I generally believe 12 months of cash equivalents. That would allow you to ride out all but the most brutal of downturns without having to sell a single stock to pay your bills.Thing I've been pondering....
My grandfather raised me always believing in having a cash pool accessible. In his world, being post-depression era, that meant literally stashed cash. In my world that has been some cash on hand, but mostly cash in easily accessible places like interest earning savings accounts.
But also, in his era the concept of owning stocks, being able to sell them and get the funds in a few days was unheard of unless you were exorbitantly wealthy.
With that in mind I have been debating if I should reposition some of the "cash fund" into the market, but in a way that is still moderately easy to liquidate should I need it. Although also with credit cards as a buffer the speed at which I might need to access it is extended.
So what should the good allocation into "readily accessible liquidity" really be in this day and age? I'm talking well past the common wisdom of 3/6 months expenses as an emergency fund.
It's like insurance, if you never need it you are pissed at wasting the money. If you do need it, its priceless and the best investment you every made.
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