Federated Investor's Debbie Cunningham writes "Hurry up and wait" in her latest "Money in Cash". She explains, "The nation's sluggish recovery created a waiting game for money markets in February. Mixed economic signals, continued brutal weather and cautious monetary policy kept rates in suspended animation, with all of us waiting for some definitive positive news to move them forward and up.... We are perhaps more focused on the Fed's daily maneuvers. The Fed recast its overnight reverse repo facility from a test to an exercise, in place at least through Jan. 2015. It raised the overnight rate from 3 basis points to 5 basis points, slowly creeping up to a little bit less abysmal. The Fed continues to establish its role as the market-rate setter. Counterparties and participants were allowed to use the program up to $5 billion a night, an increase of $2 billion. Another positive in terms of supply has been the Treasuries.... If all of this leads you to think you should see substantial change in at least the overnight to 3-month section of the yield curve, think again. There actually has been very little movement. The explanation for this is that rates would have probably been closer to zero had the Fed not been in the marketplace. The end of January saw a floating-rate Treasury note come to the market for the first time. The Treasury offered $15 billion of 2-year floating rate notes resetting weekly off 90-day bills at a spread of 4.5 basis points. We are eager to watch the market develop from the standpoint of both spread and liquidity."