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Capital One: 11-Month 360 CD Expired

5% APY
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Update: this extremely popular deal is still available.

Capital One is offering a 11-Month 360 Certificate of Deposit at 5% APY with no minimum deposit.

Thanks to Community Member ginger_ale for finding this deal.

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Edited February 24, 2023 at 12:11 AM by
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Expires 3/15/23

https://www.capitalone.com/bank/cds/online-cds/

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5% APY
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So I started to ladder T-Bills for the reasons everyone is stating in this thread. The rate is so volatile (in a good way) that locking into anything even 12 months is too long for me and rates continue to climb. I use fidelity and my suggestion is this.

When they offer the new 4 week and 8 week and 13 week t-bill (they auction on diff days and diff weeks) go in and buy one of each of them with whatever money you can spare. Let's use 5k for each.

I would buy a 4 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy an 8 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy a 13 week t-bill WITH Rollover for 5k

Then after 4 weeks when that first on comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.
Then after 8 weeks when the second comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.

Now you will have 3 13 week t-bills rolling every 4 weeks or so and rolling into a new one with the proceeds. This way every 4 weeks you are capturing an increasing rate and not locked into anything longer than 13 weeks. You benefit from the rate hikes, can cash out at any time, and you have state tax shelter from the earned interest.

I can almost guarantee that the above will yield you more net income (taking in tax break) at the end of 11months then the 5% locked CD

just my 2cents
You can buy treasuries from just about any brokerage. I use Fidelity, as I like their platform and they don't charge fees/commissions for treasuries.
Fidelity Fixed Income Page [fidelity.com]
Follow the above link and scroll down to the row "U.S. Treasury." Choose the duration you want and click on it. You can then click "buy" to start a trade of a specific treasury bill/bond.
Fidelity's Intro to Treasuries [fidelity.com]
This is true, but it doesn't make an 11-month CD at 5% a bad idea. Those HYS can change their rates at any time, but here you're guaranteed to get 5%.

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Joined Nov 2012
L2: Beginner
> bubble2 35 Posts
18 Reputation
mc86
02-05-2023 at 04:54 PM.
02-05-2023 at 04:54 PM.
Quote from KrisPLM :
tldr; Capital One froze the interest rate of older, supposedly "high yield savings accounts" at 0.3%. Basically, they silently converted them to low interest accounts.

I've been a customer of Capital One (IngDirect originally) since 2004. I had their "360 Savings account". Capital One claimed it is a high interest account and rates will fluctuate based on Federal reserve interest rates.

Apparently, some years ago they started a new savings account called "360 Performance Savings" with much higher interest rates. The new Performance savings has a interest rate of 3.4% as of today. While the legacy account is only at 0.3% and it stopped fluctuating with Fed rates many years ago.

So I lost a lot of money over the years as my savings account silently turned into a regular savings account and stopped being a high interest account.

They didn't inform established customers of the new Performance savings account and kept people like me at 0.3%. At a minimum, they should have informed existing customers of this new account type.

I learned about this new account a couple of days ago. This is clearly bad faith behavior by the bank. I am in the process of closing out my account. I can never trust Capital One again. You should not do this to long term customers to make a few bucks.

Search online for "womens money capital one cheated high interest accounts" to find other customers that got cheated the same way.
I was wondering why I was making 0.3% for being a customer since the early 2000's (I was also originally an ING customer that was converted over to a Capital 360 checking/savings). Thank you for the heads up.
Reply
Last edited by mc86 February 5, 2023 at 05:03 PM.
Joined Aug 2015
L2: Beginner
> bubble2 61 Posts
26 Reputation
acompressa
02-05-2023 at 05:05 PM.
02-05-2023 at 05:05 PM.
After looking into this for some time , I ended up going a different solution.

So Fidelity allows their brokerage accounts to be used like a bank account (comes with checks, debit cards, account/routing numbers, accepts direct deposits, etc. Exactly like a bank account, because they actually make it into a bank account on the back end).

Anyways, I have a separate brokerage account that is my "bank account" paying all of my credit cards/bills. The "core position" is just the default SPAXX, which is currently receiving 4.02% 7 day yield with a 0.42% expense ratio, and is made up of 72% "U.S. Government Repurchase Agreements."

