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Fixed Income / Money Market

American Funds® U.S. Government Money Market Fund


  • Fund Assets ($M)
    $34,514.9
    As of 2/28/25
  • Inception date
    5/1/09
     
  • 7-day SEC yield (gross/net %)
    4.04 / 4.04
    As of 3/31/25
  • Benchmark
    USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon tooltip: USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon is an index that measures the performance of the average investment rate of U.S. Treasury bills (T-Bills) with a three-month maturity. Three-month T-Bills are short-term securities issued by the U.S. government that are generally considered to be risk-free. In calculating index results, Morningstar, the index provider, determines the arithmetic mean of the investment rates on all three-month T-Bills issued during a given month as reported by the U.S. Treasury's Bureau of the Public Debt. The investment rate is then converted into a price and a monthly return, assuming that the T-Bill is held to maturity.
0

Overview

Key information

Objective
The investment objective of the fund is to provide you with a way to earn income on your cash reserves while preserving capital and maintaining liquidity. The fund is a government money market fund that seeks to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 per share.

Key facts

Fund inception
5/1/09
Fund assets (millions)
$34,514.9
As of 2/28/25 (updated monthly)
Companies/issuers
Holdings of — (updated —)
mthDividendsPaid
Regular dividends paid 4
Monthly
Capital gains paid 4
Dec.
Fiscal year-end
September
Prospectus date
12/1/24
CUSIP
02630U 81 8
Fund number
2659

Returns

Investment results1, 2

Total returns for periods ended 3/31/25 (%)

Chart

Bar chart with 2 data series.
The chart has 1 X axis displaying categories.
The chart has 1 Y axis displaying values. Data ranges from 0 to 4.99.
End of interactive chart.
  • RAFXX
  • Index
Returns table
FundDaily YTD1M3MYTD1Y3Y5Y7Y10Y15YLifetime
RAFXX1.030.341.011.014.744.102.442.231.641.091.03
Index0.361.091.094.994.612.792.571.971.33
Index data refers to the USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon tooltip: USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon is an index that measures the performance of the average investment rate of U.S. Treasury bills (T-Bills) with a three-month maturity. Three-month T-Bills are short-term securities issued by the U.S. government that are generally considered to be risk-free. In calculating index results, Morningstar, the index provider, determines the arithmetic mean of the investment rates on all three-month T-Bills issued during a given month as reported by the U.S. Treasury's Bureau of the Public Debt. The investment rate is then converted into a price and a monthly return, assuming that the T-Bill is held to maturity..
Daily YTD as of 4/2/25.
Fund inception: 5/1/09. Index lifetime is based on inception date of the fund.
Returns greater than one year are annualized.

Prices & distributions

As of 4/2/25
  • Price at nav ($)
    $1.00
  • Price change ($)
    $0.00
  • Price change (%)
    0.00
YTD dividends subtotal ($)0.01003757
YTD cap gains subtotal ($)0.00
YTD total distributions ($)0.01003757

Yield

As of 3/31/25 (updated monthly)
Yield
7-day SEC yield (gross/net %) tooltip: The 7-day SEC yield is calculated by annualizing dividends paid over the past seven days. Compared with returns, the 7-day SEC yield more accurately reflects the fund's current earnings. If shown, the net 7-day SEC yield reflects waivers/reimbursements; the gross yield does not reflect waivers/reimbursements.4.04 / 4.04

Portfolio Composition

assetMix

Asset mix

As of 2/28/25 (updated monthly)

Chart

Pie chart with 5 slices.
End of interactive chart.
U.S. Equities0%
Non-U.S. Equities0%
U.S. Bonds4.6%
Non-U.S. Bonds0%
Cash, Equivalents & Other795.4%
U.S. Equities
Non-U.S. Equities
U.S Bonds
4.6%
Non-U.S. Bonds
Cash, Equivalents & Other
95.4%

