Here's a statement of the obvious: The opinions expressed here are those of the participants, not those of the Mutual Fund Observer. We cannot vouch for the accuracy or appropriateness of any of it, though we do encourage civility and good humor.
I followed the early discussions of short-term rates with interest. Being a gambler at heart I’m inclined to roll the dice a little. “Anything but cash” for me. I like Blackrock’s short-term bond fund NEAR for monies you guys would probably commit to cash. Very high credit quality and prone to go up when the equity markets go down - thus providing better ballast to the portfolio. Should do at least as well as cash or TRBUX / TBUX over 3-5 year time frames.
If the Fed lowers rates I would think that would cause money market yields to fall. Sure seems like they will under pressure from the Administration - be it appropriate from an economic perspective or not. Of course, some of the discussion here has pertained to longer dated CDs or Treasuries.
I did not miss @catch22’s excellent point in another thread that the BLS is where inflation numbers come from for assigning TIP’s inflation premium. Good point. The games being played re BLS may indeed affect the desirability of TIPs. I’ve found TIPs a little “squirrelley” anyway. Held inside a fund they can produce unwanted / unexpected results.
Unless the economy totally tanks and goes into a very deep recession, I expect higher inflation going forward. So, for me, that’s another reason to roll the dice a little and own a well diversified portfolio rather than one concentrated on the short end.
I said crypto is very risky, probably 5-10% max in portfolio. Just pointing out like you implied that politics should not factor into investing decision. Many people have missed out on biggest gains of last year because (maybe in part at least) they don’t like politics of people in the space (crypto, Palantir, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac).
I have advocated more than 12 years ago that Treasury should take very small amount from bond sales and put into S&P 500 - very radical at the time but President just this year is talking about setting up a sovereign wealth fund.
I apologize for my poor attempt at humor in middle of the night. Did not mean to offend you about crypto.
I totally dismissed bitcoin (prefer gold) and other crypto, maybe Buffett and deep value folks are too conservative with investments (avoiding most tech), at least for young people.
FWIW, the SUTXX US Treasury Mmkt at Schwab slowly declined from 4.12% on 5/30 to 4.01% on 7/14; and then increased from there to 4.13% currently.
fwiw, FIGXX 7d is back to 4.2% Fidelity MMFs tended not to waver much in yield over the past few months. For FIGXX, all I can find is: July 25: 4.18% June 7: 4.19% May 2, 2025: 4.22%
I can provide more precise info on SPAXX, a different Fidelity MMF (and retail vs. institutional), but one managed by the same managers with roughly the same breakdown of assets. For the dates OJ gave: May 30: 3.94% July 14: 3.95% (no decline) Aug 5: 3.97% (de minimis increase on date of OP) Aug 7: 3.96% current
And for a Fidelity fund that's similar to SUTXX, there's FSIXX: May 30: 4.15% July 14: 4.16% (no decline) Aug 5: 4.16% (no change) Aug 7: 4.16% (no change)
This may say more about Fidelity vs. Schwab than about trends in the short term market.
Surely, they'll drop. But the talking heads I hear mostly think Powell and the Fed will cut just once this year. With all the zany junk going on in the Orange regime, will they even go that far with rates? Seems to me that Powell is focused on providing a dose of stability, as far as he's able. Of course, what happens is a TEAM decision. And of course, it's easy to find contrary opinions from "experts."
Comments
I followed the early discussions of short-term rates with interest. Being a gambler at heart I’m inclined to roll the dice a little. “Anything but cash” for me. I like Blackrock’s short-term bond fund NEAR for monies you guys would probably commit to cash. Very high credit quality and prone to go up when the equity markets go down - thus providing better ballast to the portfolio. Should do at least as well as cash or TRBUX / TBUX over 3-5 year time frames.
If the Fed lowers rates I would think that would cause money market yields to fall. Sure seems like they will under pressure from the Administration - be it appropriate from an economic perspective or not. Of course, some of the discussion here has pertained to longer dated CDs or Treasuries.
I did not miss @catch22’s excellent point in another thread that the BLS is where inflation numbers come from for assigning TIP’s inflation premium. Good point. The games being played re BLS may indeed affect the desirability of TIPs. I’ve found TIPs a little “squirrelley” anyway. Held inside a fund they can produce unwanted / unexpected results.
Unless the economy totally tanks and goes into a very deep recession, I expect higher inflation going forward. So, for me, that’s another reason to roll the dice a little and own a well diversified portfolio rather than one concentrated on the short end.
Yes, thank you for an interesting thread.
I said crypto is very risky, probably 5-10% max in portfolio. Just pointing out like you implied that politics should not factor into investing decision. Many people have missed out on biggest gains of last year because (maybe in part at least) they don’t like politics of people in the space (crypto, Palantir, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac).
I have advocated more than 12 years ago that Treasury should take very small amount from bond sales and put into S&P 500 - very radical at the time but President just this year is talking about setting up a sovereign wealth fund.
I apologize for my poor attempt at humor in middle of the night. Did not mean to offend you about crypto.
I totally dismissed bitcoin (prefer gold) and other crypto, maybe Buffett and deep value folks are too conservative with investments (avoiding most tech), at least for young people.
fwiw, FIGXX 7d is back to 4.2%
Fidelity MMFs tended not to waver much in yield over the past few months. For FIGXX, all I can find is:
July 25: 4.18%
June 7: 4.19%
May 2, 2025: 4.22%
I can provide more precise info on SPAXX, a different Fidelity MMF (and retail vs. institutional), but one managed by the same managers with roughly the same breakdown of assets. For the dates OJ gave:
May 30: 3.94%
July 14: 3.95% (no decline)
Aug 5: 3.97% (de minimis increase on date of OP)
Aug 7: 3.96% current
And for a Fidelity fund that's similar to SUTXX, there's FSIXX:
May 30: 4.15%
July 14: 4.16% (no decline)
Aug 5: 4.16% (no change)
Aug 7: 4.16% (no change)
This may say more about Fidelity vs. Schwab than about trends in the short term market.
Sallie Mae has directly on their website CD rate
15 months
4.40% APY
https://www.salliemae.com/banking/certificates-of-deposit/