Where all my cash hoarders at and where do you park your savings?

Also, how do you decide how much cash to hold vs invest?

Personally I enrolled in Robinhood Gold for the 4.9% APY. It costs $5/month.

9 points
*

That really depends on your local state tax situation. Fidelity has a great tool to compare yields of differently taxed fixed income options here. Basically:

  • t-bills are not taxable at the state level
  • municipal bonds are generally not taxable at the federal or state level
  • CDs are taxable at the federal and state level

So that’s why I park my savings in t-bills, I pay state income tax, and t-bills have a higher after tax return than CDs, and are more reliable than municipal bonds. The money that needs to be a little more liquid is in a money market fund.

How much cash

I don’t hoard cash, so it’s only my efund and my slush fund (i.e. the money that I’ve charged on my credit card or expect to pay in bills this month).

My money market fund yields 4.97% last I checked, and I think t-bills are >5% right now.

My total portfolio is almost entirely stocks, outside that efund, with any 75% US stocks and 25% internal stocks. My target is 70% US, 30% international, but I haven’t bothered rebalancing yet this year so it’s a bit lopsided.

permalink
report
reply
8 points

Treasury yields aren’t that amazing right now. If you need it liquid, just find a HYS. Some short term CDs go over 5% if that’s liquid enough for you

permalink
report
reply
8 points

VMFXX has a 7 day SEC yield of 5.28%.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Really? I’m seeing t-bills between 5.3-5.4% yield right now, depending on duration. Treasuries have been great this year.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

I have about 80% in index funds and Roth IRA that I never plan on touching until way later. About 15% in Ally savings account at 4.5%, and the rest on hand. The nice thing about Ally is that you get the nice interest rate, and you can pull from that pretty easily.

permalink
report
reply
3 points
*

I was super into chasing the highest possible saving accounts. I’ve always used this link when I was shopping.

I’ll say that it can be great to get a little higher % but there is also value in keep it simple. I think at my worst I had 7 entirely separate savings accounts (not counting checking or investing). I now have 2 and I’ll probably merge them in the next few months.

It would be good for you to consider your limits on what you’ll chase. If you find account that will give you an extra 0.1% it doesn’t make since to change but 2% likely does. However, if it’s 2% higher but it has a $500 limit maybe that doesn’t make since.

I’m now mainly using Ally and I really do like their bucket system.

permalink
report
reply
2 points
*

SNAXX is yielding 5.37%.

It really depends on why you’re holding the cash though- how long you plan on sitting on it. At some point it probably makes sense to lock in a longer duration t-bill/note.

I generally avoid holding cash unless there’s a specific spending goal in the next 3ish years.

permalink
report
reply

Personal Finance

!personalfinance@lemmy.ml

Create post

Learn about budgeting, saving, getting out of debt, credit, investing, and retirement planning. Join our community, read the PF Wiki, and get on top of your finances!

Note: This community is not region centric, so if you are posting anything specific to a certain region, kindly specify that in the title (something like [USA], [EU], [AUS] etc.)

Community stats

  • 7

    Monthly active users

  • 195

    Posts

  • 3K

    Comments