Key statistics

% of net assets as of 3/31/25 (updated monthly)
Key statistics
RAFXX
BSNY_YTWSEC
Yield to worst (%) tooltip: Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs.
4.2
BSNY_YTWSEC
Yield to maturity (%) tooltip: A bond's total return if held to maturity and no default occurs or options are exercised. Assumes coupons are paid on time and accounts for their present value. Assumes principal is returned at maturity.
4.2
BSNY_YTWSEC
Average coupon (%) tooltip: The average coupon is the weighted average coupon rate of all the bond holdings.
1.2
Effective duration (years) tooltip: Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds that takes into account that expected cash flows will fluctuate as interest rates change.
0.1
Spread duration (years) tooltip: A measure of fixed income securities' sensitivity to spread movement.
0.1
Option adjusted spread (bps) tooltip: Option-adjusted spread is a yield-spread calculation used to value securities with embedded options.
-7.8
Duration times spread (bps) tooltip: A measure of fixed income securities' spread exposure, taking into account both spread duration and credit spread exposure.
-1
Weighted average maturity (days)
30
Weighted average lifetime (days)
59

Portfolio exposures

As of 2/28/25 (updated monthly)
Fixed Income sector breakdown
Market value (%)
RAFXX
U.S. Treasury notes and bills55.1
U.S. agency notes and discount notes32.8
Repurchase agreements13.8
Commercial Paper
Other9-1.7

Fees & Expenses

Fees

As of the most recent prospectus
Annual management fees (%)
0.27
Other expenses (%)
0.04
Service 12b-1 (%)
n/a

