In: Finance
Why is the money market so important to treasury management?
Compare and contrast the aggressive and conservative short-term borrowing strategies
During periods of normal credit market conditions, which strategy will result in the lowest borrowing costs?
Chances are you've heard the term before, but what exactly is the money market? It is the organized exchange on which participants can lend and borrow large sums of money for a period of one year or less. While it is an extremely efficient arena for businesses, governments, banks, and other large institutions to transact funds, the money market also provides an important service to individuals who want to invest smaller amounts while enjoying perhaps the best liquidity and safety found anywhere. Here we look at some of the most popular types of money market instruments and the benefits they offer to the individual investor.
Purposes of the Money Market
Individuals will invest in the money market for much the same
reason that a business or government will lend or borrow funds in
the money market: sometimes the need for funds does not coincide
with having them. For example, if you find you have a certain sum
of money that you do not immediately need (to pay down debt, for
example), then you may choose to invest those funds temporarily,
until you need them to make some other, longer-term investment, or
a purchase. If you decide to hold these funds in cash, the
opportunity cost that you incur is the interest that you could have
received by investing your funds. If you do invest your funds in
the money market, you can quickly and easily secure this
interest.
The major attributes that will draw an investor to short-term money market instruments are superior safety and liquidity. Money market instruments have maturities that range from one day to one year, but they are most often three months or less. Because these investments are associated with massive and actively-traded secondary markets, you can almost always sell them prior to maturity, albeit at the price of forgoing the interest you would have gained by holding them until maturity.
The secondary money market has no centralized location. The closest thing the money market has to a physical presence is an arbitrary association with the city of New York; although, the money market is accessible from anywhere by telephone. Most individual investors participate in the money market with the assistance (and experience) of their financial advisor, accountant or banking institution.
Conclusion
When an individual investor builds a portfolio of financial
instruments and securities, he or she typically allocates a certain
percentage of funds towards the safest and most liquid vehicle
available: cash. This cash component may sit in his or her
investment account in purely liquid funds, just as it would if
deposited into a bank savings or checking account. However,
investors are much better off placing the cash component of their
portfolios into the money market, which offers interest income
while still retaining the safety and liquidity of cash. Many money
market instruments are available to investors, most simply through
well-diversified money market mutual funds. Should investors be
willing to go it alone, there are other money market investment
opportunities, most notably in purchasing T-bills through Treasury
Direct.