.Here's Where to Keep Your Cash
Interest Rates Are Rising: Here's Where to Keep Your Cash
By Philip Brewer
These past 10 years, interest rates have been so low it just about didn't matter what you did with your cash. There was a certain convenience to that — you didn't have to move money back and forth between checking and higher-rate accounts, because they paid almost the same.
As a bonus, you didn't have to track money market returns to be sure the rate your account paid was still competitive, because they all paid just a fraction over 0 percent.
That has changed. The Fed has already started raising interest rates, and will probably raise rates another three-quarters of a percentage point this year.
Already, rates are high enough that it makes a difference where you hold your cash, and that difference is starting to get significant. (See also: How to Benefit From Rising Interest Rates)
Let's take a look at where you should be holding your money, as well as a few reasons why you need cash on hand.
What Cash To Hold
There are four main reasons to hold cash: liquidity balances, planned expenses, temporary holdings, and an emergency fund. The size of your temporary holdings may vary quite a bit from time to time, but the others have pretty specific parameters that it's worth being clear about.
Liquidity Balances
Your income arrives in chunks that don't precisely match the due dates of your bills. Liquidity balances are the cash you keep on hand to smooth that out, so that you can pay each bill when it's due. Sizing the cash demands of your liquidity balances is easy: It's the total of all the bills that might come due between income payments. Once you know this amount, you can set it aside for when you need it.
Planned Expenses
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