Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you guys are blowing my mind. I keep about $1k in checking and feel bad that I don't watch cash flow more closely so it can be lower. Most of our money is in savings and my credit card and mortgage come out of that account. Checking pays the utilities and student loans as well as a couple charitable donations that asked us not to use a credit card to save on fees.
I don’t understand what’s so earth shattering. You pay your mortgage from your savings. I pay mine from my checking. So I need to have enough cash in my checking to pay my monthly bills - mortgage, car payment, insurances, utilities, credit card bills, medical bills etc. if I kept the cash in a HYSA then I would need to be constantly moving it to checking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you guys are blowing my mind. I keep about $1k in checking and feel bad that I don't watch cash flow more closely so it can be lower. Most of our money is in savings and my credit card and mortgage come out of that account. Checking pays the utilities and student loans as well as a couple charitable donations that asked us not to use a credit card to save on fees.
I don’t understand what’s so earth shattering. You pay your mortgage from your savings. I pay mine from my checking. So I need to have enough cash in my checking to pay my monthly bills - mortgage, car payment, insurances, utilities, credit card bills, medical bills etc. if I kept the cash in a HYSA then I would need to be constantly moving it to checking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Currently have $1.2m in there. Usually around $500k-$1m. Too high and ridiculous. We got around $1m in bonuses that we haven’t moved out yet. We are too busy to constantly be moving money to our financial advisor or to our own accounts, and don’t have the time to research the market to make good investments. And we’ve been expecting a crash for about five years so it always seems like a bad time to put money in the markets which is why I always dither.
My husband’s parents are like this. Millions are sitting in a checking account. Wanting it there for ‘easy access in an emergency’ is their reasoning. They have tons of money and don’t ‘need’ returns to make them more but like the PP mentioned, moving even a fraction of it over would be making you easy returns. I shudder thinking about the millions they have let slip away keeping that amount in a regular checking account.
Anonymous wrote:I have a savings account that's been sitting idle for 20 years with something like $8k in it. Every year BOA sends me my tax interest statement, and it's usually around $1.23 interest per year. It's not like a savings account is going to net me enough interest in a year to make it worth my while to move stuff around. I earn around $1500/hr, so spending an hour to save $25 doesn't make sense for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Currently have $1.2m in there.
In checking?
Anonymous wrote:And we’ve been expecting a crash for about five years so it always seems like a bad time to put money in the markets which is why I always dither.
Oof. The S&P 500 is up 87% over the past five years. If you'd put $1.2 million in an S&P index fund five years ago, it would be worth $2.2 million today. But with inflation, that $1.2 million buys about 23% less than it did five years ago.
In other words, your fear of investing has cost you a lot of money. You should really find someone who can help you put that money somewhere that will earn a reasonable return at a risk level you can tolerate.
Anonymous wrote:Currently have $1.2m in there. Usually around $500k-$1m. Too high and ridiculous. We got around $1m in bonuses that we haven’t moved out yet. We are too busy to constantly be moving money to our financial advisor or to our own accounts, and don’t have the time to research the market to make good investments. And we’ve been expecting a crash for about five years so it always seems like a bad time to put money in the markets which is why I always dither.