# Emergency Fund as Risk-Profile Prerequisite

_Systematic Investing . 2026-06-29 . By Tanmay Kurtkoti. Educational, illustrative, not advice._

A friend texted me on Sunday. He had just taken a risk questionnaire, scored aggressive, and wanted to push his SIP to ninety percent equity. No emergency fund yet. Cash is a drag, he said.

I asked him one question. What happens if the car packs up and a client delays a payment in the same month the market is down thirty percent.

He went quiet. Because he knew. He would sell equity. At the bottom. To pay for the car.

Here is the part the questionnaire never tells you. Every risk profile silently assumes one thing. That you will never be forced to sell. Score yourself aggressive all you like. The moment a real bill collides with a falling market and you have no cash, the market decides when you sell, not you.

So I ran the numbers on two people. Each worth twelve lakh. Each hit with the same two lakh expense the month the market is down thirty percent. The only difference is where the money comes from.

The one with a cash buffer pays the bill from cash. Equity stays invested, rides the fall, comes back to ten lakh once the market is at par. The one with no buffer sells two lakh of equity at the trough. By the time the market is merely back to where it started, he is sitting on nine point one four lakh. Same money in. Same crash. Same recovery. Rs 85714 gone, purely because he had to sell at the worst possible moment.

That gap is not a return problem. It is a liquidity problem. Six months of expenses in cash, health cover in place, high-interest debt cleared. Only then does the time-horizon question have an honest answer.

The questionnaire asks how long you can leave the money alone. The honest answer is set by your savings account, not by how brave you feel on a green day:
