Ask HN: Just got $200k from an angel, where do I stick it? Savings? CDs?
118 points| moneymoron | 15 years ago | reply
An angel investor just cut me a check for $200k (convertible note, solid terms). My questions is, what do I do with the money? I have a business banking account that has about $3k in it right now. Do I just deposit the 200k in the savings account there? Do I stick 150k of it in a savings account so it can generate some interest?
I realize this is a super elementary question, but I've never seen it addressed here or anywhere else. What does a startup do with its cash when it gets a bunch of it like this?
FWIW: Our burn rate is about $5k on 9k monthly in revenues at the moment.
[+] [-] rlucas|15 years ago|reply
DO put it in a MMA to get some yield, but understand that you'd be doing amazing to get 2% on it, and that should be lost in the noise if you're doing well in the real work.
You might also be able to extract some concessions from your banker for having more assets at the bank.
[+] [-] OstiaAntica|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] frisco|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rdl|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] moneymoron|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jonursenbach|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ctkrohn|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kloncks|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] beoba|15 years ago|reply
You can put it into a savings account or CDs at an FDIC/NCUA-insured bank or credit union, and that'd work just fine, but make sure that you stay UNDER the insurance limit (currently $250k), otherwise if the bank goes, so does the portion of the deposit beyond the limit.
If you're feeling curious about other options, a money market account[1] would work too, as would short-term treasuries via TreasuryDirect. But it's likely the case that neither of those will be better than a plain old bank account.
As an aside, there are some states which allow banks to buy private deposit insurance (eg ASI), but I don't trust that system; it's already failed many times in the past[2]. Basically, if they don't have a FDIC or NCUA logo at the bottom of their page, skip it. However, I've only seen one place that actually used that crap (SF Fire CU).
[1] I'm referring to actual money market mutual funds (which are NOT insured like a bank deposit, but are regardless considered 'safe money'). Some banks offer "money market" accounts, but they're identical to the normal insured savings accounts with a different label slapped on the front.
[2] https://www.clevelandfed.org/Research/commentary/1994/0501.p... "Lessons from the Collapse of Three State-Chartered Private Deposit Insurance Funds"
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This is probably more info than you really need, so here's the tl;dr version: Yeah, a savings account is fine. Just keep the balance under $250k.
[+] [-] beoba|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] chrisaycock|15 years ago|reply
(Likewise, someone saving for a retirement in 30 years would do well with aggressive capital gains investing, but that's a whole different thread. Just stick to answering the above question for any financial question and you'll be ok.)
[+] [-] BobbyH|15 years ago|reply
* A CD requires you to lock your money up in the CD for a certain amount of time, e.g. 6 months
* You can get the money out early only by paying a early withdrawal penalty, which is typically 30-90 days worth of interest for a CD with a term less than a year (http://banking.about.com/od/cds/a/cdpenalty.htm)
* This is not applicable to you, but FDIC insurance typically covers up to $250k per CD, so you may need multiple CDs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_of_deposit#Deposit_...)
Money Market Account rates can be as high as 1.10% (http://www.cdrate.com/money-market/). However, they are not like checking accounts and you'll have to plan out when you withdraw what amount.
* Because of "Regulation Q", MMAs allow only 6 withdrawals a month, which sometimes includes ATM transactions, and only 3 may withdrawals may be checks (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_market_account)
* FDIC insurance is up to $100k per account
A $200k deposit in a CD earning 3.8% would make around $7.6k over a year. The same deposit in an MMA earning 1.1% would net around $2.2k over a full year.
My personal view is that a CD or MMA requires extra effort and management time and reduces flexibility, so I don't use CDs or MMAs for my businesses unless there are very large amounts involved and a lot of stability in the business. I also don't chase rates from different banks, because of the convenience of having a single bank provide all my accounts.
[+] [-] pmorici|15 years ago|reply
http://home.ingdirect.com/products/products.asp?s=ElectricOr...
[+] [-] bdclimber14|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] joshu|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jodrellblank|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] DanLar75|15 years ago|reply
In my opinion it's not worth the hassle and small extra income to complicate your capital structure.
[+] [-] moneymoron|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cvg|15 years ago|reply
I'd toss nearly all of it into an FDIC insured savings account (ING Direct is 1.1%) with the rest in your corp checking account.
[+] [-] anthonycerra|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] moneymoron|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kapauldo|15 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] hugh3|15 years ago|reply
I'd say that this isn't a huge concern, as long as you don't put it anywhere particularly stupid. You're running a startup. The chances that your startup will go broke are 80%. The chances that your startup will go broke due to the bank vanishing are 0.0001%. You're more likely to go broke due to your servers being eaten by giant ants.
[+] [-] jeffreymcmanus|15 years ago|reply
The definition of "anywhere particularly stupid" changed radically in the past few years. There were 157 bank failures in the U.S. in 2010, and another 140 in 2009.
Those depositors with FDIC-insured accounts did not lose a dime in these bank failures. Those who rolled the dice and exceeded the $250K limit, well, who knows what happened to their money.
[+] [-] apedley|15 years ago|reply
In Australia we have easy access to high interest savings accounts that can be attached to a regular savings account. So money you put in this account can't be accessed by an atm or used for daily transactions but you can put it into your main savings account instantly when ever you want. But for every day it is in this high savings account you will earn 5% interest.
Ask the angel investor they would also probably have some great ideas.
But focus on investing that money in your business. You have a burn rate of about $5k-$9k would increasing that burn rate by investing more into your business (people, sales, marketing, etc) help you reduce that burn rate quicker?
Anyway I have no idea what business you are in, but use it to invest in your business, that is what is was given to you for.
[+] [-] hugh3|15 years ago|reply
For me this means a change of strategy: I'd bother with the additional bank account to get six percent, but not to get one percent.
[+] [-] imkevingao|15 years ago|reply
Instead of letting everything stay on a static basis of consistent 5k burn rate on a 9k monthly revenue, why not think of strategies to increase burn rate and increase revenue? If you took investor's money, I believe the key thing to do right now is to think how to increase your investor's stock value, which will also benefit you.
Don't even consider putting in a CD and Savings. If you do, it would be considered unethical if you're going to earn your investor the pathetic 3-4% in risk free asset, he's better off investing it from a mutual fund.
Hire. Spend. Grow. Never let cash sit idle, be a magician and transform money into more money.
[+] [-] gersh|15 years ago|reply
Keep the money in an FDIC-insured account, and don't worry about the interest. You need to focus on your business.
[+] [-] pbreit|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jaxn|15 years ago|reply
I already have a strong relationship with a local bank that I use for my personal accounts and my other business. After reading the comments here, I guess I will stick with that plan.
[+] [-] DanLar75|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] quizbiz|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] staunch|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dsl|15 years ago|reply
Monthly float is transfered from the main account to the second account, and checks/wires/etc come out of that, and incoming checks are deposited into it.
If someone manages to forge a check against your account or recall a check you deposited then you don't get cleaned out.
We were in advertising with lots of incoming and outgoing payments, so the additional work was worth it. Check fraud against businesses is still a big problem, and the law states the party that put in the least amount of effort to prevent the fraud is ultimately liable for the loss (which is you if you are using any type of off the shelf inkjet business checks).
[+] [-] BrentRitterbeck|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rexreed|15 years ago|reply
Stick with a regular business banking account, preferably one that charges few, if any, fees. Fees will eat up any interest you'd get anyways.
[+] [-] iamchmod|15 years ago|reply