Barron's writes, "Money-Market Fund Assets Are at a Record and Poised to Keep Growing. Here’s Why." They tell us, "Money-market funds pulled in $935 billion in new assets last year, pushing total assets above $8 trillion and surpassing their haul in 2024, according to new research from Morgan Stanley. The low-risk savings vehicles are poised to maintain steady asset growth in 2026, despite expectations for more Federal Reserve rate cuts ahead." The piece continues, "Morgan Stanley analysts anticipate money-market funds could attract another $500 billion in assets this year because their yields remain attractive to both retail and institutional investors. The Crane 100 Money Fund Index had an average 3.58% annualized 7-day yield as of Jan. 3. Some funds offer above-average rates, such as Vanguard Federal Money Market Fund's 3.70%. That is down from a high of more than 5% in 2023, but well above the near-zero rates money funds earned for years before the Federal Reserve started raising rates in 2022." The article also says, "Morgan Stanley forecasts that assets in money-market funds could exceed $8.6 trillion by the end of 2026. Money-market fund yields have only been higher than 3% at two points over the past two decades, according to a Dec. 5 Morgan Stanley research note. 'Their high degree of safety and liquidity continue to make money-market funds an attractive investment alternative to bank deposits,' the analysts wrote." It adds, "Flows into money-market funds have persisted even as many investors embraced risky investments last year.... Morgan Stanley analysts estimated Dec. 5 that at the end of 2026, money-market fund investors would earn $275 billion in income over the previous 12 months. They believe most investors will reinvest the income in money-market funds, rather than put it in equities."