The panic on Wall Street is rippling from the boardroom to the living room.
Corporations large and small have seen their borrowing costs spike, which could force them to cut back on investment and hiring -- the last thing Minnesota's economy, which is already losing jobs, needs.
Investors, meanwhile, are pondering whether to pull money out of mutual funds despite all advice that counsels just the opposite.
But logic sometimes crumbles in the wake of headlines about bankruptcies, massive bailouts and shotgun unions of some of the most storied names in high finance.
TrimTabs Financial Research, which tracks U.S. and global equity funds, said investors are pulling their money out of stocks and putting them into money market funds and cash.
On Wednesday, the migration from equity funds was $10.8 billion, up from $10.7 billion and $10.5 billion Tuesday and Monday respectively.
Those withdrawals represent only a small fraction of total assets invested, said TrimTabs equities analyst Vincent Delaud, but September looks to be the month with the largest withdrawal of funds this year.
"We're in a situation we haven't seen before," said Murray Frank, a finance professor at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management. "Banks are scared to lend to banks. Investors are going to gold and T-bills because they want security," he said.