How To Come Up With Money Quickly During Emergencies

Investors Have Several Options for Raising Cash That Aren't Available to Others

A mature man looks stressed as he reviews his financial statements on a laptop.
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Need to raise cash quickly? Hopefully, you already have an emergency fund in case of unexpected expenses and liquidity reserves to take advantage of opportunities. However, real life is often messy.

If you're an investor, you have options. If you're in a position where you need to come up with emergency money, several possibilities are available to you that might not be possible for non-investors.

Note

Some of these options, such as borrowing against your securities, should be a last resort.

1. Create a Temporary Line of Credit

If you've been diligent and disciplined, the odds are good that you have built up a respectable brokerage account outside of your retirement accounts. If you've been at this long enough and have a decent job, you're probably in the six-figure range; for example, a 40-year-old that began investing $5,000 per year at 22 after graduating and landing their first job would have just shy of $228,000 assuming an average rate of return.

If you need emergency funds, it's possible to temporarily borrow against your securities to create a margin loan, withdrawing the cash.

Note

Raising money this way is not without risk. Your interest rate is floating and subject to change. Plus, if your stocks and other investments fall below a specific threshold, your broker could sell your assets to pay back the loan without contacting you.

Many brokers will give you the courtesy of a call (known as a margin call) to deposit more funds so that this doesn't happen, but they aren't required to do this by law. This could either lock in losses or trigger capital gains taxes, depending on the success you've had with the positions in your account. Worse yet, you have no control over which stocks are sold; that is entirely at your broker's discretion.

People have funded startups by writing a check against an account that held assets, such as a brokerage account. This can provide the company with working capital until it generates the funds to repay this amount.

2. Get a Second Job

Sometimes the fastest and most effective way to generate immediate funds is to take on a second job. As an example, working the night shift at a mid-scale restaurant could generate more than $30,000 per year in tips above and beyond a day job. It may take time to connect with the right part-time job that leverages your talent.

Many argue they don't have time. The internet has changed all of that. You can freelance from Starbucks. Creativity often pays off more than just putting in more hours, so as tired as the phrase may be: Think outside the box.

3. Take Out a 401(k) Loan or Hardship Withdrawal

This should only be done in extreme cases, but it is possible to borrow against the assets you've built up in a retirement account. There are very specific rules to follow or else you could find yourself paying huge tax penalties.

Note

If things should get worse before they get better, you could have inadvertently wiped out your retirement, causing yourself much bigger financial problems down the road.

4. Redeem Your Rewards

Most of us have some type of rewards-based credit card, such as the venerable American Express. Over the past few years, you might have rung up some pretty hefty reward balances, especially if you pay for things such as gas and groceries on your card.

Check into your program and consider redeeming your points for gift certificates or merchandise from retailers that can free up cash.

5. Sell Your Gold

It may sound cliché, but it works. Almost every household has excess gold in the form of jewelry. With gold prices soaring for the past few years, plenty of businesses are happy to take that scrap and melt it down, giving you a check in exchange.

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Sources
The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Margin Call."

  2. Internal Revenue Service. "Retirement Topics—Plan Loans."

  3. Macrotrends. "Gold Prices—100-Year Historical Chart."

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