Tbh, idk the difference between repurchase agreements and tbills, but let's say SPAXX has a net of 3.5% vs this whole tbill/savings account thing with 5.0%. That's a 1.5% difference, but comes with a lockup period, some minor management, can't pay credit cards/bills with it, limitations on transactions, etc.

At $100k cash, thats only $1.5k extra, for a whole lot of inconvenience.

Anyone have opinion on this method vs laddering?
Reply
Joined Sep 2009
L7: Teacher
> bubble2 2,817 Posts
1,620 Reputation
vivisimonvi
02-05-2023 at 06:03 PM.
02-05-2023 at 06:03 PM.
Quote from Milkcake81 :
Grace Period: You may redeem your Certificate of Deposit within ten (10) calendar days after the maturity date without penalty.

What happens if you don't redeem within 10 days?
When you first set up your CD, there should be an option to "Close your CD on the maturity date" when you look under the option to manage your CD. This is for if you don't want to automatically re-enroll. I also found this [youtube.com] tutorial to help navigate the process with Capital One.
Reply
Joined Sep 2006
L7: Teacher
> bubble2 2,280 Posts
156 Reputation
robertw477
02-05-2023 at 06:17 PM.
02-05-2023 at 06:17 PM.
Quote from mblock66 :
So I started to ladder T-Bills for the reasons everyone is stating in this thread. The rate is so volatile (in a good way) that locking into anything even 12 months is too long for me and rates continue to climb. I use fidelity and my suggestion is this.

When they offer the new 4 week and 8 week and 13 week t-bill (they auction on diff days and diff weeks) go in and buy one of each of them with whatever money you can spare. Let's use 5k for each.

I would buy a 4 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy an 8 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy a 13 week t-bill WITH Rollover for 5k

Then after 4 weeks when that first on comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.
Then after 8 weeks when the second comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.

Now you will have 3 13 week t-bills rolling every 4 weeks or so and rolling into a new one with the proceeds. This way every 4 weeks you are capturing an increasing rate and not locked into anything longer than 13 weeks. You benefit from the rate hikes, can cash out at any time, and you have state tax shelter from the earned interest.

I can almost guarantee that the above will yield you more net income (taking in tax break) at the end of 11months then the 5% locked CD

just my 2cents

Great post. I will be looking to do the same.
Reply
Joined Sep 2009
L7: Teacher
> bubble2 2,817 Posts
1,620 Reputation
vivisimonvi
02-05-2023 at 06:21 PM.
02-05-2023 at 06:21 PM.
Quote from AquaBorder1581 :
Very easy to get locked out on the TreasuryDirect website and a pain in the ass to get back on. Get Treasuries on another site.
If I may ask, how did you get locked out of your TD account?
Reply
Joined Nov 2017
L2: Beginner
> bubble2 60 Posts
10 Reputation
rachel.rambo
02-05-2023 at 07:47 PM.
02-05-2023 at 07:47 PM.
Do you buy it on Treasury Direct or Brokerage?
Quote from mblock66 :
So I started to ladder T-Bills for the reasons everyone is stating in this thread. The rate is so volatile (in a good way) that locking into anything even 12 months is too long for me and rates continue to climb. I use fidelity and my suggestion is this.

When they offer the new 4 week and 8 week and 13 week t-bill (they auction on diff days and diff weeks) go in and buy one of each of them with whatever money you can spare. Let's use 5k for each.

I would buy a 4 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy an 8 week t-bill with NO Rollover for 5k
I would buy a 13 week t-bill WITH Rollover for 5k

Then after 4 weeks when that first on comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.
Then after 8 weeks when the second comes up, buy another 13 week t-bill with the 5k WITH Rollover.

Now you will have 3 13 week t-bills rolling every 4 weeks or so and rolling into a new one with the proceeds. This way every 4 weeks you are capturing an increasing rate and not locked into anything longer than 13 weeks. You benefit from the rate hikes, can cash out at any time, and you have state tax shelter from the earned interest.

I can almost guarantee that the above will yield you more net income (taking in tax break) at the end of 11months then the 5% locked CD

just my 2cents
Reply
Joined Jul 2013
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 479 Posts
77 Reputation
likzslick
02-05-2023 at 09:47 PM.
02-05-2023 at 09:47 PM.
Quote from acompressa :
After looking into this for some time , I ended up going a different solution.

