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expired Posted by dn90003 • Dec 12, 2021
expired Posted by dn90003 • Dec 12, 2021

US Treasury Series I Savings Bonds Inflation Rate Earnings (Nov '21 - April '22)

(Limit $10K/Year Per Person)

7.12% Interest

3,499 Comments 1,447,946 Views
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Note: This popular deal is still available.

U.S, Government Treasury is currently offering 7.12% Interest Rate in combined Fixed + Inflation Rate Earnings valid on newly issued Series I Savings Bonds purchased from November 2021 through April 2022. Limit of $10,000 / year in interest earnings per person.

Thanks to community member dn90003 for sharing this offer.

About this offer:
  • How do I buy a Series I bond?
  • What is a Series I bond? (source)
  • "A savings bond that earns interest based on combining a fixed rate and an inflation rate."
  • You may use Series I bonds to:
    • Save in a low-risk product that helps protect your savings from inflation
    • Supplement your retirement income
    • Give as a gift
    • Pay for education
    • Click here for more information about Series I Bonds
  • What interest does a Series I bond earn? (source)
    • A combination of a fixed rate that stays the same for the life of the bond and an inflation rate that is set twice a year.
    • For bonds issued from November 2021 through April 2022, the combined rate is 7.12%

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
Refer to the forum thread here for more information and details.

Original Post

Written by dn90003
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Note: This popular deal is still available.

U.S, Government Treasury is currently offering 7.12% Interest Rate in combined Fixed + Inflation Rate Earnings valid on newly issued Series I Savings Bonds purchased from November 2021 through April 2022. Limit of $10,000 / year in interest earnings per person.

Thanks to community member dn90003 for sharing this offer.

About this offer:
  • How do I buy a Series I bond?
  • What is a Series I bond? (source)
  • "A savings bond that earns interest based on combining a fixed rate and an inflation rate."
  • You may use Series I bonds to:
    • Save in a low-risk product that helps protect your savings from inflation
    • Supplement your retirement income
    • Give as a gift
    • Pay for education
    • Click here for more information about Series I Bonds
  • What interest does a Series I bond earn? (source)
    • A combination of a fixed rate that stays the same for the life of the bond and an inflation rate that is set twice a year.
    • For bonds issued from November 2021 through April 2022, the combined rate is 7.12%

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
Refer to the forum thread here for more information and details.

Original Post

Written by dn90003

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Top Comments

Looks tempting. But these are only rated for inflation as fixed rate is 0%. Once inflation is back down, your rate will go down with it.
In case you're wondering, here's how the rate is computed:
Composite rate =
No, these are govt bonds. They stay in the treasury. I bonds are based on the rate of inflation. They have a fixed rate plus the current rate of inflation. Inflation goes up, you earn more. It was 3.54%. Rates went up on 11/1. To realize the full benefit you need to buy before the rates change on 5/1 and 11/1. No fees or penalties. Hold for a min.of a year. If you cash out in less than 5 years you forfeit 3 months interest. After 5 years, you don't pay anything. You can only buy $10k/yr and then up to an additional $5k if purchased directly from your tax refund.
I bought $10k in denominations of 2,3, 5 so if I want to cash out I can do it in chunks instead of having to cash out $10k.: Better than any CD or bank rate if you want to stay in cash.
By the way, using your tax refund to purchase bonds won't count toward your $10k yearly limit.

https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...eature.htm

3,499 Comments

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Dec 14, 2021
1,441 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
Dec 14, 2021
whodiini
Dec 14, 2021
1,441 Posts
Quote from keung :
​


I am sure you know your Math but the least you can do is to do little research on the subject before going all over the place and give out mis information.

It is VERY unlikely to go to 0.1%

The bonds reset the rate on May 1 2022, and we already have 2 months reference
Sept/Oct 2021 change is 0.83%
Oct/Nov 2021 change is 0.49%
2 months in we have a change of Sept-Nov 1.33% which annualize to 2.66%

If the rest of the 4 months we have 0% inflation you still get 1.33%
We will ASSUME the inflation is ZERO for the next 4 months so you get
10K @3.56% 6 months = $356
10K @ 1.33% 3 months = $76.5
Total interest with penalty = 432.5
It is al least 4%+ interest for 12 months if you factor in 3 months penalty and assume that the next 4 months has 0% inflation. Now let me know where can I get a 1 year 4% CD

No one say iBond it is the best investment in the world but it is a very safe investment

1. Credit agency rated US government AAA rating, this is the best rating any country can get.

2. A 2 years US treasury give you @ 0.632%, so 4% is like 6X more return

3. I have not see any CD give me more than 4% return the last 5 year have you?

Yes, people said you can do CC Bonus, Bank Bonus, everything else to 4% interest sure I do all that too, I rake in few thousands each year on those, but why do I still buy iBond? Because I don't need to do anything and it give me 4%!!

Its better than this for some people. The interest is state tax free, so if you live in a state like CA, where the marginal tax rate for most people is 9.3%, you get 4.4% effectively.
Dec 14, 2021
446 Posts
Joined Dec 2012
Dec 14, 2021
imkaca
Dec 14, 2021
446 Posts
7.12% is good deal.

$10,000/person/year or per family?
Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Joined Mar 2005
Dec 14, 2021
acegolfer
Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Quote from advan13 :
I think the parent can redeem and spend the ibond if they are the co-owner. So child will be primary owner and the parent the co-owner.
There's no "co-owner" in treasurydirect.gov. Only 2ndary owner. 2ndary owner can't redeem. See the widow post earlier. She was the 2ndary owner to the deceased husband's i-bond but had to go through trouble to gain access.
Dec 14, 2021
208 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
Dec 14, 2021
slbenfica
Dec 14, 2021
208 Posts
Quote from imkaca :
7.12% is good deal.

