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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)

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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

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Top Comments

coolcoder
4588 Posts
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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

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Nov 06, 2022 07:24 PM
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Joined Jun 2009
ls1dreamsNov 06, 2022 07:24 PM
1,195 Posts
Quote from sandbeach :
If you listen to Suze Orman, she would say buy. She plans on buying another $60K in Jan. 2023 ($10K individual, $10K trust, $10K business and the same for her spouse for the $60K total). However, Suze is 71 years old and keeps 50% of her money in funds that make her feel secure.
Ya my parents are 70/68 and holding lots in cash right now so I figure why not. Wish they would have listened to me last year and this year - they coudl have had $40k in.
Nov 06, 2022 07:31 PM
2,395 Posts
Joined Jun 2007
sandbeachNov 06, 2022 07:31 PM
2,395 Posts
Quote from ls1dreams :
Ya my parents are 70/68 and holding lots in cash right now so I figure why not. Wish they would have listened to me last year and this year - they coudl have had $40k in.
I agree. It took me awhile to convince my sister, because she was worried about problems with the government website, having to keep records, forgetting her password, etc. She finally bought in October and gave the info to her financial advisor. So now she has the info backed up.

Well, good luck with your parents. Hopefully they buy now and more next year! Treasuries, too, would be a great idea since I-bonds have a monetary limit.
Nov 07, 2022 02:45 PM
13,409 Posts
Joined Apr 2005
TidalWaveOneNov 07, 2022 02:45 PM
13,409 Posts
Quote from ls1dreams :
Ya my parents are 70/68 and holding lots in cash right now so I figure why not. Wish they would have listened to me last year and this year - they coudl have had $40k in.
LOL... my mother has decent amount of cash sitting in a 0% account and I have tried many times to get her to let me help her open a savings account and she doesn't want to because she "hates changes". I tell her how much money she is throwing away and she doesn't seem to care. Some old people are just set in their ways and afraid of change. I'm sure the banks love it though.
2
Nov 08, 2022 01:45 AM
4,507 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
SlickdeezeeNov 08, 2022 01:45 AM
4,507 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
LOL... my mother has decent amount of cash sitting in a 0% account and I have tried many times to get her to let me help her open a savings account and she doesn't want to because she "hates changes". I tell her how much money she is throwing away and she doesn't seem to care. Some old people are just set in their ways and afraid of change. I'm sure the banks love it though.
That sucks as she is losing money on inflation as well. Which bank does she use? Do they offer any decent CDs?
Nov 08, 2022 01:49 AM
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Joined Apr 2005
TidalWaveOneNov 08, 2022 01:49 AM
13,409 Posts
Quote from Slickdeezee :
That sucks as she is losing money on inflation as well. Which bank does she use? Do they offer any decent CDs?
She has Bank of America and Chase checking accounts. Maybe I will look into CDs there as maybe she wouldn't be so silly about getting a CD with the same bank... And yes, I told her that she's also losing money through inflation but she didn't care. Unfortunately, I don't think she really understands much... And of course she's extremely resistant to any changes of almost anything so even opening up a CD at the same bank might meet a good amount of resistance.
Nov 08, 2022 02:01 AM
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SlickdeezeeNov 08, 2022 02:01 AM
4,507 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
She has Bank of America and Chase checking accounts. Maybe I will look into CDs there as maybe she wouldn't be so silly about getting a CD with the same bank... And yes, I told her that she's also losing money through inflation but she didn't care. Unfortunately, I don't think she really understands much... And of course she's extremely resistant to any changes of almost anything so even opening up a CD at the same bank might meet a good amount of resistance.
Bank of America CDs are a joke, check for yourself. If she has over $100k, I think your best bet if she insists on staying with BofA is by opening a brokerage account with them, they own Merrill Lynch and the brokerage is called Merrill Edge, and linking the two is easy since it's the same company. Hopefully they can do all this at a BofA branch for her if she doesn't want to do anything online.

Put the money into their Preferred Deposit cash account, it's an FDIC insured money market. The interest isn't the highest, it's currently 2.69% (https://olui2.fs.ml.com/Publish/C...eSheet.pdf) but it's better than earning 0%.
Nov 08, 2022 05:09 AM
13,409 Posts
Joined Apr 2005
TidalWaveOneNov 08, 2022 05:09 AM
13,409 Posts
Quote from Slickdeezee :
Bank of America CDs are a joke, check for yourself. If she has over $100k, I think your best bet if she insists on staying with BofA is by opening a brokerage account with them, they own Merrill Lynch and the brokerage is called Merrill Edge, and linking the two is easy since it's the same company. Hopefully they can do all this at a BofA branch for her if she doesn't want to do anything online.

Put the money into their Preferred Deposit cash account, it's an FDIC insured money market. The interest isn't the highest, it's currently 2.69% (https://olui2.fs.ml.com/Publish/C...eSheet.pdf [ml.com]) but it's better than earning 0%.
Thanks for the info... but unless it's just a few clicks on the Chase or Bank of America website to get a CD without opening a new account then I think I'm just going to run into the same issue.... but makes me mad she's throwing away all that money because she won't open a simple savings account. It wasn't a big deal for years but now that rates are way up compared to the low rates of the past several years, it's a whole different matter. On a side note... I really do believe they screwed up by artificially holding rates so low for so long..... that was an unwarranted punishment for savers and I'm sure it had other bad side effects as well... like making house prices rise too much too fast... but I digress.

