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Laddering your emergency fund

Posted May 20 2008, 09:39 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog Blueprint for Financial Prosperity.

Plenty of articles discuss the importance of emergency funds and how to set one up, so this is not going to be one of those. I assume that you already understand all that good stuff. (If not, check out these great articles at a Money Blog Network writing project.)

Here I'll discuss a strategy to maximize your emergency fund's interest earnings so you can lessen the pain of not having the funds in an investment account.

The strategy is quite simple and works on the assumption that you are using the emergency fund to cover month-to-month expenses and not an enormous cost that is in the multiples of a month, though it can handle that too.

The strategy

Ladder certificates of deposit so that you can maximize your interest earnings, minimize risk, and still have access to your funds when you need them. To ladder CDs, you purchase CDs for the amount of each month of savings but with different maturity periods, so that one CD matures each month.

I'll use a real-life example with ING Direct CDs to illustrate this. (I'd shop around for rates, but I picked ING because it makes opening a CD a cinch.) Also, for the sake of simplicity, let's say you've saved up 13 months of savings of $13,000 total, which means 12 months will constantly be cycled into laddered CDs, with one month sitting in a high-yield online savings account.

Month One. You'll see that ING offers six-month, nine-month, and 12-month CDs. You actually need CDs that mature in one month, two months, three months, etc., but that's not available. The solution is to buy one six-month CD, one nine-month CD, and one 12-month CD. This sets you up to have three of your 12 months covered.

Month Two. Next month, purchase another six-, nine- and 12-month CD. This sets you up to have half of the 12 months covered since the first set of 6-9-12 has now become 5-8-11. This puts your six CDs maturing in five, six, eight, nine, 11 and 12 months, and your on-hand cash can cover seven months of expenses.

Month Three. Are you starting to see a pattern? Buying another 6-9-12 puts your total collection of nine CDs at maturity dates of four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11 and 12 months. At this point you also still have four months of cash sitting in your account.

Month Four. Now the pattern changes. Add an additional 12-month CD. This leaves you with three months of cash on hand and CDs maturing in three to 12 months.

Month Five. Add another 12-month CD to bring your full collection to 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12, leaving you with two months of cash on hand.

Month Six. Add another 12-month CD, and now you have a fully laddered 12-month CD structure in place. You still have one month of cash on hand.

Month Seven. The first of your CDs has now matured and you'll roll that into a new 12-month CD so that you have the full collection and still have a month's worth of expenses in cash on hand. You will repeat this over and over and over.

Weaknesses

The primary weakness of this strategy is that you only have a month's worth of expenses on hand. This lets you weather emergencies equal to or less than a month's expenses and those that have recurring costs, like job loss. If you lose your job, you're fine with this strategy because you'll have access each month to another month's worth of expenses as a CD matures.

One mitigating factor about emergencies with a large cost: You can usually cancel your CD early and surrender the interest you would've earned, so laddering may be OK in that situation.

What if your bank doesn't offer CDs that mature in less than a year? Buy one 12-month CD a month for a full year and you can have the same laddering.

Other articles of interest at Blueprint for Financial Prosperity:

"Setting up an emergency fund"

"Remember to adjust your emergency fund limits"

"Don't rely on credit as an emergency fund"

Comments

 

does anyone know what the best CD rates are right now? ING is at 3.30%, which is less than I used to get with them in my ING savings account (which peaked at 4.20% or so last year).

someone needs to look at and go to dave ramsey's website and see what he says about an emergency fund.

no matter what you do it feels like a lsing battle

DollarSavingsDirect.com paying 4% though you have to pony up (and maintain) $1,000 minimum balance.  They offer a 16-month CD at 3.5% and work just like ING.  DSD is an online division of Emigrant Direct.  I used EMG for several years.  They're great ... set up like ING but always pay slight better interest rate.

Ditto the Dave Ramsey suggestion.  An emergency fund is NOT an investment, it is INSURANCE for WHEN a rainy day comes.  Who cares what you earn on it...the important thing is that the money is available for you to use in an emergency and you don't have to worry about fees if you cash it out early.  Stick to keeping it in a savings account (I use ING Direct) and forget about the CDs (Certificates of Depression).

Yes, an emergency fund is exactly that - for emergencies. But what is wrong with having the fund in FDIC-insured savings vehicles? CDs are as much for savings as regular savings accounts.

Once you have the initial $1,000 dollar emergency fund Ramsey recommends, and once you are out of debt, why NOT take the money you were spending on debt-elimination and put it in the system described here? You'll end up with 12 $1,000 emergency funds - and with NO DEBT, $1,000 can go a LONG way.

Ramsey is EXCELLENT at explaining how to get out of debt and get money saved, but don't be blind to other, excellent suggestions that can dovetail his advice.

I just keep all of it in an etrade savings account - one of the highest rates around and the bank is for the most part safe.  CD Rates are pathetic across the board;  i tried the laddering strategy but when CD rates went down it didn't make sense to lock up incremental amounts like this.  just keep the entire balance in a cash savings account so you're not messing around with surrender charges in case of an emergency.

PS - My ING account is "Interest Rate Change to 2.472% (2.50% APY)" as of 11:41 today 1/10/09 11:42am Pacific Time.  ETRade is 3.01%.  Bank Rate highest yeild for 60 month CD is 2.9%.  CASE CLOSED.

Hey foks -- it's not an emergency account if you can't access the funds. Put it in the bank in a savings acccount or buy savings bonds with it so you can get it when you need it and stop worrying about earning interest on it.

Once you have an emergency account in place then start putting money away for investments -- CDs, Bonds, Stocks, Real Estate and get your return there.

How do you finance all this savings and investment? Spend less than you make.

Guys, you really gotta check out INGDirect.com. They are the only place so far that I've seen that doesn't require a minimum deposit for CD's. For this reason, I've never been able to open a CD! And, from what I can gather, the only penalty for getting an early disbursement is a few months worth of interest. If you really need the money for an emergency, sacrificing the interest gained wouldn't be that much of a problem. And anyway, for those of us who don't have emergency funds already, this is a great vehicle for saving up for it, just everytime you renew a CD, add more money to it!

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