Expense ratio

RAFXX (gross/net %) 3
0.31/0.31

Resources

Timely thought leadership to guide your investment perspectives

EXPLORE INSIGHTS

Find resources on topics ranging from plan design to participant education

EXPLORE RESOURCES

Figures shown are past results and are not predictive of results in future periods. Current and future results may be lower or higher than those shown. Investing for short periods makes losses more likely. View mutual fund expense ratios and returns. View current mutual fund SEC yields.
Returns will vary, so investors may lose money. (American Funds U.S. Government Money Market Fund)
You could lose money by investing in American Funds® U.S. Government Money Market Fund. Although the fund seeks to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 per share, it cannot guarantee it will do so. An investment in the fund is not a bank account and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. The fund's sponsor is not required to reimburse the fund for losses, and you should not expect that the sponsor will provide financial support to the fund at any time, including during periods of market stress.
For money market funds, the annualized 7-day SEC yield more accurately reflects the fund's current earnings than does the fund's return.
Investments are not FDIC-insured, nor are they deposits of or guaranteed by a bank or any other entity, so they may lose value.
Investors should carefully consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. This and other important information is contained in the fund prospectuses and summary prospectuses, which can be obtained from a financial professional and should be read carefully before investing.
The value of fixed income securities may be affected by changing interest rates and changes in credit ratings of the securities.
Capital Group offers a range of share classes designed to meet the needs of retirement plan sponsors and participants. The different share classes incorporate varying levels of financial professional compensation and service provider payments. Because Class R-6 shares do not include any recordkeeping payments, expenses are lower and results are higher. Other share classes that include recordkeeping costs have higher expenses and lower results than Class R-6.
Visit the SEC website for the American Funds® U.S. Government Money Market Fund's most recent filings.
American Funds U.S. Government Money Market Fund may suspend 12b-1 payments under agreements between its principal underwriter and intermediaries and other entities that sell fund shares. To the extent such payments have been suspended for a certain share class, should payments subsequently commence, the fund's investment results would be lower and expenses would be higher for that share class. Please refer to the prospectus for additional information.
There have been periods when the results lagged the index(es) and/or average(s). The indexes are unmanaged and, therefore, have no expenses. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.
All Capital Group trademarks mentioned are owned by The Capital Group Companies, Inc., an affiliated company or fund. All other company and product names mentioned are the property of their respective companies.
Portfolios are managed, so holdings will change. Certain fixed income and/or cash and equivalents holdings may be held through mutual funds managed by the investment adviser or its affiliates that are not offered to the public.
Totals may not reconcile due to rounding.
Investment results assume all distributions are reinvested and reflect applicable fees and expenses.
When applicable, results reflect fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements, without which they would have been lower and net expenses higher. Read details about how waivers and/or reimbursements affect the results for each fund. View results and yields without fee waiver and/or expense reimbursement.
1.
YTD (year-to-date return): For the period from January 1 of the current year to the date shown or from inception date if first offered after January 1 of the current year.
2.
When applicable, returns for less than one year are not annualized, but calculated as cumulative total returns.
3.
Expense ratios are as of each fund's prospectus/characteristics statement available at the time of publication.
4.
The months indicated for dividends and capital gains paid represent the anticipated current year ex-dividend date schedule for all share classes.
5.
Portfolio turnover is as of the most recent prospectus/characteristics statement.
6.
The distribution rate reflects the fund's past dividends paid to shareholders and may differ from the fund's SEC yield which reflects the rate at which the fund is earning income on its current portfolio of securities. The distribution rate reflects fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements in effect during the period. Without waivers and/or reimbursements, it would be reduced.
7.
Includes short-term securities, other assets less liabilities, and may include accrued income.
8.
Includes cash, short-term securities, other assets less liabilities, and may include accrued income. It may also include investments in money market or similar funds managed by the investment adviser or its affiliates that are not offered to the public.
9.
Sector breakdown “other” includes cash, other assets less liabilities and may include accrued income.
Use of this website is intended for U.S. residents only.
Capital Client Group, Inc.
This content, developed by Capital Group, home of American Funds, should not be used as a primary basis for investment decisions and is not intended to serve as impartial investment or fiduciary advice.
© 2025 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Some of the information contained herein: (1) is proprietary to Morningstar and/or its content providers; (2) may not be copied or distributed; and (3) is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely. Neither Morningstar, its content providers nor Capital Group are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Information is calculated by Morningstar. Due to differing calculation methods, the figures shown here may differ from those calculated by Capital Group.
Average outpaced rolling return
Average outpaced rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio outpaced the index in periods where the portfolio return was greater than the index for the specified timeframe.
Effective duration
Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds that takes into account that expected cash flows will fluctuate as interest rates change.
Average coupon
The average coupon is the weighted average coupon rate of all the bond holdings.
Index Correlation
Correlation describes the strength of the association between a return and a benchmark. Correlation is shown on a scale from 1 to -1. The higher the positive correlation, the more closely the return and the benchmark moved relative to one another. The lower the negative correlation, the more the return and the benchmark diverged from one another.
Beta
Beta relatively measures sensitivity to market movements over a specified period of time. The beta of the market (represented by the benchmark index) is equal to 1; a beta higher than 1 implies that a return was more volatile than the market. A beta lower than 1 suggests that a return was less volatile than the market. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be.
Success Rate
The success rate is the percentage of time when the return of a portfolio is greater than the return of its respective index. It is calculated by dividing the number of periods the portfolio outpaced the index by the total number of periods.
Option adjusted spread
