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Investing recurring aggregated short-term funds

Personal Finance & Money Asked on July 21, 2021

I have half a dozen "buckets" of short-term cash sitting in money markets; e.g., vacation fund, unforeseeable house repairs, a post-COVID wedding reception, etc.

Looked at individually, none of them seem safe to invest, since I’ll need between 15% and 30% of it in the next 3-18 months. As a whole, though, they represent a non-trivial amount of money, and are unlikely to all be needed at the same time. Many of those buckets are perennial too (e.g., vacation & home repair funds); I always deposit some into them every month, and then withdraw a few times a year.

What’s a good way to weight the risks and potential benefits of investing them, instead of letting them sit in a money market? If I wanted to withdraw it during a market downturn, I’d likely have options available where I would wait until the market improved to sell a lot (postpone discretionary expenses, cut back on spending, pay expenses in smaller monthly installments, cut back on donations if I really had to, etc). And of course, I’ll always keep my emergency fund in a low-penalty CD.

If I take this approach for the next 30-50 years, it seems safe to me. Even if there are times where I can’t wait and have to withdraw at a loss, it seems likely that those losses would be covered by the fact that the rest of the time it’s earning ~7% instead of ~1%.

I’m not sure how to confirm my hunch with hard numbers, though. And I’d also like to get opinions from other folks.


I’ve read a few similar questions, but this one seems different because of the recurring and aggregated nature.

One Answer

General investing isn’t complicated, no matter how much it may seem to be. There’s almost never special cases where you need other funds, bonds or stocks than other people because your situation is unique, because with 99% certainty it’s anything but.

Invest the money you can tolerate a loss for in something like an index fund with low fees and expect around or at best a 7% yearly return only after ten consecutive years.

If you’re likely to need the money before that, and/or you cannot tolerate a loss during that time, the money probably shouldn’t be invested but saved for whatever expenses you’re expecting to need them for.

Answered by pzkpfw on July 21, 2021

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