You’re excited to start growing your wealth through unit trust investments—but before you dive in, there’s one crucial step you must take: building an emergency fund.
Why? Because even the best unit trust funds are designed for long-term growth, not immediate cash needs. A sudden job loss, medical emergency, or urgent repair could force you to withdraw your investments at the wrong time—possibly at a loss.
An emergency fund is your financial safety net, ensuring you don’t have to cash out your unit trust holdings in a crisis.
✅ How Much Should You Save?
3–6 months’ worth of living expenses is ideal.
Start with a small goal (e.g., 1 month’s expenses) and build from there.
Keep this money in a high-yield savings account or money market fund—safe, liquid, and separate from your investments.
Once your emergency fund is in place, unit trust funds become a powerful tool for long-term wealth-building. Here’s why:
Emergency Fund (Short-Term Safety) | Uniit Trust Investments (Long-Term Growth) |
---|---|
💵 Cash in a savings account | 📊 Professionally managed diversified portfolio |
🛡️ Immediate access for emergencies | 🚀 Potential for higher returns over time |
🔒 Low risk, stable value | 📉 Subject to market fluctuations (but historically grows) |
🏦 Earns modest interest (~3–5%) | 📈 Potential for 7–10%+ annual returns (varies by fund) |
1️⃣ Step 1: Build your emergency fund (3–6 months of expenses).
2️⃣ Step 2: Pay off high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans).
3️⃣ Step 3: Start investing in unit trust funds consistently (e.g., equity, balanced, or fixed-income funds based on your risk profile).
💡 Pro Tip: Many unit trust platforms allow systematic investment plans (SIPs), so you can invest small amounts regularly—even after securing your emergency fund.
💬 Your Turn: Do you have an emergency fund, or are you investing in unit trusts already? Share your strategy below! 👇
📌 Tag a friend who needs to see this!
SK Lim
Your Wealth Planner