Who would want to hold cash? Most seasoned Monevator readers know their way around far more exciting asset classes, after all.
For more than a few readers, I suspect your portfolio is your playground. You trade shares and reinvest your dividends with cheerful self-confidence.
You’re the playful otters of personal finance! Yet cash doesn’t seem to be a favourite toy.
And I get it. Cash is not exactly the most lucrative investment.
At best it’s going to barely keep up with inflation over the long-term.
At worst? Maybe it will continue to lose to inflation – it’s already flunked that low bar in recent decades.
Which I admit is pretty rubbish, considering there’s none of the potential with cash for the big gains that you can get with equities. Nor even the quite nice returns that your bonds might deliver in any given year.
No, compared to other assets cash lags far behind, like the teenage Squirrel on a cross-country run.
Show me the money
I like cash though. Cash is my comfort blanket. So I believe there’s a case for cash.
There may even be… a case for a case of cash!
Here are ten reasons I believe cash can be king for even you investing otters out there.
Reason #1: cash is liquid
Cash is most useful for unplanned expenses.
If your roof blows off, your boiler explodes, you see the sports car you’ve always wanted at a bargain price, or your cousin needs bail money in Torremolinos (what, just us?) then you don’t want to rely on selling your shares, bonds, or other resources to raise money.
Being forced to sell assets at a time that doesn’t suit you is a great way to derail your investment strategy. Instead a cash pile can take the hit so your other holdings don’t.
Cash is also useful as a lifeline in the event of major personal drama.
Emergency funds don’t just cover having to rebuild your garden wall when it gets demolished by a passing coach heading for Flamingoland. (Again, just me?) There are bigger life-blips that have the potential to demolish all your plans.
The usual recommendation is to have six months of expenses in easy access cash accounts, in case something goes wrong in your life.
Unemployment is typically cited as the main money-related major risk. But I reckon illness and disability are underestimated hazards.
A six-month cash cushion gives you time, in theory, to get back on your feet if you lose your job.
Personally I’m happier with a year’s worth of cash – just in case multiple things go wrong at once.
It never rains but it pours.
#2: cash is liquid but also dry
I love the term ‘dry powder’, which is sometimes used by corporations and private equity funds to describe their cash reserves. (Imagine them all sitting in their boardrooms dressed as American Civil War cosplayers, polishing their muskets and trying to get their flags to swish nicely.)
Anyway, ‘dry powder’ – aka holding cash – enables you to respond to opportunities. So you can access your cash and buy quickly if you suddenly encounter that once-in-a-lifetime stock opportunity or must-buy market dip.
#3: cash is stable
Stable, boring, doesn’t do much… I had an ex like that.
But I absolutely love cash for its steadfastness. Unlike equities, with cash I know what returns I’ll be getting and I can plan accordingly. There’s still a little voice in my head that warns me the stock market is gambling (thank you, parents, for programming my subconscious), and cash keeps this little voice at bay.
You do, of course, have to keep an eye on the tax implications of going over the annual personal savings allowance. This currently sits at a measly £1,000 of interest if you’re a basic-rate taxpayer, and £500 if you’re in the higher-rate bracket.
Also, stability cuts both ways. The costs – those low expected returns – are stable, as well as the benefits.
#4: cash is useful for spending
This one is obvious, yes – but no less important for that.
Technically you can use other things to spend, like bitcoin, or even gold if you have one of those fancy gold spending cards.
But people overwhelmingly buy their day-to-day stuff with cash. So if you’re needing to buy food, clothes, petrol, toys, or anything else at all, you should have enough in your cash accounts to cover it.
There are credit cards, of course, but they deal in cash, too – future cash.
If you’re a family person, you’ll be very aware of how much the Bank of Mum and Dad relies on cash.
Increasingly though I’m also finding that the lesser-known Bank for Mum and Dad runs on cash, because my older relatives don’t have anything except for the equity in their houses.
#5: cash is simple
This is one of my favourite reasons to hold cash – the simplicity.
We all have, and use, bank accounts. We all have access to free savings accounts. None of us needs any specialist knowledge to operate our cash accounts.
I know plenty of people who would never touch equities and who are wary of all other asset classes, but they are brilliant at juggling bank accounts.