$10,000/person/year or per family?
per SSN
Dec 14, 2021
372 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
Dec 14, 2021
two-rocks
Dec 14, 2021
372 Posts
is the 10K per calendar year? or a 12 month cycle.
Dec 14, 2021
27 Posts
Joined Jun 2011
Dec 14, 2021
advan13
Dec 14, 2021
27 Posts
Quote from acegolfer :
There's no "co-owner" in treasurydirect.gov. Only 2ndary owner. 2ndary owner can't redeem. See the widow post earlier. She was the 2ndary owner to the deceased husband's i-bond but had to go through trouble to gain access.
Thanks for the clarification
Dec 14, 2021
751 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
Dec 14, 2021
rballnut
Dec 14, 2021
751 Posts
Quote from acegolfer :
There's no "co-owner" in treasurydirect.gov. Only 2ndary owner. 2ndary owner can't redeem. See the widow post earlier. She was the 2ndary owner to the deceased husband's i-bond but had to go through trouble to gain access.
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...#openminor
How do I open an account for a minor?
A Minor account is a custodial account you may establish for a child under the age of 18 if you are a parent or person providing chief support of the child. You may purchase, redeem, receive gifts, and perform other transactions within an individual account on behalf of the minor. You can even create a customized name, such as "Ben's College Fund", for the account. When the minor reaches age 18 and establishes a Primary TreasuryDirect account, you may de-link the securities from the Minor account to move them to the new Primary account. Note: Minor accounts are not available in entity accounts.

By able to redeem, it means that we can transfer back out to parent's bank account?

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Dec 14, 2021
3,188 Posts
Joined Nov 2011
Dec 14, 2021
Tuckin
Dec 14, 2021
3,188 Posts
Quote from konoplya :
you stake it?
i dont stake it because its $1=$1 idk if you could...
Dec 14, 2021
633 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
Dec 14, 2021
optimize
Dec 14, 2021
633 Posts
Quote from rballnut :
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...#openminor [treasurydirect.gov]
How do I open an account for a minor?
A Minor account is a custodial account you may establish for a child under the age of 18 if you are a parent or person providing chief support of the child. You may purchase, redeem, receive gifts, and perform other transactions within an individual account on behalf of the minor. You can even create a customized name, such as "Ben's College Fund", for the account. When the minor reaches age 18 and establishes a Primary TreasuryDirect account, you may de-link the securities from the Minor account to move them to the new Primary account. Note: Minor accounts are not available in entity accounts.

By able to redeem, it means that we can transfer back out to parent's bank account?
Yes, I think you can redeem. Can someone who has experience can confirm? In their research center ( https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...s_ibuy.htm ), they state:

Information concerning electronic and paper bonds:
Electronic bonds in TreasuryDirect. A child may not open a TreasuryDirect account, buy securities in TreasuryDirect, or conduct other transactions in TreasuryDirect. A parent or other adult custodian may open for the child a TreasuryDirect account that is linked to the adult's TreasuryDirect account. The parent or other adult custodian can buy securities and conduct other transactions for the child, and other adults can buy savings bonds for the child as gifts.
Paper bonds. Adults can buy bonds in the name of a child.



Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Joined Mar 2005
Dec 14, 2021
acegolfer
Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Quote from rballnut :
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/in...#openminor
How do I open an account for a minor?
A Minor account is a custodial account you may establish for a child under the age of 18 if you are a parent or person providing chief support of the child. You may purchase, redeem, receive gifts, and perform other transactions within an individual account on behalf of the minor. You can even create a customized name, such as "Ben's College Fund", for the account. When the minor reaches age 18 and establishes a Primary TreasuryDirect account, you may de-link the securities from the Minor account to move them to the new Primary account. Note: Minor accounts are not available in entity accounts.

By able to redeem, it means that we can transfer back out to parent's bank account?
You can redeem it on behalf of the kid so that the kid (not parent) can spend it. Once bought in the kid's account, it's no longer parent's money.
Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Joined Mar 2005
Dec 14, 2021
acegolfer
Dec 14, 2021
1,183 Posts
Quote from optimize :
Yes, I think you can redeem. Can someone who has experience can confirm?
Parent can redeem on behalf of the kid. But parent can't spend it for them. It's kid's money.
Dec 14, 2021
751 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
Dec 14, 2021
rballnut
Dec 14, 2021
751 Posts
Quote from acegolfer :
Parent can redeem on behalf of the kid. But parent can't spend it for them. It's kid's money.
Once redeemed I assume the only way to get the money out is through parent's bank account?

Then the "kid" decides to buy dad a nice car.....

I'm not sure how to differentiate who/how spends the money.
Dec 14, 2021
633 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
Dec 14, 2021
optimize
Dec 14, 2021
633 Posts
Quote from acegolfer :
Parent can redeem on behalf of the kid. But parent can't spend it for them. It's kid's money.
This sounds really odd. Once redeemed (= cashed) it's weird/impossible to have the restriction that only the kid in the family can spend!
Dec 14, 2021
2,837 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
Dec 14, 2021
keung
Dec 14, 2021
2,837 Posts
Quote from two-rocks :
is the 10K per calendar year? or a 12 month cycle.
Calendar year you can buy this month (Dec 2021) then buy again Jan 2022

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Dec 14, 2021
101 Posts
Joined Jul 2010
Dec 14, 2021
Dogmeat26
Dec 14, 2021
101 Posts
God the site is god awful. I can't remember my login information and there is no easy recovery method. I think I'll just buy a 10k bond in my wife's name.

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