money market
Noun: A financial marketplace where participants engage in the borrowing and lending of short-term funds, typically for periods of one year or less. It involves highly liquid, low-risk debt instruments and is a core component of the financial system for managing liquidity.
The term "money market" refers to the collective trading activity and institutions involved in short-term debt securities.
- Central banks often intervene in the money market to influence interest rates.
- Corporations use the money market to manage their short-term cash surpluses by purchasing treasury bills.
- The stability of the money market is crucial for the smooth functioning of the broader financial system.
- "Money market rates": The interest rates prevailing on instruments traded in the money market, such as the interbank lending rate.
- "Money market turmoil": A period of severe stress or dysfunction in the short-term funding markets, often characterized by a sharp rise in interest rates and a decline in liquidity.
- Money market fund (noun): A type of mutual fund that invests exclusively in short-term, high-quality debt instruments from the money market. It is a distinct financial product, not the market itself.
- Investors seeking stability often park their cash in a money market fund.
- Short-term credit market: A descriptive synonym emphasizing the market's focus on short-duration lending.
- Liquidity market: Highlights the market's primary role in providing liquidity to financial institutions and governments.
The money market is characterized by: 1. Short Maturity: Instruments have maturities ranging from overnight to one year. 2. High Liquidity: Securities can be easily bought and sold with minimal price impact. 3. Low Credit Risk: Instruments are typically issued by entities with high creditworthiness, such as governments, banks, and large corporations. 4. Large Transaction Sizes: Trading is often conducted in high denominations, primarily by institutional investors.
- a market for short-term debt instruments