Option-adjusted spread is a yield-spread calculation used to value securities with embedded options.
Information ratio
The information ratio represents the excess return generated (over the market) per unit of relative risk as measured by tracking error.
Average rolling return
Average rolling return provides the average return for the portfolio across all periods within the specified timeframe.
Average lagging rolling return
Average lagged rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio lagged the index in periods where the portfolio return was less than the index for the specified timeframe.
Standard deviation
Annualized standard deviation (based on monthly returns) is a common measure of absolute volatility that tells how returns over time have varied from the mean. A lower number signifies lower volatility.
Total Return Swap
A total return swap (TRS) is a contract between a total return payer and total return receiver. The payer usually pays the total return of agreed security to the receiver and receives a fixed/floating rate payment in exchange. The agreed (or referenced) security can be a bond, index, equity, loan, or commodity.
12-month distribution rates
The income per share paid by the fund over the past 12 months to an investor from dividends (including any special dividends). The distribution rate is expressed as a percentage of the current price.
Price/Book
Price-to-book ratio compares a stock's market value to the value of total assets less total liabilities (book value). Adjusted for stock splits. Price-to-cash-flow (P/C) ratio is the average price to cash flow ratio of the individual stocks within a fund. Price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio takes the current price of a stock divided by its earnings per share. The ratio reflects the cost of a given stock per dollar of current annual earnings and is the most common measure of a stock's expense. The higher the P/E, the more investors are paying, and therefore the more earnings growth they are expecting.
Credit Default Swap Index
The credit default swap index (CDX) is a benchmark financial instrument made up of credit default swaps (CDS) that have been issued by North American or emerging markets companies. Credit default swaps act like insurance policies offering a buyer protection in case of the borrower's default.
Upside capture ratio
Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was up, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, an up-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a higher return than the index during periods when the index was up.
Duration times spread
A measure of fixed income securities' spread exposure, taking into account both spread duration and credit spread exposure.
Currency Weighting Short Breakdown
The exposure to a specific currency before taking into consideration any forward currency contracts that may increase or decrease that currency's exposure.
Spread duration
A measure of fixed income securities' sensitivity to spread movement.
Downside capture ratio
Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was down, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, during periods when the index was down, a down-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a lower return than the index.
Average rolling index return
Average rolling index return provides the average return for the index across all periods within the specified timeframe.
Tracking error
The tracking error is the standard deviation of the difference between the returns of an investment and its benchmark.
30-day SEC yield
The 30-day SEC yield reflects the rate at which the fund is earning income on its current portfolio of securities calculated according to the standardized SEC formula; when applicable, it reflects the maximum sales charge. If shown, a net yield reflects fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements in effect during the period. Without waivers and/or reimbursements, the yield would be reduced. Gross yield does not adjust for any fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements in effect.
Yield Annualized 7-day SEC
The 7-day SEC yield is calculated by annualizing dividends paid over the past seven days. Compared with returns, the 7-day SEC yield more accurately reflects the fund's current earnings. If shown, the net 7-day SEC yield reflects waivers/reimbursements; the gross yield does not reflect waivers/reimbursements.
USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon
USTREAS T-Bill Auction Ave 3 Mon is an index that measures the performance of the average investment rate of U.S. Treasury bills (T-Bills) with a three-month maturity. Three-month T-Bills are short-term securities issued by the U.S. government that are generally considered to be risk-free. In calculating index results, Morningstar, the index provider, determines the arithmetic mean of the investment rates on all three-month T-Bills issued during a given month as reported by the U.S. Treasury's Bureau of the Public Debt. The investment rate is then converted into a price and a monthly return, assuming that the T-Bill is held to maturity.
Average excess rolling return
Average excess rolling return is the average of the excess return between the portfolio and the index across all periods for the specified timeframe.
Yield to worst
Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs.
Sharpe ratio
Sharpe ratios use standard deviation and excess return to determine reward per unit of risk. The higher the number, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
Price/Cash flow
Price-to-cash-flow (P/C) ratio is the average price to cash flow ratio of the individual stocks within a fund/model.
Price/Earnings
Price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio takes the current price of a stock divided by its earnings per share. The ratio reflects the cost of a given stock per dollar of current annual earnings and is the most common measure of a stock's expense. The higher the P/E, the more investors are paying, and therefore the more earnings growth they are expecting.
Alpha
Alpha is a measure of the difference between a portfolio's actual returns and its expected results, given its level of risk as measured by beta. A positive alpha figure indicates the portfolio has performed better than its beta would predict. In contrast, a negative alpha indicates the portfolio has underperformed, given the expectations established by beta.
Yield to maturity
A bond's total return if held to maturity and no default occurs or options are exercised. Assumes coupons are paid on time and accounts for their present value. Assumes principal is returned at maturity.
Category
In an effort to classify funds by what they own, as well as by their prospectus objectives and styles, Morningstar developed Morningstar Categories. While the prospectus objective identifies a fund's investment goals based on the wording in the fund prospectus, the Morningstar Category identifies funds based on their actual investment styles as measured by their underlying portfolio holdings (portfolio and other statistics over the past three years).
R-squared
R-squared is a measure of the correlation between a particular return and that of a benchmark index. A measure of 100 indicates that all of the return can be explained by movements in the benchmark. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be.
Portfolio turnover
Portfolio turnover is the portion of a portfolio's holdings sold and replaced with new securities annually, usually expressed as a percentage of the portfolio's total assets. For example, a portfolio with a turnover of 25% holds assets for an average of about four years, while a portfolio with a turnover of 100% holds assets for one year.