Cash
Definition
Cash in a portfolio refers to uninvested capital held in a brokerage account. It's typically used for liquidity, risk management, or as dry powder to deploy later. While often seen as "safe," idle cash in a brokerage account may not be insured or yield interest unless properly managed.
Many investment systems, including TiltFolio, treat short-term Treasury bills or Treasury-backed ETFs as a safer and more efficient alternative to holding raw cash.
Why It Matters to Investors
- Provides flexibility to respond to new opportunities
- Acts as a buffer during market downturns
- Offers psychological comfort during uncertainty
- Idle cash in brokerages may earn no yield or face counterparty risk
- Cash alternatives like Treasury ETFs offer similar liquidity with higher safety and yield
The TiltFolio View
TiltFolio Adaptive uses ultra-short-term Treasury ETFs, such as BIL, as a cash proxy when market conditions turn defensive. This has two key advantages:
1. It reduces counterparty risk. Holding Treasury bills via an ETF insulates assets from brokerage failures, whereas uninvested cash in a brokerage account may not be fully protected unless swept into a bank deposit program.
2. It earns yield. Treasury ETFs provide interest income from government securities, unlike idle cash which may earn nothing.
TiltFolio Balanced maintains its diversified allocation (50% bonds, 30% stocks, 20% gold) and does not hold cash positions. We view this as a smarter way to hold "cash" when needed, safer, more transparent, and aligned with modern portfolio design.
Real-World Application
• An investor parks funds in BIL while waiting for equity signals to turn bullish
• A trading strategy exits risk assets and rotates into short-term Treasuries
• A brokerage client moves idle cash into a money market fund to avoid zero interest