Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid investments that are:
- Easily convertible to known amounts of cash,
- Near their maturity (i.e., 3 months or less),
- Subject to an insignificant risk of change in value,
- Held primarily for meeting short-term cash commitments rather than for investment or other purposes.
Key Condition: For an investment to be classified as a cash equivalent, it must have a
maturity period of three months or less from the date of acquisition. This strict time-bound criterion ensures that the investment is not affected by interest rate changes or market volatility, and thus remains nearly as liquid and safe as cash itself.
Common Examples: - Treasury bills with original maturity ≤ 3 months,
- Commercial papers,
- Short-term government bonds,
- Bank deposits with ≤ 3 months tenure,
- Highly liquid money market funds.
Investments with maturity periods greater than 3 months, even if liquid, do not qualify as cash equivalents under this definition.