Cash Cheats: Series I Bonds & Ally 5 Year CD
Posted: Wed Mar 23, 2011 7:18 pm
For those interested, I know these topics have been discussed, but I've become quite fond of I bonds and my Ally 5-year CD.
For I bonds I have used the two links below to analyze several different dates and it seems that even compared to SHY they are a much more lucrative option with few drawbacks.
Most of the time, between the semiannual inflation rate (often very liberal) and the fixed interest rate, these instruments are usually paying somewhere close to what the 5-year treasury yield is paying, and that is often quite a bit higher than the yield of the bonds lower on the curve. Since you are only required to hold them for a year, and have very limited interest penalties on redemption, they function much like a 1 year bond. Further, they accrue interest payable on redemption that is (like treasuries) not state taxable, but it's also federally tax deferred until redemption. If those bonds are used for education at redemption nothing is taxable. This juices their returns even more, as annual federal taxation is one of the biggest reasons to not like cash in a liquid account. There are limits to how much an individual can purchase, but it's worth looking into.
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/res ... dterms.htm
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center ... &year=2002
The 2nd piece, Ally 5-year CD's, are paying 2.4% interest now (basically the best you can do with an FDIC insured 5-year CD), but with a 60-day interest redemption penalty, making them basically like a savings account.
Between these two, one can boost their cash yield a bit without taking on unreasonable risk. Most people here know this... I just thought I'd shine one more light on it by giving these two options a thread of their own.
For I bonds I have used the two links below to analyze several different dates and it seems that even compared to SHY they are a much more lucrative option with few drawbacks.
Most of the time, between the semiannual inflation rate (often very liberal) and the fixed interest rate, these instruments are usually paying somewhere close to what the 5-year treasury yield is paying, and that is often quite a bit higher than the yield of the bonds lower on the curve. Since you are only required to hold them for a year, and have very limited interest penalties on redemption, they function much like a 1 year bond. Further, they accrue interest payable on redemption that is (like treasuries) not state taxable, but it's also federally tax deferred until redemption. If those bonds are used for education at redemption nothing is taxable. This juices their returns even more, as annual federal taxation is one of the biggest reasons to not like cash in a liquid account. There are limits to how much an individual can purchase, but it's worth looking into.
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/res ... dterms.htm
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center ... &year=2002
The 2nd piece, Ally 5-year CD's, are paying 2.4% interest now (basically the best you can do with an FDIC insured 5-year CD), but with a 60-day interest redemption penalty, making them basically like a savings account.
Between these two, one can boost their cash yield a bit without taking on unreasonable risk. Most people here know this... I just thought I'd shine one more light on it by giving these two options a thread of their own.