Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredLibertarian posted Apr 29, 2022 02:05 AM
expiredLibertarian posted Apr 29, 2022 02:05 AM

US Treasury Series I Savings Bonds Inflation Rate Earnings (May - October '22)

(Limit $10K/Year Per Person)

9.62% Interest (Annualized for 6 Months)

2,165 Comments 819,077 Views
Visit Retailer
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
U.S. Government Treasury is currently offering 9.62% Interest Rate (Annualized for 6 Months) in combined Fixed + Inflation Rate Earnings valid on newly issued Series I Savings Bonds purchased from May through October 2022. Limit of $10,000/year per person.

Thanks to Community Member Libertarian for posting 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.
    • An I bond earns interest monthly from the first day of the month in the issue date. The interest accrues (is added to the bond) until the bond reaches 30 years or you cash the bond, whichever comes first.
    • The interest is compounded semiannually. Every six months from the bond's issue date, interest the bond earned in the six previous months is added to the bond's principal value, creating a new principal value. Interest is then earned on the new principal.
    • The composite rate for I bonds issued from May 2022 through October 2022 is 9.62 percent. This rate applies for the first six months you own the bond.
  • When can I cash my I bonds?
    • After they are 12 months old.
    • If you cash an I bond before it is five years old, you will lose the last three months of interest.
    • I bonds earn interest for 30 years if you don't cash the bonds before they mature.
    • If you've been affected by a disaster, special provisions may apply.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
Please refer to the forum thread for additional details & discussion.

Original Post

Written by Libertarian
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
U.S. Government Treasury is currently offering 9.62% Interest Rate (Annualized for 6 Months) in combined Fixed + Inflation Rate Earnings valid on newly issued Series I Savings Bonds purchased from May through October 2022. Limit of $10,000/year per person.

Thanks to Community Member Libertarian for posting 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.
    • An I bond earns interest monthly from the first day of the month in the issue date. The interest accrues (is added to the bond) until the bond reaches 30 years or you cash the bond, whichever comes first.
    • The interest is compounded semiannually. Every six months from the bond's issue date, interest the bond earned in the six previous months is added to the bond's principal value, creating a new principal value. Interest is then earned on the new principal.
    • The composite rate for I bonds issued from May 2022 through October 2022 is 9.62 percent. This rate applies for the first six months you own the bond.
  • When can I cash my I bonds?
    • After they are 12 months old.
    • If you cash an I bond before it is five years old, you will lose the last three months of interest.
    • I bonds earn interest for 30 years if you don't cash the bonds before they mature.
    • If you've been affected by a disaster, special provisions may apply.

Editor's Notes

Written by StrawMan86 | Staff
Please refer to the forum thread for additional details & discussion.

Original Post

Written by Libertarian

Community Voting

Deal Score
+637
Good Deal
Visit Retailer

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

coolcoder
4584 Posts
1004 Reputation
If you buy by the end of April, you will get 7.12% for the first 6 months, and 9.62% for the 6 months after that (you are locked in at 9.62% for the second 6 months even if the rate for the period starting Nov 2022 is lower). Even if you could, why would you want to take your money out while you are earning 9.62%? You can take your money out after 12 months and before 5 years with a penalty equal to the last three months of interest.

Also, it is highly unlikely that inflation is going to go down to 0% anytime soon, so most of us will just leave the money in there for at least 5 years if not longer. Sure beats the 0.5% - 1% savings interest I was getting.
shj
407 Posts
252 Reputation
Assuming you want to hold for 18 months:

Buy today: 7.12% for next 6 mo + 9.6% for 6 mo after + (unknown)% for next 6 mon

Buy in May: 9.6% for 6 mo after + (unknown)% for next 6 mon + (unknown)% for next 6 mon
Fogmoose
3467 Posts
861 Reputation
Certainly emergencies can happen, and you should never invest money that is set aside for an emergency fund in things like this for that reason. But the majority of people buying these bonds realize that and are investing money they will not need to access in that time frame. If you only have 10k savings total, you should probably not invest it in these bonds.

2,164 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 29, 2022 03:59 AM
888 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
n1kthequickApr 29, 2022 03:59 AM
888 Posts
Quote from Scoreracing :
This is not worth it guys. Not yet anyways. Inflation is going to get worse in coming months. April inflation is likely going to come in at 9.5% based on monthly growth rates lately. Inflationary periods don't just quickly go down they taper off if anything. That's the time to buy. With recession confirmed in Q2 and inflation continuing, things will get hella worse before Fed's rates do anything.

