I know that when rates rise the value of my bond funds will decrease, and I know that I'm earning next to
nothing in my money market funds.
Not exact matches
At the same time, what is counted as cash on the sidelines, whether
in money market funds, or as tiny balances
in equity
funds, is
nothing but a mountain of short - term debt securities, mostly Treasury bills, that have been issued and must be held by somebody until they are retired.
Nothing gonna happen unless board granting
money to Wenger to spend
in the
market and granting
funds in the hands of Kronke as his the owner of the club because he is the major shares of the club... So as said by Wenger he is going to buy only 1 or 2 signings this season....
(While he could have simply made the contributions to a
money market fund, that would leave several thousand dollars languishing
in the account for up to year, earning next to
nothing.)
My nest egg is now sitting
in a
money -
market fund where it's doing
nothing.
My
funds also languished
in this
money market fund for many weeks, of the choices told to me, I picked 2, no contact from them telling me one
fund was not really available, I had to contact them to ask why
nothing was going into my chosen
funds.
Well, this is the essentially the dilemma many retirees find themselves
in: they realize that a) their CDs and
money market accounts are yielding almost
nothing, b) they are withdrawing more than they are earning, c) their retirement
fund is shrinking, d) they must live on less.
Those who don't understand this end up parking their
money in a
money market fund — which pays practically
nothing in return — and forgetting about it.