Using a Line of Credit as Emergency Cash

by Mr. Cheap on June 9, 2007

People used to say that you should always have 3 months living expenses in your “emergency savings”. When reading “The Intelligent Investor” they claim that you can increase you position to 100% stocks (risky) if you meet a number of criteria, one of which is liquid assets to pay for living expenses for 1 year.

I’m the last person on earth to say “live for today, don’t bother saving”, but the idea of an emergency money pool of cash strikes me as a fallacy. Obviously you need to be able to weather the storm of not earning income for a reasonable period of time (I’m working towards getting this period of time to be the rest of my life, and that’s a big project), but like anything there’s more then one way to accomplish this.

Given my estimated monthly costs of $2,140 in order to survive without earning money for 3 months someone might suggest I keep $6420 ($2,140 x 3) in my checking account.

Since I wouldn’t need the entire amount immediately (just one month’s expenses per month), a slight improvement would be to have this money in a safe, liquid investment (perhaps a cashable GIC, money market account or high-yield savings account). While I’m waiting for the emergency to strike, I would be earning a small yield on this money (say 3% after tax, maybe 1% after taxes and inflations). If the emergency never hits and I keep this fund around for the next 35 years until I retire, I’ve paid a HUGE price to have this “insurance” (considering some use 5.5% as returns after tax and inflation on conservative dividend paying blue chips).

$6,420 compounded at 1% annually over 35 years would be $9,094.59, whereas $6,420 compounded at 5.5% annually over 35 years would be $41,818.76.

So what’s the alternative you ask? Simple. Go into your local bank, and set up an unsecured line-of-credit (LOC). If you have a decent credit rating and income, they should happily give you a pretty large balance at a few percent over prime (I got an offer out of the blue from TD for $10,000 at Prime + 2.75%, they recently offered to increase this to $20,000). Obviously at this rate you wouldn’t want to borrow from this account unless it was a VERY good investment, but it is well suited to use as an emergency source of funds. If I have 3 months without income, I simply withdraw what I need to survive from the LOC every month. A LOC works just like a cash advance on a credit card (you get the money immediately, and immediately start paying interest on it until its re-paid), except that its a FAR more reasonable interest rate.

Then once money starts coming in again, I pay off the LOC before anything else (paying it down will likely be the best investment available to me). With a $20,000 limit, and spending $2,140 / month I can go 9 months without earning income, even with interest factored in. For full disclosure, there’s usually a small monthly minimum payment (3% or $50 whichever is more), but you can juggle money between accounts, or pay this from passive investments or whatever.

This allows me to put all my cash into long term savings, get it working as hard as possible for me, and at the same time have a cushion to deal with unexpected emergencies. If I can see a period of unemployment coming up (currently my contract is over at the end of September, so I can expect to not get paid for a while if I don’t renew it and don’t look for another job), I can keep money available to pay my living expenses (and avoid the LOC interest charges), but this is different then saving money for UNEXPECTED periods without income.

If I ever encountered a longer period of not earning money (say I became disabled or suffered major depression), I’m in trouble regardless of however I’ve structured my finances (unless maybe if I’d bought disability insurance), so a pot of “emergency funds” isn’t going to help all that much (it just puts off things getting bad for a couple of months longer than it would have otherwise). I’d probably just start liquidating long term assets as needed (sell my condo, sell my stocks) and when everything ran out, throw myself on the mercy/charity of friends/family/government (not a fun idea).

This would work the same way for other unexpected costs (such as needing a new appliance, roof repairs, vet bills or a new car).

Any other ideas for the best way to deal with short term financial emergencies?

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Mingling Funds

by Mr. Cheap on June 8, 2007

Say I get paid a dividend (perhaps from my ROC that’s due mid-month) and its paid into my E*Trade account. That account has a negative balance (since I’ve been trading on margin). That interest paid on that negative balance is tax-deductible.

How is that affected if I withdraw the dividend payment and use it for something else? Say I withdrew it and applied it to a principle residence mortgage (non-deductible debt). From Revenue Canada’s perspective, would I have paid back part of my margin loan, then re-borrowed the money for non-deductible purchases (and thereby “contaminated” the margin loan), or would their view be that as long as I withdrew EXACTLY what was deposited, then I didn’t really repay any of the loan (it just traveled briefly through my account)?

If the mingling is bad, can/should I get E*Trade to make dividend payments directly to me?

Thanks if anyone knows! A pointer to a sites dealing with this issue would be greatly appreciated!

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Courage In The Face Of Dropping Share Prices

by Mr. Cheap

On June 6th I lost most of the gains on BMO and ROC that I’d previously made (about $400). The market seemed to turn against them (no specific bad news), and both stocks dipped back to where they were when I bought them.
Its a little bit nerve wracking, but I just doubled my position [...]

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My Portfolio – Detailed Asset Allocation for Equities

by FourPillars

Today I’ll talk about the equities portion of our portfolio which represents 75% of our entire portfolio. This section of the portfolio is a combination of low cost mutual funds, ETFs or exchange traded funds and one stock.

The breakdown for equities by type is as follows:
The first number is as a percentage of equities portion, [...]

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Getting Started With Real Estate Investing – Part 5

by Mr. Cheap

To start at the beginning – please see part 1 of this series.
Should I hire a contractor?
I talked to various friends and family and scoured the web looking for the best way to find contractors. I found so many horror stories about contractors gone out of control, that I was almost as stressed out [...]

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Market Timing?

by FourPillars

I thought I would take a break from the exciting portfolio building series and write about market timing. This post was inspired by one of my favourite Globe & Mail writers, John Heinzl who wrote this morning about market timing and why you shouldn’t do it. Although he manages to contain himself in that article, [...]

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