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Nov 08, 2022 01:47 PM
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practicalmeNov 08, 2022 01:47 PM
6,684 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
Thanks for the info... but unless it's just a few clicks on the Chase or Bank of America website to get a CD without opening a new account then I think I'm just going to run into the same issue.... but makes me mad she's throwing away all that money because she won't open a simple savings account. It wasn't a big deal for years but now that rates are way up compared to the low rates of the past several years, it's a whole different matter. On a side note... I really do believe they screwed up by artificially holding rates so low for so long..... that was an unwarranted punishment for savers and I'm sure it had other bad side effects as well... like making house prices rise too much too fast... but I digress.
At least you have online access. My mother won't agree to that. I did get her to the actual bank the other week to open a special savings account to get her at least a few percentage, and a CD. She has a BoA account as well, they did have a special CD rate that you may want to look at. It may have to be new money but if you have the two banks, you can move the money out first and caring it back as new money. We had it all set to open but her other bank matched it instead,
Nov 09, 2022 02:46 AM
4,507 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
SlickdeezeeNov 09, 2022 02:46 AM
4,507 Posts
Quote from practicalme :
At least you have online access. My mother won't agree to that. I did get her to the actual bank the other week to open a special savings account to get her at least a few percentage, and a CD. She has a BoA account as well, they did have a special CD rate that you may want to look at. It may have to be new money but if you have the two banks, you can move the money out first and caring it back as new money. We had it all set to open but her other bank matched it instead,
What was the rate and length CD she got? I checked their site and the rates are ridiculously low for every date I've tried: https://www.bankofamerica.com/dep...-accounts/
Nov 09, 2022 02:05 PM
6,684 Posts
Joined Mar 2004
practicalmeNov 09, 2022 02:05 PM
6,684 Posts
Quote from Slickdeezee :
What was the rate and length CD she got? I checked their site and the rates are ridiculously low for every date I've tried: https://www.bankofamerica.com/dep...-accounts/
It was a couple weeks back. I think it was the 13 month one for 2,25. It wasn't great but my options with her are limited with her refusing online banking. I wish I could dump it all into Marcus or Discover where she could at least get 3% with full liquidity.

https://www.bankofamerica.com/dep...atured-cd/
Nov 09, 2022 08:32 PM
2,872 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
keungNov 09, 2022 08:32 PM
2,872 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
Thanks for the info... but unless it's just a few clicks on the Chase or Bank of America website to get a CD without opening a new account then I think I'm just going to run into the same issue.... but makes me mad she's throwing away all that money because she won't open a simple savings account. It wasn't a big deal for years but now that rates are way up compared to the low rates of the past several years, it's a whole different matter. On a side note... I really do believe they screwed up by artificially holding rates so low for so long..... that was an unwarranted punishment for savers and I'm sure it had other bad side effects as well... like making house prices rise too much too fast... but I digress.
Open a Merrill account for her ( can be done within BOA online)
transfer money to ML account
Buy her some US T Bill
3 month 4.19%
6 Month 4.59%
12 month 4.69%
2 year 4.62%
5 year 4.28%
Nov 10, 2022 12:43 AM
13,409 Posts
Joined Apr 2005
TidalWaveOneNov 10, 2022 12:43 AM
13,409 Posts
Quote from keung :
Open a Merrill account for her ( can be done within BOA online)
transfer money to ML account
Buy her some US T Bill
3 month 4.19%
6 Month 4.59%
12 month 4.69%
2 year 4.62%
5 year 4.28%
Thanks... that is good info and I just talked to her about it but it didn't help. She just can't "process" any changes to her account. "If it's working fine then don't touch it.". Told her again she is throwing away a lot of money but she doesn't care.... oh well. Guess they will use the money they are making off her 0% interest account to increase their executive bonuses.
Nov 10, 2022 06:32 PM
1,039 Posts
Joined Jan 2011
laidbackinNCNov 10, 2022 06:32 PM
1,039 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
Thanks... that is good info and I just talked to her about it but it didn't help. She just can't "process" any changes to her account. "If it's working fine then don't touch it.". Told her again she is throwing away a lot of money but she doesn't care.... oh well. Guess they will use the money they are making off her 0% interest account to increase their executive bonuses.
Believe me, it could be worse. You could have a parent who is susceptible to falling for slick sales jobs and bad offers, and losing money that way.
Nov 10, 2022 06:38 PM
13,409 Posts
Joined Apr 2005
TidalWaveOneNov 10, 2022 06:38 PM
13,409 Posts
Quote from laidbackinNC :
Believe me, it could be worse. You could have a parent who is susceptible to falling for slick sales jobs and bad offers, and losing money that way.
Yes that is one thing I'm not too concerned about. I think she would be difficult to scam.

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Nov 13, 2022 03:52 PM
6,684 Posts
Joined Mar 2004
practicalmeNov 13, 2022 03:52 PM
6,684 Posts
Quote from TidalWaveOne :
Yes that is one thing I'm not too concerned about. I think she would be difficult to scam.
I've always felt that way about my mom as well, until she get scammed. Nothing major, we caught it in time, but just be aware it can happen, don't be complacent. The biggest worry is that they know they got scammed and are too embarrassed to admit it.

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