Explained: Why Emergency Funds Should Never Be Parked in Stocks or Mutual Funds

Explained: Why Emergency Funds Should Never Be Parked in Stocks or Mutual Funds
Financial planners stress that emergency funds exist for one primary purpose: immediate access to cash during unforeseen situations. However, a growing number of investors are making the mistake of chasing higher returns by investing these funds in stocks or equity mutual funds, often leading to significant losses when emergencies arise. A recent LinkedIn post by chartered accountant Abhishek Walia illustrated this risk through a real-life case. One of his clients, a disciplined saver, had set aside ₹3 lakh as an emergency fund, equivalent to six months of expenses. Instead of keeping the amount in a safe and liquid instrument, she invested the entire sum in equities and mutual funds, believing it was a smarter way to earn 12–15% annual returns rather than letting money remain idle. Unfortunately, a family medical emergency coincided with a 12% market decline. To access the funds, she was forced to sell her investments at a loss, pay a 1% exit load, and wait two to three days for settlement. By the time the money was credited, she had already borrowed from a friend to cover hospital bills. “An emergency fund is not an investment. Its purpose is capital safety and instant liquidity, not returns,” Walia explained. Parking such funds in volatile or illiquid instruments defeats their core purpose. Experts advise safer alternatives such as high-interest savings accounts for immediate access, sweep-in fixed deposits offering liquidity with moderate returns, liquid mutual funds with T+1 settlement and low risk, or money market funds with stable NAVs. The key takeaway is clear: if you cannot access 100% of your emergency corpus within 24 hours without incurring a loss, it is not serving its purpose. Liquidity and security must take precedence over returns.
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