I invested #1,000,000 in a money market fund. i did not withdraw any interest. Over time, my Balance grew to about #1,150,000 and later #1,175,000. However I observed that my periodic returns do not increase in proportion to my growing balance. For example @ #1,000,000 i earned about #30,000, @#1,150,000 i still earn around #30,500 @#1,175,000 i sometimes earn even less like #12,700 My question is why does my return not increase consistently despite compounding and how much of this is due to changing yield versus fund structure or charges.
What you are observing is actually very common with money market funds (MMFs). A money market fund does not guarantee that returns will increase steadily just because your balance increases. Your earnings depend on several moving factors, especially the prevailing yield environment. Here is the breaRead more
What you are observing is actually very common with money market funds (MMFs). A money market fund does not guarantee that returns will increase steadily just because your balance increases. Your earnings depend on several moving factors, especially the prevailing yield environment.
See lessHere is the breakdown.
1. MMF Returns Depend More on Yield Than Balance
Your balance matters, but the annualized yield of the fund matters even more.
The simplified formula is:
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So even if your balance grows from ₦1,000,000 to ₦1,175,000:
if yield drops sharply,
your payout may remain flat,
or even decline.
Example:
Scenario A
Balance = ₦1,000,000
Yield = 18% annualized
Monthly return ≈ ₦15,000
Scenario B
Balance = ₦1,175,000
Yield drops to 12%
Monthly return ≈ ₦11,750
So despite higher capital, lower rates reduce earnings.
That is likely what you are experiencing.
2. MMFs Invest in Short-Term Instruments
Money market funds usually invest in:
Treasury Bills
Commercial Papers
Bank placements
Short-term government securities
These instruments mature quickly.
This means:
old high-interest instruments expire,
fund managers reinvest at current market rates,
and if rates in Nigeria fall, your MMF yield also falls.
So MMF returns fluctuate with:
CBN monetary policy,
Treasury bill rates,
liquidity in the banking system,
inflation expectations.
3. Your “₦30,000” May Not Be Comparable Periods
One major thing investors overlook:
Was each return for the same duration?
For example:
₦30,000 may have covered 2 months,
₦12,700 may have covered only 2 weeks.
MMFs usually accrue daily and credit:
monthly,
weekly,
or irregularly depending on platform structure.
So compare:
same number of days,
same reporting period,
same unit price date.
Otherwise comparisons become misleading.
4. Compounding in MMFs Is Gradual, Not Explosive
People sometimes expect compounding to behave like:
crypto,
aggressive equities,
leveraged investments.
But MMFs are conservative.
Even with compounding:
growth is incremental,
not dramatic.
For example:
At 15% annual yield:
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That entire ₦150k growth happens over roughly one year, not instantly.
So the increase in periodic payouts may appear small month-to-month.
5. Fund Charges Also Reduce Effective Yield
MMFs charge management-related expenses such as:
trustee fees,
fund manager fees,
custodial charges,
SEC fees,
administrative costs.
Usually these are already deducted before returns are shown.
So:
the advertised yield may be 18%,
but effective net yield to investors may become 14–16%.
Some platforms also display:
gross yield,
while crediting net yield.
6. Unit Price Structure Can Make Returns Look Irregular
Many Nigerian MMFs operate using:
unitization,
daily price adjustments.
Instead of “interest” being paid like a bank account:
your units appreciate gradually,
distributions may vary,
timing differences occur.
So two things can happen:
balance rises steadily,
periodic payout still appears inconsistent.
That does not necessarily mean something is wrong.
7. Why You Sometimes Earn “Less” Even With Higher Balance
This usually happens because:
market yields dropped,
fewer accrual days were counted,
distribution timing changed,
or the fund temporarily held more low-yield assets.
Example:
Treasury bill rates fall from 21% to 13%.
Your capital grows 17%.
But yield fell 38%.
The yield drop overwhelms the balance increase.
8. What You Should Actually Monitor
Instead of focusing only on payout amount, monitor:
A. Annualized Yield
Current effective yield
7-day yield
Net return rate
B. Benchmark Rates
Compare with:
Treasury bill yields,
OMO rates,
inflation.
C. Expense Ratio
High expense ratios reduce compounding.
D. Consistency
Some MMFs are more stable than others.
9. Important Reality About Nigerian MMFs
In Nigeria, MMF yields have been highly volatile recently because:
treasury bill yields moved aggressively,
CBN policy rates changed repeatedly,
liquidity conditions fluctuated.
So it is normal for:
one month to pay strongly,
another month to pay much less.
MMFs are not fixed deposits.
Their returns float with market conditions.
10. Final Answer to Your Core Question
Your return is not increasing consistently because:
MMFs do not pay fixed interest.
Returns depend heavily on changing market yields.
Falling rates can offset balance growth.
Different accrual periods distort comparisons.
Fees and portfolio changes affect net payouts.
Compounding in MMFs is slow and conservative.
So your growing balance alone does not guarantee proportionally higher periodic income. The yield environment is usually the dominant factor.