Your money-market fund statement may show a balance with a few more digits.
(Money Magazine)
When you next check your balance, you may see a lot more digits. Fidelity, Schwab, and other firms managing 40% of U.S. money fund assets said in January they would disclose the exact per-share value of their funds' holdings daily, in place of reports they've issued monthly since 2010.
Don't be confused: Shares you trade will still be priced at the standard net asset value (NAV) of $1 apiece.
So why the new detail?
The firms are responding to proposals aimed at protecting investors from a repeat of 2008, when one fund's NAV hit 97¢.
One such idea (which stalled at the SEC last year) is to have funds trade at a floating NAV like other mutual funds.
Related: Money 70 - Best mutual funds and ETFs
Wall Street hopes the daily disclosure will reassure people that values stay very close to $1. As low as the funds' risk may be nowadays, though, it may not be offset by their reward: an average yield of just 0.05%.
Unless you need a brokerage sweep account, keep your cash in an FDIC-insured bank account.
Per-share market value of Fidelity funds
$1 a share? Not exactly. Money-market funds may all report a $1 net asset value per share, but the actual market values of their holdings vary.
Fund | Net Asset Value (NAV) |
Fidelity Government Money Market (SPAXX) | $1.0001 |
Fidelity Tax-Free Money Market (FMOXX) | 1.0005 |
Fidelity AMT Tax-Free Money (FIMXX) | 1.0016 |
NOTE: Values as of Jan. 16. SOURCE: Fidelity
First Published: March 15, 2013: 6:53 AM ET
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