Bloomberg writes, "Chilling in Money-Market Funds is the Hot Retail Strategy Now." The article, written by Alex Harris and Carter Johnson, states, "The stock market keeps setting records. Bitcoin has minted millionaires. Gold has peaked at new levels. Yet one of the most popular trades is to sit in cash or, more precisely, money-market funds. These plain‑vanilla vehicles, which invest in short‑term debt, have become the default parking spot for everyone from retail savers to corporate treasurers. The US money-market industry now holds a record $8.29 trillion -- almost twice the size of Japan's economy -- after inflows topped $1 trillion last year, according to Crane Data LLC, which tracks the industry. The strategy's popularity has been accompanied by a Wall Street catchphrase, 'T-bill and chill,' which has come to signify investors' preference for the short-term Treasuries these funds often hold." It quotes Peter Crane, president of Crane Data, "Convenience is king with cash. It's the ultimate hedge when other assets like Bitcoin and gold have done more going up and going down.'" The piece explains, "Stability in finance has been rare over the past decade as the Covid-19 pandemic, geopolitical conflicts and the rise of artificial intelligence unleashed uncertainty across global markets. The volatility has pushed safety-minded investors toward money-market funds, where the appeal is the combination of stability and returns. Yields on the 100 largest funds were near 3.5% at the end of April, according to a Crane Data index. To Amrita Bhasin, a 25-year-old tech worker in California, money-market funds feel easier to manage than, say, certificates of deposit, where cash is locked up for a specific period and subject to penalties. 'With money-market funds, I feel like I have more visibility and control over what's happening with my money,' she says. 'I want to understand where my money is, what yield I'm getting and how it's changing.'" The Bloomberg article adds, "While Wall Street forecasters have long warned that a 'wall of cash' would rush out of money-market funds and into riskier assets once the Fed started cutting interest rates, investors kept piling in last year even as the central bank lowered borrowing costs three times. Renewed market volatility in recent months, fueled in part by the Iran war and a spike in oil prices, has only reinforced the appeal of cashlike assets, with inflows continuing in 2026, according to Crane Data. 'I've been hearing the 'wall of cash' theory since money funds hit a trillion in 1997,' Crane says. 'That's the fallacy underneath the zero-sum thinking that people believe if something goes up, something else must go down.'"