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SONI Results – Reserve Policy

SONI Table of Contents

Participation

Segmentation and Asset Allocation

Reserve Policy

Investment Policy Guidelines

Investment Performance and Fees

SONI Custom Reporting

Adviser Alerts for Reserve Policy

What is the Ideal Target Level of Reserves?

While there is no one right answer for all organizations, generally we believe that having six months of budgeted expenses in reserve is a good place to start.  However, each organization is unique and may experience distinct and unexpected circumstances that could affect long-term financial health. That which may be too little for one organization could be more than enough for another, even within the same budget size.

A variety of factors can drive what’s needed to be held in reserve.  If your organization’s revenue streams are diversified, income is relatively reliable, or costs can be cut quickly, then it’s likely you will not need to hold as much in reserve.  However, if your organization has few revenue sources, income that fluctuates significantly year to year, or it will take time to cut costs, it’s likely more will be needed to be held in reserve. In addition, if there are strategic initiatives that your organization wants to pursue and they are not budgeted for, your organization will need even more in reserve.

To quantify the dollars needed in reserve we recommend going through a risk and opportunity assessment.  After identifying all potential risks and opportunities, discount them based on the likelihood or time frame over which they may occur.  A dollar value, or range of potential values, can then be assigned to each item to determine the total dollar amount or range to hold in reserve.

The process and its outcome should be outlined in a reserve policy with a risk/opportunity assessment included as documentation.  With the new reserve target or range it’s important to outline which actions to take to either add to the reserve, or whether to consider a spending plan.  This assessment should be revisited every few years to determine if there have been any changes to your organization’s risks or opportunities.

Short-Term Investments

After determining a reserve policy and segmenting assets, the short-term reserve investments will need to mitigate risk.

Organizations looking to make the best use of short-term assets can mitigate risk in three different ways:

  • Using FDIC insured products or accounts (CDs and bank money market or savings accounts)
  • Buying bonds backed by the U.S. Treasury or other U.S. government agencies
  • Having diversified funds that invest in high quality government or corporate bonds (fixed income mutual funds)

If the timing is clear that cash will be spent several years out, it’s highly efficient to use individual CDs or government bonds that mature near when the funds are needed.  If there is no specific timing for withdrawals, we recommend using low-cost bond mutual funds that will exist in perpetuity.  We suggest targeting a certain short-term average maturity that’s in line with the potential timing of withdrawals.  The average credit quality should be very high (AA or higher) so it’s less likely that the portfolio would be down notably when funds are needed for withdrawal.  As the time frame expands beyond two or three years, having a small allocation (10 – 20%) to equity could provide additional diversification for the portfolio.

Given that the purpose of the reserve is to cover a future cash outflow, we recommend that these investments be very liquid so that they can be quickly exited when it becomes necessary to make an outlay.

Reserve Policy Exercise

How Much Should My Nonprofit Target for Reserves Presentation & Exercise

Thank You!

Thank you for participating in the 2021 Study on Nonprofit Investing.  Please see a breakdown of this year’s survey participants to the left.

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