I think that if one is disciplined enough to hold
enough liquid funds in an investment account to cover these issues that would function the same as having a specific «insurance» account.
Once you have
enough liquid funds to deposit into an account, you can choose a brokerage.
That could mean the ability to work a few years longer than you anticipated, or having
enough liquid funds to tap for years before needing to withdraw from your stock portfolio.
Not exact matches
The
fund trades well -
enough for long - term investors, but there are more
liquid funds in the segment that may offer tighter spreads.
My emergency Roth concept is not to treat your retirement account like an emergency
fund, but rather, if one's 401 (k) is
enough, and they wouldn't otherwise use Roth, putting
liquid emergency money into a Roth is a no risk option.
While there is no one - size - fits - all rule, in general, exchange - traded
funds with about 500,000 shares of average daily trading volume are
liquid enough for retail investors to buy and sell without «moving the market,» so to speak.
The investment
fund may be
liquid, but if markets are unstable and he loses money, he may not have
enough to repay the 401k loan in case of job loss.
In highly -
liquid and efficient market like large - cap equities, you're probably better off going with a Vanguard ETF or mutual
fund because it's highly unlikely the manager will outperform
enough to justify the fees.
For example if you are looking for alternate to savings bank account - and investing in
liquid funds - 2
funds are good
enough.
A proof of
funds letter is a document that proves that a home buyer has
enough liquid cash to purchase a home.
Larger private investors provide developers with the benefits of entrepreneurial private capital that is
liquid enough to
fund larger or multiple projects, all from a single capital source.