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Understanding Idle Funds

03 Dec 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 03 Dec 2021 01:39:26
Understanding Idle Funds

Idle funds are funds not being actively used to benefit the entity that holds the funds. You may hear idle funds discussed in relation to saving and investing.

When you invest in stocks or mutual funds or add it to a savings account, you’re putting that money to work. The goal in doing so is to grow your initial investment or deposit with interest. Money that’s allowed to sit idle, on the other hand, isn’t working for you. 

Having idle funds isn’t necessarily a bad thing. However, it’s important to understand how it can impact your ability to build wealth over the long term. Broadly speaking, idle money is money that is not serving a specific purpose or use. Different entities may have idle funds, including: small businesses, corporations, local and state governments, and Individuals.

How idle funds are defined for each of these entities can vary. For example, idle funds for a small business may be any money that’s not immediately needed to fund day-to-day operations or business investments. In local and city government situations, idle funds can mean money that has not yet been spent to fund projects such as public works, housing development, social services, or economic development. Alternate name of idle funds are Idle cash, idle money, idle savings.

You may have some idle funds sitting around without realising it. For example, if you’re keeping your savings in a drawer at home, then you’re not putting it to use by depositing it or investing it, which means you’re not earning any interest on it, either.

Idle cash, idle money, and idle funds all essentially mean the same thing: Money that is sitting idle.

There are different reasons why a person, business, or government may have idle funds. For example, you might have money sitting in your checking or cash management account that you eventually plan to transfer to your online brokerage account. Until you transfer those funds, however, they’re sitting idle and not earning interest for you.

A small business owner, meanwhile, may have idle funds if they’re piling up cash reserves in a bank account that doesn’t add interest. They may have earmarked these funds to purchase new equipment, make renovations to their business premises, or pay an upcoming tax bill. Or they may simply keep a few thousand dollars on hand in petty cash. But if that money isn’t earning interest, it’s still sitting idle in the meantime.

The common thread is that idle funds are not being used to their potential. However, changing idle funds to active funds can be as simple as opening a brokerage or savings account, or using the funds to make a business investment to help boost revenues.

In the finance world, idle money can represent a wasted opportunity because your money has no chance to grow if it isn’t earning interest.

For example, let’s say you sell your car and you now have $10,000 in cash. You don’t plan to buy a new car anytime soon, so you’re trying to decide what to do with the money right now. Option A is sticking it under your mattress until you need it, while Option B is putting it in a savings account. If you take Option A, your money has zero room for growth. If you choose Option B and you earn a 1 per cent APY, you’d earn $100 in interest if you keep the money there for one year. 

 

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