An Advisor’s Guidebook for Moving Off the Cash Sidelines

High yields in money markets and CDs, alongside prolonged market uncertainty and risk, resulted in elevated cash allocations for portfolios this year. As tempting as 5% returns in cash may be short term, the mid- to long-term costs of missed opportunities in other asset classes mean investors should consider moving off the cash sidelines.

While returns remain attractive now for CDs and money markets, “the expected path of cash is down,” explained Natixis Investment Managers in a recent Portfolio Playbook.

How low can cash go

Image source: Natixis Investment Managers

When CDs mature and roll over in one year, interest rates are likely to be lower than current levels. This creates reinvestment risk alongside diminishing real returns.

A CD yielding 5% returns in a 3.5% interest rate environment only creates real returns of 1.5%. This number generally falls much lower than goals set for retirement and long-term financial planning.

What’s more, by staying invested in cash and cashlike investments, the opportunity cost can be significant. A one-year CD generating 5% returns takes an entire year to generate those returns. That’s assuming an investor doesn’t withdraw earlier, reducing the return potential.