
Originally Posted by
Rickson9
You need to ask Forbes. However, I just want to add that: My net worth is far larger than my "cash in the bank" and this is likely true of most actively wealthy individuals. No offense, but only the average financially illiterate tend to overvalue "cash in the bank".
The problem with "cash in the bank" is this: most things are divided into either cash-generating assets or price-declining liabilities. A car is a good example of a price-declining liability. So are boats, personal residences, and roller skates. Cash, in and of itself is a liability. It devalues at the rate of inflation. Very wealthy individuals spend a lot of time (and cash) figuring out how to properly deploy "cash in the bank" into cash-generating assets.
No actively wealthy individual relishes the idea of spending years sitting on a huge pile of "cash in the bank". That dream is reserved for the common person with no money.
It is irrelevant that an asset's value can change quickly. This is the fear of the average financial illiterate and used by the financial industry to scare them into mutual funds, "high interest" savings accounts and CDs. Wealthy individuals take huge advantage during "quick price changes" to either scalp/arb or (you guessed it), amass more cash-generating assets.
Now here's the rub. As individuals like me continue to collect cash-generating assets (and I'm a slower collector than most), the amount of cash generated increases at an increasing rate forcing us to constantly look at ways to sensibly deploy the cash which generates more cash and so on and so forth. It is a never-ending cycle.