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Ask HN: How do I handle a $Ms windfall for the short term?
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3 points
by moneyanoney
2192 days ago
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I’m coming into a low $Ms windfall from a personal investment and am looking for advice on how to handle the receipt and management of these funds for the short term. This is the first time I’ve ever come into this kind of money, and want to take ~6 months to cool down and shore up my financial intelligence before making any moves. I’m deathly afraid of fucking up, and losing it all. How do I handle the wiring process — send it all to one account? And how do I hold this money safely for the short term — multiple high-yield savings accounts, treasuries, money market, etc? Any advice and stories of your own experiences would be greatly appreciated. |
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* the r/FatFIRE subreddit - many people have asked variants of the same question: https://www.reddit.com/r/fatFIRE/comments/hf99ez/large_inher... . The r/personalfinance “windfall” page comes up occasionally: https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/windfall/ (it links to lots more similar questions).
* Past HN submission: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18600220
* If you don’t have any experience at all, you may want to start with an hourly financial planner who is also a fiduciary: https://www.napfa.org/find-an-advisor?q=&exp=Fee+Structure%3... (note: the “Hourly” filter is checked), https://www.napfa.org/financial-planning/fiduciary-101, https://www.forbes.com/sites/baldwin/2019/10/13/hourly-plann.... They’ll help you answer these questions and charge an hourly fee, much like an attorney would.
(The best-insured place to park it would be a bank/brokerage with multi-bank sweep account, like Fidelity’s FDIC-Insured Sweep: https://accountopening.fidelity.com/ftgw/aong/aongapp/fdicBa.... However, talk with a professional first.)