A client showed me her portfolio last month. $120,000 in a savings account. Zero in stocks. Zero in bonds. “I don’t like risk,” she said. I asked about inflation. She shrugged. That $120,000 five years ago bought a new luxury car and a vacation. Today it buys a used sedan and a weekend trip. The risk she avoided was a market dip. The risk she accepted was slow, certain poverty.
The bank calls your savings account “safe.” It is not safe. It is a guaranteed loss of purchasing power every single year. Inflation is a silent tax. And you are volunteering to pay it.
Here’s what the branch manager won’t say: cash is a position. And right now, it’s a losing one.
A $50,000 savings account earning 0.50% with inflation at 3% loses $1,250 in real value each year. Over ten years, that’s $12,500 gone. You didn’t spend it. You didn’t lose it in the market. You just watched it evaporate.
Real example: A retired electrician kept $80,000 in a credit union for eight years. He was proud of avoiding the stock market. In year eight, he needed a new roof and a used car. His $80,000 bought what $58,000 bought eight years earlier. He lost $22,000 of spending power while earning $600 in interest. Safety cost him a car.

Keep one month of expenses in checking. Keep two to three months in a high-yield savings account at 4-5% (online banks exist). Everything else goes to work. That’s not aggressive. That’s just refusing to lose.
Treasury bills and I bonds pay 4-5% right now. They are backed by the US government. Safer than a savings account. Better returns. Why doesn’t your bank mention them? Because they don’t make money when you buy Treasuries.
Actionable step: Open a free TreasuryDirect account today. Buy $10,000 of I bonds before the end of the month. Do the same next month. After one year, that money is liquid with a small penalty. After five years, no penalty. You just turned your melting ice cube into a growing asset.
A five-year CD ladder: $10,000 in a one-year CD, $10,000 in two-year, up to five years. Each year, one matures. Roll it to the end. Current CD rates are 4-5%. Your savings account pays 0.05%. That ladder earns $2,000 more per year on a $50,000 balance. Every year.
Stop calling your savings account “savings.” Call it what it is: a transaction account for bills and short-term needs. Real savings go into assets that at least keep up with inflation. That’s not greed. That’s math.
A plumber in my neighborhood figured this out. He kept $40,000 in checking for “security.” I showed him the inflation loss. He moved $30,000 to a Treasury ladder. Two years later, he thanked me. “I didn’t know sitting still was losing,” he said. Most people never realize it.
Look at your savings account balance. Ask: do I really need this much cash for the next 24 months? If the answer is no, move half of it this week. Buy I bonds. Build a CD ladder. Open a high-yield account. Any of these beats doing nothing.
Here’s my question for you: if a product guaranteed a 3% annual loss, would you buy it? Then why are you holding cash beyond your real emergency needs? The bank is not protecting you. It is protecting itself. You are the product.
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