So Fidelity allows their brokerage accounts to be used like a bank account (comes with checks, debit cards, account/routing numbers, accepts direct deposits, etc. Exactly like a bank account, because they actually make it into a bank account on the back end).

Anyways, I have a separate brokerage account that is my "bank account" paying all of my credit cards/bills. The "core position" is just the default SPAXX, which is currently receiving 4.02% 7 day yield with a 0.42% expense ratio, and is made up of 72% "U.S. Government Repurchase Agreements."

Tbh, idk the difference between repurchase agreements and tbills, but let's say SPAXX has a net of 3.5% vs this whole tbill/savings account thing with 5.0%. That's a 1.5% difference, but comes with a lockup period, some minor management, can't pay credit cards/bills with it, limitations on transactions, etc.

At $100k cash, thats only $1.5k extra, for a whole lot of inconvenience.

Anyone have opinion on this method vs laddering?
This sounds like a decent option. If I had like 25k, I would do the tbills in Fidelity for 20k and keep the 5k in the "Core position"
Reply

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Joined Jul 2006
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,217 Posts
484 Reputation
PrincipalMember
02-05-2023 at 11:03 PM.
02-05-2023 at 11:03 PM.
Quote from acompressa :
After looking into this for some time , I ended up going a different solution.

So Fidelity allows their brokerage accounts to be used like a bank account (comes with checks, debit cards, account/routing numbers, accepts direct deposits, etc. Exactly like a bank account, because they actually make it into a bank account on the back end).

Anyways, I have a separate brokerage account that is my "bank account" paying all of my credit cards/bills. The "core position" is just the default SPAXX, which is currently receiving 4.02% 7 day yield with a 0.42% expense ratio, and is made up of 72% "U.S. Government Repurchase Agreements."

Tbh, idk the difference between repurchase agreements and tbills, but let's say SPAXX has a net of 3.5% vs this whole tbill/savings account thing with 5.0%. That's a 1.5% difference, but comes with a lockup period, some minor management, can't pay credit cards/bills with it, limitations on transactions, etc.

At $100k cash, thats only $1.5k extra, for a whole lot of inconvenience.

Anyone have opinion on this method vs laddering?
1. I am at TD - yeah I use it like a checking account. One thing you mentioned where TD checking account does better than conventional account is that my check simply cannot bounce. I have so much margin coverage due to the equities that I hold there, any direct withdrawal by credit card companies etc. will always be paid. Worst case scenario - I pay margin interest for a few days - but there is zero chance of things bouncing because I happened to be on vacation and forgot to be on top of things.

2. Correction - depending upon your tax bracket, it is less than 1.5K extra.

3. I am doing something similar at TD - SWVXX - yield is 4.37%. [In reality I am using a different Muni fund due to my tax bracket]. But thi is mostly due to my main goal of being an investor. If I see a nice investment opportunity, I need to be able to tap into my funds. Yup - those money market funds have been nicely creeping up in what they pay.
Reply
Joined Nov 2015
L5: Journeyman
> bubble2 668 Posts
127 Reputation
Intranetusa
02-05-2023 at 11:11 PM.
02-05-2023 at 11:11 PM.
Quote from KrisPLM :
tldr; Capital One froze the interest rate of older, supposedly "high yield savings accounts" at 0.3%. Basically, they silently converted them to low interest accounts.

I've been a customer of Capital One (IngDirect originally) since 2004. I had their "360 Savings account". Capital One claimed it is a high interest account and rates will fluctuate based on Federal reserve interest rates.

Apparently, some years ago they started a new savings account called "360 Performance Savings" with much higher interest rates. The new Performance savings has a interest rate of 3.4% as of today. While the legacy account is only at 0.3% and it stopped fluctuating with Fed rates many years ago.

So I lost a lot of money over the years as my savings account silently turned into a regular savings account and stopped being a high interest account.

They didn't inform established customers of the new Performance savings account and kept people like me at 0.3%. At a minimum, they should have informed existing customers of this new account type.

I learned about this new account a couple of days ago. This is clearly bad faith behavior by the bank. I am in the process of closing out my account. I can never trust Capital One again. You should not do this to long term customers to make a few bucks.

Search online for "womens money capital one cheated high interest accounts" to find other customers that got cheated the same way.
I had a 360 money market account and they informed me electronically that they had a new 360 performance savings account that had better interest rates.

