Interest Rate Increases Spur a Shift to Cash

(Los Angeles Times/TNS) —

Cash is creeping back.

With interest rates rising and the stock market cooling from its big gains last year, some savers and investors are putting more money into once-dormant cash-related products such as money market funds, bank certificates of deposit and Treasury securities.

The net assets of money market mutual funds totaled $2.89 trillion as of June 6, the most since the financial crisis in 2008-09, according to the Investment Company Institute, a mutual fund trade group.

At Vanguard Group, one of the nation’s largest mutual fund providers, net cash flows into money market funds totaled $10.5 billion in the first four months of this year — nearly twice the $5.3-billion inflow during the same period last year — to $238 billion.

Still, that’s by no means a huge shift. And a spot check of financial planners and wealth management advisers in Southern California showed that all were keeping roughly the same amount of cash as a percentage of their clients’ portfolios, a percentage that’s typically in the single digits because most of the money is invested in stocks and bonds.

The rise in rates is “just not enough to change the equation at this point,” said Stuart Blair, director of research at Canterbury Consulting, a Newport Beach firm that manages $18.5 billion of assets.

Money funds and other cash-related products were paid scant notice during the last decade because they paid so little, carrying interest rates not much above zero. That was largely due to the Federal Reserve Board’s stimulus monetary policy, in which it kept its benchmark short-term rates at nearly zero to help the country recover from the financial collapse.

As the U.S. economy bounced back, the stock market enjoyed a nine-year bull run that continues today — the Dow Jones industrial average has soared nearly threefold since early 2009 — and investors were disinclined to keep much money in cash.

That was true even for the middle class, which poured most of its money — including 401(k) retirement money — into stock mutual funds rather than low-yielding money funds.

But the scenario changed starting in December 2015, when the Fed began nudging interest rates higher once again. The central bank has done so several times since then — most recently on June 13, when it lifted its key rate to a range of 1.75 percent to 2 percent — and two more increases are expected this year.

In response, yields on a variety of fixed-income cash products also rose.

The yield on the widely held 10-year Treasury note stood at 1.43 percent two years ago; now it’s at nearly 3 percent.

The average yield on five-year bank CDs was 1.24 percent as of May 30, up from 0.78 percent in 2013, though some institutions offer five-year CDs with yields above 2 percent, according to Bankrate.com.

At the same time, the bull market in stocks stalled.

“Interest rates are rising, valuations on riskier assets like stocks are elevated, and investors are starting to rethink their willingness to take risks in pursuit of returns as cash becomes more appealing,” said Greg McBride, Bankrate.com’s chief financial analyst.

With CDs in particular, “momentum has certainly picked up in the last nine months,” he said.

CDs, money market funds, Treasury bills and other short-term, liquid accounts are in large part about protecting one’s assets — often with a fixed return — rather than risking them on the vagaries of the stock and bond markets.

That safety feature largely took a back seat while the stock market kept setting record highs. So the shift to cash now is primarily because cash-related products simply are paying more than they have in years.

“For the first time in more than a decade, CD investors are getting a return that is on par or better than inflation,” McBride said.

But barely. The Federal Reserve’s latest projection is that inflation will move up to 2.1 percent this year. That means “on a real (inflation-adjusted) basis you’re still losing money” with many cash instruments that yield less than 2.1 percent, Blair said.

Other factors besides the Fed’s monetary policy have fueled the heightened interest in cash.

As stock prices have wobbled during rising trade tensions between the United States and other nations, investors poured $55 billion into worldwide money market funds in the week that ended June 6, the highest since October 2013, according to the research firm EPFR Global.

Blair said another reason cash levels have swelled is that stock prices have risen so much in recent years. That has raised the overall value of portfolios and, because money managers maintain a certain percentage of those portfolios in cash, they’ve had to add more dollars to the cash portion of those portfolios.

Consider, for example, a $1 million portfolio that keeps 5 percent, or $50,000, in cash. As stock gains lifted the portfolio’s value to $1.5 million, the portion invested in cash instruments had to climb to $75,000 to maintain that 5 percent level.

“You haven’t changed your risk profile, but on an absolute basis the cash portion has gone up,” Blair said.

Despite the recent increase, returns on cash-related investments remain paltry compared with past decades.

When interest rates soared in the 1970s and ’80s, CDs and T-bills carried double-digit yields. They fell back into the single digits in the 1990s as investors’ attention turned to the stock market, which soared in the ’90s until the dot-com crash in 2000, recovered and then was flattened again by the financial collapse of 2008-09.

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