So locking in at 8.5% for 12 months is likely to lose you a couple % under inflation in just next few months.
You do realize that this does adjust every 6 months, and unless your taking a good amount of risk in the markets this is by far the best risk/reward out there for people looking for a conservative option for their portfolios
Apr 29, 2022 04:00 AM
842 Posts
Joined Jul 2015
TikiTakaApr 29, 2022 04:00 AM
842 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank TikiTaka

Quote from FancyKite319 :
You can report the gain every year on accrual or show the gain when you redeem it in the tax return you file. You also indicate in the same tax return if it was used for education or not - if you get audited then you better have proof to back that claim up or else you'll get a free colonoscopy from the IRS without being sedated.
Thanks! Is it correct that any tuition paid the same year after the sell which has larger amount can be counted as the valid expense?
1
Apr 29, 2022 04:00 AM
2,750 Posts
Joined Apr 2014

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
9,433 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
doboy007
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
9,433 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank doboy007

Quote from skeleton516 :
So if you gift to your wife 10k in 2023, will she be able to buy another 10K for herself in 2023?
What I am trying to figure out is that each SSN/EIN can only acquire 10K worth of I bond per calendar year whether or not it is thru purchase or gift?
No. See my post #36
1
Apr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
2,750 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
ScoreracingApr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
2,750 Posts
Quote from FancyKite319 :
If you have a better 100% safe investment that is not stocks, crypto, lottery ticket or the Nigerian prince giving the same or higher rate of return, please let us know. If the rate goes up due to inflation, you still get that when the rate changes in Nov.
Yeah you have to wait 6 months for it to adjust.
3
Apr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
2,750 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
ScoreracingApr 29, 2022 04:01 AM
2,750 Posts
Quote from n1kthequick :
You do realize that this does adjust every 6 months, and unless your taking a good amount of risk in the markets this is by far the best risk/reward out there for people looking for a conservative option for their portfolios
You have to wait 6 mo for an adjustment.
4
Apr 29, 2022 04:02 AM
55 Posts
Joined Sep 2013
lx82kujre1nq6dewApr 29, 2022 04:02 AM
55 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank lx82kujre1nq6dew

Also keep in mind:

I bonds are meant to be longer-term investments; if you redeem an I bond within the first 5 years, you'll lose your last 3 months interest. For example, if you redeem an I bond after 18 months, you'll receive the first 15 months of interest.
3

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:02 AM
2,160 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
Fanime
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:02 AM
2,160 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Fanime

Quote from Scoreracing :
Why would you lock in now instead of a few months when inflation is much worse? You'll be locked in while the rate grows
You'll be getting the better rate as it comes. If you had bought a few minutes ago, you'd lock in 7% for 6 months, 9% for 6 months, and then whatever "higher rate" comes after that for another six months.
1
Apr 29, 2022 04:03 AM
842 Posts
Joined Jul 2015
TikiTakaApr 29, 2022 04:03 AM
842 Posts
Quote from Scoreracing :
This is not worth it guys. Not yet anyways. Inflation is going to get worse in coming months. April inflation is likely going to come in at 9.5% based on monthly growth rates lately. Inflationary periods don't just quickly go down they taper off if anything. That's the time to buy. With recession confirmed in Q2 and inflation continuing, things will get hella worse before Fed's rates do anything.

So locking in at 8.5% for 12 months is likely to lose you a couple % under inflation in just next few months.
You are right only if you can have other better investment options.
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:03 AM
9,433 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
doboy007
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:03 AM
9,433 Posts
Quote from Scoreracing :
Why would you lock in now instead of a few months when inflation is much worse? You'll be locked in while the rate grows
The I Bond rate changes every 6 month and not monthly and buying it now will also allows you to get the future rate in the future.
Apr 29, 2022 04:09 AM
174 Posts
Joined Aug 2020

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Apr 29, 2022 04:09 AM
800 Posts
Joined May 2011
IamAwesom3Apr 29, 2022 04:09 AM
800 Posts
Since Friday is last day, can I purchase them tomorrow morning? Someone mentioned purchase had to be done by tonight already?

I'm confused
2
Apr 29, 2022 04:11 AM
842 Posts
Joined Jul 2015
TikiTakaApr 29, 2022 04:11 AM
842 Posts
Quote from Scoreracing :
Why would you lock in now instead of a few months when inflation is much worse? You'll be locked in while the rate grows
You don't lost the chance to get higher interest anyway.
For example, if the interest rate for May drops to 2% and you buy it today, you still get 7% for 6 months
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:11 AM
2,160 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
Fanime
Pro
Apr 29, 2022 04:11 AM
2,160 Posts
Quote from IamAwesom3 :
Since Friday is last day, can I purchase them tomorrow morning? Someone mentioned purchase had to be done by tonight already?

I'm confused
It takes at least 1 business day to settle. It's too late to get the 7% rate. Buying now or tomorrow morning (if you're on the west) gets you the new 9% since it would land on Monday.
1

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 29, 2022 04:12 AM
96 Posts
Joined Jan 2017
chowar01Apr 29, 2022 04:12 AM
96 Posts
Quote from Scoreracing :
Why would you lock in now instead of a few months when inflation is much worse? You'll be locked in while the rate grows
It's kind of funny that your posting actively trying to dissuade people from investing in I-bonds when A) you provide no alternatives to yield guaranteed 8+% returns with zero risk and, more importantly, B) your comments clearly indicate you don't understand how I-bonds work at all. If your thesis of inflation going up in the coming months is correct, someone buying now will get: 6 months of the 7+% interest rate, 6 months of the 9+% interest rate, and 6 months of a higher interest rate based off the higher inflation you speak of. Explain to me how 1.5 years with over 8% return is a bad thing? And that ignores the scenarios where you're wrong (crazy thought) and inflation drops and you've at least locked in a full year of 8+% return.
Last edited by chowar01 April 28, 2022 at 10:14 PM.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Related Searches

Popular Deals

Trending Deals