Not exact matches
I have thought about creating more
liquid cash instead of
investing so heavily in the coming years?
The bill would take currently untaxed profits of US companies being stored abroad — profits that would normally be taxed at a 35 percent rate upon being brought back to the US — and tax them at new ultra-low rates: 8 percent for profits
invested in real estate and other hard assets abroad, and 15.5 percent for profits in
cash and stock and other
liquid assets.
Since investors receive steady monthly payments from each note they have
invested in, and the payments are
liquid, one can theoretically use the
cash flow from the payments to live on for a decent length of time.
At least 30 % of the fund's total assets must be
invested in Weekly
Liquid Assets, which can consist of
cash, direct obligations of the U.S. government such as U.S. Treasury bills, certain other U.S. government agency debt that is issued at a discount and matures within 60 days or less, or securities that will mature or are payable within 5 business days.
For taxable funds, at least 10 % of the fund's total assets must be
invested in Daily
Liquid Assets, which can consist of
cash, direct obligations of the U.S. government, or securities that will mature or are payable within one business day.
«However, let us be equally candid, if «category» (that is
liquid milk) returns are not sorted out for better for the medium - to - long term, it will be merely a short - term transfer of
cash from a player over-
invested in dairy processing to those over
invested in dairy production.»
Holding on to
cash, say
investing it in a
liquid fund that fives 7 % return, makes sense only if the fund manager can't identify any opportunities that are expected to give a higher return.
They also have the ability to
invest beyond the equity market in «less
liquid» investments, such as distressed debt, can hold short positions in merger / arbitrage situations or to hedge market risk, and are willing to hold a up to 15 % in
cash.
So I'd keep a ~ year's worth of
cash needs
liquid and
invested (giving me 6 mo worth in the worst case) and throw the rest at the mortgage.
A short - term, generally
liquid, investment into which you
invest cash and typically receive a return in 90 days or less.
This section of homeowners chose to
invest in
cash assets that included residential resale housing and other types of
liquid investments such as derivatives and precious metals.
The required minimum amount will be specified as a percentage of the fund's net assets to be
invested in highly
liquid,
cash - type investments that can be converted to
cash within three business days or less.
The required minimum will be specified as a percentage of the fund's net assets to be
invested in «highly
liquid investments» — meaning
cash held by a fund and any investment that the fund reasonably believes is convertible into
cash in current market conditions within three business days without significantly changing the market value of the investment.
The Manager views such liquidity as a strategic asset and may
invest a significant portion of
cash and
liquid assets in other more risky securities at any time, particularly under situations where markets are weak or a particular industry's securities decline sharply.
And I don't have a real emergency fund now either (at one time I did though, but I kind of outgrew it...) I still have plenty of near -
cash invested,
liquid resources available should an emergency arise!
However, given you have the means to take more risk a generally smarter scheme would be to
invest much of the money in a broad
liquid bond funds with a somewhat lower percentage in stocks and then reduce the amount of stock each year as you get closer even moving some into
cash.
They now pay an average of 2 per cent of $ 1,332,000
invested in mutual funds — that does not count $ 50,000
cash which would be very
liquid as ETF units.
I give you professional management of a stock portfolio with 30 - 40 different stocks and
cash, which is very close to a clone of my own portfolio, in which 70 % + of my
liquid net worth is
invested.
Cash - out provisions are not allowed in QLACs, so any money
invested in the annuity is no longer a
liquid asset, and you may sacrifice the opportunity for higher investment returns that might be available in the financial markets.
Investing them in GIC, bonds, or other
cash - like
liquid investments would get that fund eaten away fairly quickly through inflation.
If you want to keep a small portion of this completely
liquid (like a true emergency fund), you could keep that portion of your HSA in
cash and
invest the rest in index funds.
The funds intend to
invest cash pending settlement of any TBA transactions in U.S. Treasury securities, money market instruments, repurchase agreements, or other high - quality,
liquid short - term instruments, including money market funds.
I suppose one way to understand his statement is to say that you should have $ 100,000 in
liquid cash in your bank account before you
invest.
Any
liquid cash held in the Delawre Statutory Trust or DST between distribution dates can only be
invested in short - term debt obligations.