trump announced significant new tariffs—an announcement that triggered a 4.8% drop in the S&P 500 on Thursday, marking the index’s steepest decline since 2020.
Since July 2024, money-market funds have added nearly $1 trillion in assets, rising from $6.1 trillion to their current level. For wealth advisors and RIAs, this sustained surge underscores the importance of cash and cash equivalents in client portfolios—not just as a yield-generating vehicle, but as a tactical asset class during periods of market stress.
More Articles
Central Bank Expected Not to Make Interest Rate Move
The Federal Reserve enters this week’s policy meeting facing a complex macro backdrop shaped by persistent geopolitical risk and uneven inflation dynamics. With the Middle East conflict now extending into its second month, policymakers are confronting heightened uncertainty around both inflation and growth, reinforcing expectations that the Fed will maintain its current policy stance in the near term.
AI Optimism Raises Positive Implications for RIAs and Wealth Advisors
A renewed wave of optimism around artificial intelligence is reshaping equity market leadership, with meaningful implications for portfolio positioning among RIAs and wealth advisors. The sharp rally in semiconductor stocks has reaccelerated the AI investment theme, coinciding with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite reaching fresh record highs.