Anyone else do Certificates of Deposit?
They may be conservative, but they are guaranteed, they are always at least what they were yesterday, and you know what they will be at maturity.
When I first started, I thought I'd ladder them, cuz that's what the ex-spirts suggest you do. By always purchasing the same term, say 5 years, and then putting 20% into each term, you average out the interest rate ups and downs.
Plus, I believe the ex-spirts made an assumption that longer terms would always pay more. Not the case. If you ladder, and stick to it, the past few years would have been bad for you. I think because of doubt as to what the future holds, the highest rates have been for shorter terms much of the time.
In practice I've found I can't ladder. Paying attention to liquidity, what we may need to dip into, I have been opting for the highest rate regardless of the length of term.
This week the highest rate was 4.02% for 30 months. I have some for 7 years at 4%, some at 5 years for 5-5.25%, some at 1 year for 4.35% and 4.7%.
- - - - - -
Changing gears . . .
All that said, they are a pain in the butt, especially in IRA's, since our fearful leaders have not provided for an efficient way of managing retirement accounts. If I were in charge, a person could have an IRA umbrella and then be able to freely manage assets under that umbrella . . . any qualified assets at any institution . . . without having to repeatedly set up and close separate retirement accounts at each institution or brokerage.
Like a Trust.
Call it a Qualified Retirement Trust (Traditional, Roth, SEP, etc.). It would be the job of the Trustee to manage the Trust according to the rules of retirement accounts. That would free the financial institutions from the cumbersome chore that involves. The could just offer their product (CD or whatever) without all the paperwork and reporting.
The way it works now, when a CD matures and you want to move it to another institution, it takes a month and a mountain of paperwork to do that. With a Retirement Trust, you would just do it, give the order to the first institution to send the money to the second one.
BTW, the financial institutions are called Trustees when it is qualified retirement accounts, so just change it to one Trustee managing their entire account.
Wow, that is a good idea.
They may be conservative, but they are guaranteed, they are always at least what they were yesterday, and you know what they will be at maturity.
When I first started, I thought I'd ladder them, cuz that's what the ex-spirts suggest you do. By always purchasing the same term, say 5 years, and then putting 20% into each term, you average out the interest rate ups and downs.
Plus, I believe the ex-spirts made an assumption that longer terms would always pay more. Not the case. If you ladder, and stick to it, the past few years would have been bad for you. I think because of doubt as to what the future holds, the highest rates have been for shorter terms much of the time.
In practice I've found I can't ladder. Paying attention to liquidity, what we may need to dip into, I have been opting for the highest rate regardless of the length of term.
This week the highest rate was 4.02% for 30 months. I have some for 7 years at 4%, some at 5 years for 5-5.25%, some at 1 year for 4.35% and 4.7%.
- - - - - -
Changing gears . . .
All that said, they are a pain in the butt, especially in IRA's, since our fearful leaders have not provided for an efficient way of managing retirement accounts. If I were in charge, a person could have an IRA umbrella and then be able to freely manage assets under that umbrella . . . any qualified assets at any institution . . . without having to repeatedly set up and close separate retirement accounts at each institution or brokerage.
Like a Trust.
Call it a Qualified Retirement Trust (Traditional, Roth, SEP, etc.). It would be the job of the Trustee to manage the Trust according to the rules of retirement accounts. That would free the financial institutions from the cumbersome chore that involves. The could just offer their product (CD or whatever) without all the paperwork and reporting.
The way it works now, when a CD matures and you want to move it to another institution, it takes a month and a mountain of paperwork to do that. With a Retirement Trust, you would just do it, give the order to the first institution to send the money to the second one.
BTW, the financial institutions are called Trustees when it is qualified retirement accounts, so just change it to one Trustee managing their entire account.
Wow, that is a good idea.
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