Barron's is encouraging investors to pull their cash out of money market mutual funds. On Saturday Beverly Goodman
outlined the current woes of money market mutual funds and their advisors. She points investors, particularly those in sub-$1-billion funds from smaller firms, towards alternative cash havens like bank checking and savings accounts, money-market deposit accounts, bank certificates of deposit, and even short-term bond funds.
Meanwhile, some fundsters offered
Barron's their concerns about the looming possibility of more money market mutual fund regulation, especially capital buffers and the possibility of floating NAVs.
"If the regulation requires fund companies to provide the capital, it could create an oligopoly,"
Deborah Cunningham,
Federated Investors' chief investment officer for taxable money-market mutual funds, told
Barron's. "The smaller players won't be able to put up the money. You can't get blood from a stone."
Crane Data chief
Peter Crane,
Vanguard money-market group chief
David Glocke,
Grant's Interest Rate Observer editor
James Grant,
Fidelity money-market group president
Nancy Prior and
Stradley Ronon attorney
Joan Ohlbaum Swirsky all offered
Barron's their two cents.
Crane's own pub also
followed up on the
Barron's piece.
The article also offers a chart, powered by Crane Data, of the assets and market share of the ten biggest money market mutual fund advisors. 
Edited by:
Neil Anderson, Managing Editor
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