z31maniac said:
ProDarwin said:
The question is how liquid does it need to be?
With a brokerage account you can get money out fairly quickly. I would argue any time you need 5 figures worth of money, you can wait a day or two, because those types of purchases typically arent cash. With the exception of ransom.
Oh it would never need to be RIGHT NOW. But maybe within a week or so? My credit cards are all 0 balance and between the 3 I think I have $70-75k in limit.......so I have more than enough for any kind of emergency.
My 401k is already through Fidelity, do you guys think it best to just open a separate account there and move forward that way?
It sounds like you and I are in similar financial situations.
For me, my credit card is my cash reserve (one month access to 50K at zero interest) and whatever cash I have on-hand gets thrown towards paying down debt.
I owe 32K to the penny on my mortgage (3.625% 30 year fixed) and ~6.5K on a car loan and about $250 on my credit card. My eldest daughter will be starting college this September and I'm on track to be debt free by then.
BTW, I had a one hour call with a Fidelity financial advisor last week. She had good qualifications, was well spoken, and advised me that I was making a mistake to not have "three months of cash reserves on hand".
I would have received the exact same advice 30 years ago and had I taken it then, I'd be $535,000 poorer today. Do the math, three months thirty years ago was 10K, three months today is 30K so the average of 20K compounded at 12% annual growth for thirty years is $535,000.
Not to disparage Fidelity but my financial advisor wasn't a Fiduciary, kept moving me towards annuities / heavily managed mutual funds (1.2% to 3.0% annual management fees) and even their calculator was wildly biased as I only had three scenarios to pick from (the market does much worse than average, worse than average, or average during my retirement years). Give me a break, that's obviously a tactic to draw me into ridiculously expensive "safe' investments...how about a simple 90% confidence interval.
Anyway, screw the "experts"...we're so far ahead of where we'd be had we listened to them our whole life that we can afford to continue to be aggressive.
Pay off your debt and use your credit cards for emergency cash.