Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest. - Basically Money most recent 30 from http://www.basicallymoney.com2010-07-31T11:35:10Zhttp://www.basicallymoney.com/feeds/question/921http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generateWhere can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.S. Chang2010-02-04T21:18:49Z2010-04-25T01:33:40Z
<p>Savings accounts don't seem to generate much interest. What other options do I have for my emergency fund?</p>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/930#930Answer by Rich Seller for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.Rich Seller2010-02-05T13:34:06Z2010-02-05T14:21:51Z<p>I don't know Canada very well, but can offer some general points when considering where to park your emergency fund.</p>
<p>Savings rates are currently low, but then so is inflation. Always bear in mind that inflation decreases the value of your money, so if you're getting 4% interest and inflation is 2%, you're making 2% gross in real terms. If you're getting 2% and inflation is close to zero, you're actually earning a similar amount, it's just the numbers are going up more slowly.<br />
Obviously when and how much tax you pay affects the actual return, it's just worth bearing in mind that low interest and low inflation are actually not that bad a savings environment as they first appear.</p>
<p>For an emergency fund the key thing is ease of access, consider keeping some portion of your savings in an instant access account for those emergencies that happen when the banks are closed.</p>
<p>In the UK there are various tax-free savings options, I'm guessing Canada has a few too, if so you should explore those options. While these may not have attractive headline rates, you don't pay tax on the interest, this can make them much more competitive (4% tax free is the same as 5% gross if you would have to pay tax at 20%). Normally tax free investments have caps so once you've invested a set amount you can't add anymore. This may be a consideration if you regularly dip into your emergency fund as you might not easily be able to build it up again.</p>
<p>My approach is to have about 90% of my "rainy day" fund in easily accessible but tax free savings. This discourages me from spending it unless I really need to. I then keep a slush fund sufficient to cover every day disasters (boiler packing up, needing a hire car for a week etc) in instant access accounts .</p>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/939#939Answer by TaxQueries.com for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.TaxQueries.com2010-02-06T04:00:02Z2010-02-06T04:00:02Z<p>Opinions vary but I've always thought that an "emergency fund" is just that... for emergencies... NOT investment.</p>
<p>While it "hurts" not to have your emergency money making more money... its MORE IMPORTANT to have quick access to it.</p>
<p>As long as the interest rate keeps up with the rate of inflation leave it alone. Fill up your emergency fund with 3-6 mos salary and then INVEST your money beyond that however you see fit.</p>
<p>Dave Ramsey's "Financial Peace University" is a very good audiobook and I would recommend it to anyone asking questions such as this one.</p>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/941#941Answer by Zephyr for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.Zephyr2010-02-06T04:23:51Z2010-02-06T04:23:51Z<p>Actually there has been lots of talk around using a TFSA (Tax Free Savings Account) in Canada for just that purpose. A TFSA allows you:</p>
<ul>
<li>$5000 contribution limit per year with carry forward for unused balance</li>
<li>Flexibility to withdraw funds at any time</li>
<li>Income is tax sheltered</li>
</ul>
<p><a href="http://gailvazoxlade.com/blog/archives/277" rel="nofollow">This blog</a> makes some good points about exactly that:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The bestest thing about the TFSA is its flexibility. You can take money out of your TFSA at any time for any purpose, without losing the contribution room, which makes this account the number one choice for socking away an emergency fund. So even if you take money out in one year, you can put it back the next, without affecting that year’s $5,000 contribution limit.</p>
</blockquote>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/946#946Answer by Jedidja for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.Jedidja2010-02-07T03:40:15Z2010-02-07T17:18:03Z<p>Specifically, if you are looking for a "reasonable" rate for a savings (especially in TFSA) account then <a href="http://www.ally.ca/en/savings/high-interest-savings-account/hisa-overview.html" rel="nofollow">Ally</a> has a 2% guaranteed account and <a href="http://www.ingdirect.ca/muscle/index.html" rel="nofollow">ING</a> has a 3% one (but it is subject to change).</p>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/1166#1166Answer by Natalie for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.Natalie2010-03-09T19:03:04Z2010-03-09T19:03:04Z<p>If this is truly your emergency fund, then you should keep the money safe. Unfortunately interest rates are very low right now and there is not much you can do about that. However, ask your investment advisor for a CDIC insured high interest account, such as these:</p>
<ul>
<li>0.50% RBC Investment Savings Account (Royal Bank)</li>
<li>0.55% Altamira High Interest Cashperformer (National Bank)</li>
<li>0.65% Dundee Investment Savings (Scotiabank)</li>
<li>0.70% Manulife Investment Savings Account (Manulife Bank)</li>
<li>0.70% Renaissance High Interest Savings Account (CIBC)</li>
<li>0.75% B2B High Interest Investment Account (Laurentian)</li>
</ul>
http://www.basicallymoney.com/questions/921/where-can-i-park-my-rainy-day-emergency-fund-savings-accounts-dont-generate/1172#1172Answer by fennec for Where can I park my rainy-day / emergency fund? Savings accounts don't generate much interest.fennec2010-03-10T17:04:32Z2010-03-10T17:04:32Z<p>Consider also setting up a CD ladder. CD rates are often better than savings account rates.</p>
<p>You have a 12-month CD that you purchase in January with a twelfth of your money, then another small one in February, then another in March.... then, when January comes around again, you a little more money to the first CD, and the ladder is complete.</p>
<p>The idea is that you have more access to your money than one big CD, since you'll always have a CD maturing next month that you can get to in case of an emergency, and you can get better rates on a 1-year CD than on something else (with less risk of being locked into a bad interest rate). And you'll be less tempted to tap it all at once to buy some fancy car or what-not because you can't get at it all at once (without a penalty). And in a major emergency, losing a few percent of your interest for early withdrawals is likely the least of your problems.</p>