El-Erian Says Cash on Sidelines Is Minimizing Bond Market Losses

Investors are using their massive cash piles to lock in attractive yields in global bond markets, helping to limit losses in the asset class, according to Mohamed El-Erian.

Demand for Treasuries is strong as demonstrated with this week’s auctions. And US money-market fund assets have soared in recent weeks to an all-time high, offering fresh evidence that the desire for cash remains persistent even as the Federal Reserve prepares to cut interest-rates.

The sale of $39 billion 10-year US Treasury notes Wednesday had “massive indirect demand,” El-Erian, the president of Queens’ College, Cambridge, told Bloomberg Television on Thursday.

“I can only reconcile it by the ton of cash that’s on the sideline, and the fear that if you don’t lock in interest rates now, you will lose interest income in the future. Every time we have a backup in rates, we have people rush back in.”

The Fed is expected to cut interest rates next week at its policy meeting for the first time in four years.

Total assets held in US money market funds are now at about $6.3 trillion as of the week ending Sept. 4, up about $165 billion over the past five weeks.