The $6.3T Money-Market Industry Just Got Its First ETF

ETF letters and stock charts

What You Need to Know

Though interest rates are coming down, Texas Capital sees an opportunity to capitalize on the still-strong demand for cash.
MMKT, which carries an annual expense ratio of 20 basis points, must invest 99.5% of its assets in cash or short-dated government securities.
The maturities of its holdings can be as short as overnight, in the form of repurchase agreements, or as long as 13 months, according to SEC filings.

A new exchange-traded fund attempting to carve out a slice of the $6.3 trillion sitting in traditional money-market funds launched Wednesday.

The Texas Capital Government Money Market ETF begins trading under the ticker MMKT, according to a press release. While other short-dated bond ETFs exist, MMKT is the first to follow the so-called Rule 2a-7 — a provision of a 1940s Securities and Exchange Commission law that governs money-market funds.

MMKT’s portfolio will have the characteristics of a traditional money-market fund and be governed by the same SEC provision, there’s one crucial difference: MMKT won’t maintain a stable net-asset value of $1.

“Money markets have gone unchallenged since ETFs began,” said Edward Rosenberg, head of ETF and funds management for Texas Capital. “Money market funds are viewed as cash equivalents, and no other ETF has that designation.”

For investors wondering why they might want a vehicle with less stable capital preservation, the Dallas-based lender — which launched its first ETF last year — says there’s been growing acceptance of floating values for government money-market and prime funds.

MMKT also provides institutional investors more intraday liquidity than a traditional money-market account, according to the bank.

See also  Best Life Insurance for Deep-Sea Divers

Assets in money market funds have skyrocketed over the past several years, thanks in a large part to an aggressive Federal Reserve hiking cycle that left short-term rates north of 5%. Investors flocked to those relatively lofty yields, boosting money-market funds to an all-time high of $6.3 trillion this month.