As bond yields rise and stock prices wobble, cash is no longer a spurned asset among top money managers
There is an investment that is 100%-backed by the U.S. government, never loses its value and is paying more than 7% interest a year. So why haven’t most Americans heard of Series I savings bonds? WSJ’s Dion Rabouin explains. Photo: TNS/Zuma Press, China’s Covid-19 outbreak, a U.S. or European recession and surging global inflation are making a long-spurned asset increasingly popular with Wall Street’s top money managers these days: cash.
As stock and bond prices have retreated from records in the tumult of headlines, more asset managers said they are looking to move funds into low-risk, cash-like assets. That marks a shift from recent years, when steadily climbing equity indexes trained investors to
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