By Joel Dresang
You hear a lot of money talk about “nest eggs.”
They’re chunks of savings or lumps of money set aside for a certain purpose – retirement, say, or college, or a house or vacation.
The term comes from a centuries-old practice in poultry farming.
When a hen is unproductive or inconsistent, farmers strategically plant an egg – whether real or artificial – in the nest to try to stimulate the hen to lay eggs in that same spot. Think of it as a sort of behavioral conditioning – the way that going to a ballpark might make you hungry for a hot dog.
Although the term nest egg is used a lot to refer broadly to a designated pot of money, consider it along the lines of those first couple of dollars a bartender puts in the tip jar to attract more money.
It’s a stimulus fund.
And this shouldn’t be confused with “laying an egg,” which is a theater term for bombing at the box office. That’s probably more related to the shape of the egg, which looks like a big fat zero. In fact, the term “goose egg” means just that – nothing.
In tennis, a score of zero is called “love” and is believed to be from the French “l’oeuf,” which means, “the egg.”
Wise investors know better than to put all their eggs in one basket. It’s just common sense to spread your risk, and it particularly applies to investment portfolios, which call for broadly diversified asset allocations.
Joel Dresang is vice president-communications at Landaas & Company.
(initially posted March 21, 2017)
Send us a question for our next podcast.
More information and insight from Money Talk
Money Talk Videos
Follow us on Twitter.
Landaas newsletter subscribers return to the newsletter via e-mail.