So Capital One did inform at least some people of a new better account that would replace the older accounts.
Reply
Joined May 2010
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,208 Posts
78 Reputation
hummer06ku
02-06-2023 at 02:15 AM.
02-06-2023 at 02:15 AM.
Quote from amcallis :
Found this video explaining how to click through Fidelity to do what mblock suggests.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i...ZVM&t=332s [youtube.com]
I picked up savings bonds late last year through treasury direct. It looks like I can purchase t bills through that portal as well poking around. anyone do it through treasury direct? I ask because treasury direct's website is fairly sparse for lack of a better description
Reply
Joined Oct 2015
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,263 Posts
6,504 Reputation
fred1313
02-06-2023 at 03:10 AM.
02-06-2023 at 03:10 AM.
I got a message to, "Let's start your first deposit," which gave me the option to transfer funds from another Cap One account into the new CD but when the CD was opened, the amount I wanted to transfer from the other Cap one account disappeared and only the amount from an external account appears. Has anyone else had this issue? Is there a delay in transferring from the other Cap One account? Thanks in advance for your help.
Reply
Last edited by fred1313 February 6, 2023 at 03:16 AM.
Joined Jun 2016
New User
> bubble2 2 Posts
10 Reputation
raychung144
02-06-2023 at 03:45 AM.
02-06-2023 at 03:45 AM.
Quote from xmonger :
Here's a hack that not everyone thinks about. Break the amount you lock in a CD into smaller amounts.

For example, if you are doing a 500k CD, do 5 100k accounts. That way, if you need 100k or less before term you only get 1/5 the penalty as you only have to break one smaller CD.

Can we open multiple CDs at capital one?
Reply
Joined Nov 2014
L3: Novice
> bubble2 111 Posts
101 Reputation
mblock66
02-06-2023 at 07:39 AM.
02-06-2023 at 07:39 AM.
Quote from rachel.rambo :
Do you buy it on Treasury Direct or Brokerage?
Fidelity
Reply
Joined Oct 2007
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,894 Posts
308 Reputation
turls
02-06-2023 at 07:40 AM.
02-06-2023 at 07:40 AM.
Quote from KrisPLM :
tldr; Capital One froze the interest rate of older, supposedly "high yield savings accounts" at 0.3%. Basically, they silently converted them to low interest accounts.

I've been a customer of Capital One (IngDirect originally) since 2004. I had their "360 Savings account". Capital One claimed it is a high interest account and rates will fluctuate based on Federal reserve interest rates.

Apparently, some years ago they started a new savings account called "360 Performance Savings" with much higher interest rates. The new Performance savings has a interest rate of 3.4% as of today. While the legacy account is only at 0.3% and it stopped fluctuating with Fed rates many years ago.

So I lost a lot of money over the years as my savings account silently turned into a regular savings account and stopped being a high interest account.

They didn't inform established customers of the new Performance savings account and kept people like me at 0.3%. At a minimum, they should have informed existing customers of this new account type.

I learned about this new account a couple of days ago. This is clearly bad faith behavior by the bank. I am in the process of closing out my account. I can never trust Capital One again. You should not do this to long term customers to make a few bucks.

Search online for "womens money capital one cheated high interest accounts" to find other customers that got cheated the same way.
Yeah, I got caught the same way. But I wasn't putting much money in Savings until this past year, and I switched then. That was when I paid attention and saw they had another option. I don't recall how I figured it out but it must not have been too hidden and it was super-easy to switch.

Yes, it's kind of on the bank, but it's also on you to assume a Savings account will be competitive by default. If you had much money in there you should have noticed and moved it or changed account.
Reply

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Joined Oct 2007
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,894 Posts
308 Reputation
turls
02-06-2023 at 07:42 AM.
02-06-2023 at 07:42 AM.
Quote from fred1313 :
I got a message to, "Let's start your first deposit," which gave me the option to transfer funds from another Cap One account into the new CD but when the CD was opened, the amount I wanted to transfer from the other Cap one account disappeared and only the amount from an external account appears. Has anyone else had this issue? Is there a delay in transferring from the other Cap One account? Thanks in advance for your help.
I didn't have that issue, it was instant, but all money came from my existing performance savings account at CapOne.
Reply
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