Dear Investors and Friends,
In prior letters we articulated why savvy investors invest their cash in short term US Treasury bonds. Specifically:
In this letter we address two related and significant “drags” on cash performance and how RCM avoids them.
Drag #1: Allowing cash to sit in default sweep products
Financial instruments generate cash - equities pay dividends and fixed income products have coupon payments and redemptions. Whether they are aware of it or not, investors typically allow their custodians to “sweep” this cash to the custodian’s default income generating product. We have found that many investors have a false sense of security, believing that their cash is earning a reasonable interest. Exacerbating this, many investors do not pay attention to the cash sitting in their accounts and allow significant time to go by before moving their cash to better alternatives. Whatever the case may be, the result is tremendous opportunity cost incurred as the yield on these default sweep products pales in comparison to short duration Treasuries. For instance, Schwab currently pays 0.45% on its sweep products and Fidelity pays 2.60%. Compare these rates to yields on short duration US Treasuries well in excess of 5.00%.
Drag #2: When “rolling” Treasuries, not doing so until there is cash in the account
We have found that many investors who are following the best practice of investing cash in short duration US Treasuries are still unnecessarily leaving cash on the table because they do not roll Treasuries until there is cash in the account. “Rolling” is the process of buying a new Treasury when the one you own matures.
Let’s walk through an example. Assume you own $1 million face of a Treasury bill that matures on Wednesday, February 7th. You will not see the $1 million of cash from the T-bill maturity in your account until Thursday, February 8th. Many Treasury investors wait until this cash shows up to redeploy the $1 million into a new Treasury. Critically, this trade does not settle until Friday, February 9th. The result of waiting until cash is in the account is a loss of 2 days of interest. If the maturity were to fall on Friday, February 9th, there would be a loss of 4 days of interest. On average, the lost days of interest each time a Treasury is rolled is 2.4 days (80% of the time * 2 days + 20% of the time * 4 days) if you wait until cash shows up in the account!
Over an entire year, the loss of interest for an investor that waits to see cash in the account can be very significant. Assuming a 5.00% interest rate and 18 trades per year (implied Treasury maturity of 20 days) there would be 43.2 days of impaired interest. Assuming a sweep rate of 0.45% (Schwab’s current rate), the result is that your actual interest would be 4.45%, not 5.00%.
Roosevelt Capital Management: Eliminating Drag on Cash
RCM eliminates the drag on cash on behalf of our clients. How do we do this?
Please reach out to us with questions and comments. Thank you for trusting RCM with your capital. It is a privilege for us to serve you.
David and Mike
Disclaimer
Roosevelt Capital Management LLC is a registered investment adviser. Information presented is for educational purposes only and does not intend to make an offer or solicitation for the sale or purchase of any specific securities, investments, or investment strategies. Investments involve risk and are not guaranteed. Be sure to first consult with a qualified financial adviser and/or tax professional before implementing any strategy discussed herein.
Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Principal value and investment return will fluctuate. No guarantees or assurances that the target returns will be achieved, or objectives will be met are implied. Future returns may differ significantly from past returns due to many different factors. Investments involve risk and the possibility of loss of principal.
While all the values used in this report were obtained from sources believed to be reliable, all calculations that underly numbers shown in this report believed to be accurate, and all assumptions made in this report believed to be reasonable, Roosevelt Capital Management LLC neither represents nor warrants the values, calculations or assumptions and encourages each prospective investor to conduct their own review of the audits, values, calculations and assumptions.