Cash can be useful to anybody, anytime. It’s not exactly idiot-proof, but it is mostly anxiety-proof.
#6: cash can be useful and interesting!
I accept that if you’re involved in elaborate active antics in the stock market, you’re not going to find anything particularly exciting about your cash accounts.
But some of us live a much more boring life. We’re entertained by things like fixed-term accounts and flexible cash ISAs.
And there’s actually a lot you can do when you hold cash, in terms of adroitly moving it around and deploying it to your best advantage.
Returns from cash are never going to be amazing, but they’re potentially not to be sniffed at.
For example I’m a big fan of paying into multiple regular saver accounts. These can have interest rates of near-double the rates of standard savings accounts.
It all adds up…
#7: cash can be protected
In a world of volatility, when it sometimes seems that everything is falling down around our ears, cash is as about as close as we can get to guaranteed security.
(I work in education, where things are quite literally falling down…)
Even if you’re a mega-saver, it’s not hard to negotiate the £85,000 FSCS protection limit on cash savings by opening an account with another bank if you look like you’re approaching that amount. And that’s all you need to do to keep your money safe.
Well, that and avoid scams of course.
As somebody who worries about pretty much everything, I appreciate this reassurance.
#8: physical cash can be uniquely useful
Yes, I know that we’re moving towards a glorious cashless society. But you can still make a teenager’s face light up by putting a couple of £20 notes in their birthday card.
Don’t try telling me that vouchers are just as good. We both know they’re not!
In fact you can do lots of fun things with physical cash.
And it’s even possible to get some fun out of not having it. An elderly relative of mine died recently, but before she went she whispered to her children that she’d hidden money all over the house.
The kids tore the place apart. Didn’t find a penny!
I like to think of her looking down on them and having a good laugh at their expense.
#9: cash is grabbable
The portability of cash rarely comes up in finance circles. But people have lives, and lives can be messy.
If you’ve ever been trapped in a bad relationship you’ll know how important it is to have a ‘go bag’ packed and ready, with copies of all your legal documents and plenty of cash.
Prepaid debit cards will do the job if you don’t want to keep a stash of banknotes in your bag. But whatever form your cash comes in, have it ready to go.
Relationships aren’t the only reason you might need some portable cash. If you live in a rough neighbourhood then again you might one day have to move fast.
Last year a nice police officer knocked on my door and told me to leave the house immediately, while the bomb squad rumbled down my street in an armoured truck.
I don’t think well on my feet. I grabbed my child, five packets of tissues, some ginger biscuits, and a dog-eared copy of Ovid’s Metamorphoses.
At least I remembered the kid.
Ever since then I’ve had a bag ready to go – just in case. My bag holds everything I might need for an emergency night away.
Disaster ‘preppers’ have what they call ‘bug-out bags’ – although they’re more likely to prefer barter goods and/or gold coins over cash.
But they’ll still tell you to keep a few weeks’ worth of cash on hand, just in case the banks suffer a massive cyber-attack or the zombies get between you and the cashpoint.
Keep coins and small notes (no £50s) in case everyone has to suddenly switch to cash and the shops run out of ready money.
Zombies, I believe, do not carry change.
#10: hold cash as a useful part of your portfolio
All of the above relate to the practical uses of cash. But you can also hold cash to help balance a portfolio.
Holding cash is not the same as holding bonds, but in some respects it has a similar function.
Make sure you create a distinction between ‘portfolio cash’ and ‘emergency cash’ (and also ‘day-to-day cash’). Otherwise you’ll find yourself trying to use one pot to do at least two different things at once.
Cashing up
Maybe I just like to hold cash because I’m a pretty new investor and I haven’t quite found my feet. Or perhaps I like it because I’ve been through some tough times with no safety net, and having plenty of cash to hand now makes me feel more confident.
I guess it’s possible that in 20 years – sitting in my wing chair in the library of my castle – I’ll look back at this list and laugh at how cautious I was.
Who knows? Well, maybe you do.
If you’re further down the FIRE path than I am, has your perspective on cash changed since you started out? Do you still find space to hold cash? Or have you outgrown any dragon-like urge to hoard it?
Let us know in the comments below.
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