Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Sorry, this deal has expired. Get notified of deals like this in the future. Add Deal Alert for this Item
Frontpage

CIT Bank 6-Month CD: Earn Expired

5.00% APY*
+40 Deal Score
54,378 Views
CIT Bank, our partner, offers the following benefits with their 6-Month CD.

Thanks to staff member EfficientGame645 for finding this deal.
  • $1,000 minimum to open
  • No opening or maintenance fees
  • Daily compounding interest to maximize your earning potential
  • Member FDIC
  • *See site for details
Slickdeals may be compensated by CIT Bank

Original Post

Written by
Edited April 18, 2023 at 01:35 AM by
CIT Bank, our partner, offers the following benefits with their 6-Month CD.
  • $1,000 minimum to open
  • No opening or maintenance fees
  • Daily compounding interest to maximize your earning potential
  • Member FDIC
  • *See site for details


Slickdeals may be compensated by CIT Bank
If you purchase something through a post on our site, Slickdeals may get a small share of the sale.
Deal
Score
+40
54,378 Views
5.00% APY*

Your comment cannot be blank.

Featured Comments

This is one of the highest rates currently available, however, there may be better options depending on your financial situation. Also, you will have to consider what it is worth setting up accounts at a new bank, which may or may not have good customer service. There are several high yield savings accounts in the low to mid 4% range with no lock up. However, if the rates go down (pretty unlikely for the next months) you would earn the going rate. They also increase if rates increase.

Another thing to consider is that you are taxed both federally and at the state level for interest. If you live in a high tax state and are in the middle class income brackets, you are probably better off buying treasuries or T-bills, which are not subject to income tax at the state level. So in California, assuming a > $66,296 income, you pay 9.3% in state tax and 22% in federal tax. If you buy a T-bill, you would earn 4.5% or so depending on the going rate and term, which is only taxed at the federal level. This is essentially equivalent to the 5% being taxed at the state and federal level. While not FDIC insured, if US treasuries fail, you probably can't rely on FDIC insurance. You can sell a treasury at any time, just at the market rate, which may go up or down.

There are number of things to consider other than rate, so do your homework. This is a very low risk way to earn 5% APY for the next 6 months, but there may be better options depending on the accounts you already have and your financial situation.
OP's description is wrong.
This is what's on the website for this product.
No idea why this is getting down votes, but the 11 month @4.8% is a no-penalty CD, meaning you can withdraw at any time and keep the interest you accrued. Here, you have to hold for the full 6 months, otherwise you lose some of the interest you accrued. In an environment where the interest rates are changing rapidly, that no-penalty + longer duration is very valuable.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Joined Aug 2010
L12: God
> bubble2 10,858 Posts
1,160 Reputation
J03
04-19-2023 at 09:33 AM.
04-19-2023 at 09:33 AM.
Quote from Weltweit :
Bread Savings is another option.
I've got 6 loaves of white in my pantry right now but I was thinking of diversifying and going with a pumpernickel or maybe just a whole wheat for my next few. Any suggestions?
1
Reply
Joined Aug 2016
L5: Journeyman
> bubble2 821 Posts
91 Reputation
anatvass313
04-19-2023 at 09:47 AM.
04-19-2023 at 09:47 AM.
If you do not have any accounts with CIT it's a pain to open a new account with a new bank. If you have a brokerage account in a brokerage house like Fidelity or eTrade it's much easier to open a brokered CD there with similar or better rates. It takes 20-30 seconds. Then you do not have to monitor your Maturity date. The funds will be transferred to your core account by default.
In case you need your money before maturity it's easier to sell your brokered CD at market price than to contact bank's customer service and try to liquidate your CD before maturity.
Reply
Joined Dec 2018
L2: Beginner
> bubble2 33 Posts
14 Reputation
IanP2626
04-19-2023 at 10:36 AM.
04-19-2023 at 10:36 AM.
Quote from archygos :
You can use trusts or LLCs to hold I-bonds as well to surpass that $10k limit. I hold some in an LLC owned by my Roth IRA to avoid the tax on interest.
Where do you find out about this kind of stuff? Just have a good accountant?
Reply
Joined Dec 2013
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 312 Posts
162 Reputation
newgun
04-19-2023 at 12:26 PM.
04-19-2023 at 12:26 PM.
Quote from sknick :
I'm locked into a 5% CD for 27 months, think the best rate I've seen since was 5.35% (& it was callable which = not guaranteed to last to term). At some point you just take the rate & stop holding out for more.

& before someone says "you could get close to that in HYSA without having your money tied up"…I wanted the rate guaranteed for 27 months in case HYSA rates eventually fall during that window.

I also didn't want to go the i-bond route because I had way more than $10k to invest. You also have to forfeit 3 months of interest to cash out I-bonds. 3 months of no interest effectively lowers the I-bond rate down closer to 5%.
At the end of last month I locked in a 5-year 5.45% APY CD
Reply
Joined Aug 2016
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 775 Posts
131 Reputation
sknick
04-19-2023 at 12:30 PM.
04-19-2023 at 12:30 PM.
Quote from newgun :
At the end of last month I locked in a 5-year 5.45% APY CD

Nice!

Now what to do if we hit the big recession before the CD matures. If the Dow gets below 20k again, I'd have a tough time not taking the 6 month interest penalty & moving the money over to mutual funds.
Reply
Last edited by sknick April 19, 2023 at 12:33 PM.
Joined Jul 2007
L3: Novice
> bubble2 299 Posts
17 Reputation
nikko213
04-19-2023 at 12:53 PM.
04-19-2023 at 12:53 PM.
Quote from newgun :
At the end of last month I locked in a 5-year 5.45% APY CD

What bank(s) for these higher rate APY with the LONGER terms? I see mostly 1 year which I consider short term.
Reply
Joined Dec 2013
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 312 Posts
162 Reputation
newgun
04-19-2023 at 12:54 PM.
04-19-2023 at 12:54 PM.
Quote from sknick :
Nice!

Now what to do if we hit the big recession before the CD matures. If the Dow gets below 20k again, I'd have a tough time not taking the 6 month interest penalty & moving the money over to mutual funds.

iBond only has three month penalty
Reply

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Joined Aug 2016
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 775 Posts
131 Reputation
sknick
04-19-2023 at 01:33 PM.
04-19-2023 at 01:33 PM.
Quote from newgun :
iBond only has three month penalty

Yeah but without getting into too much detail, I'm dealing with multiples of $10k & I-bonds have the $10k limit.

The I-bond rate is reset at least a couple of times per year & could drop, plus the 3 month penalty is unavoidable & drops the effective rate.

With the CD, there's a chance the recession doesn't happen before I redeem & then I pay no penalty.
Reply
Last edited by sknick April 21, 2023 at 02:53 PM.
Joined Mar 2009
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,283 Posts
425 Reputation
kgorilla
04-19-2023 at 01:54 PM.
04-19-2023 at 01:54 PM.
Quote from sknick :
Yeah but without getting into too much detail, I'm dealing with many many multiples of $10k & I-bonds have the $10k limit.

The I-bond rate is reset at least a couple of times per year & could drop, plus the 3 month penalty is unavoidable & drops the effective rate.

With the CD, there's a chance the recession doesn't happen before I redeem & then I pay no penalty.

The 3 month penalty is totally avoidable, just hold the ibond for 5+ years.
Reply
Joined Dec 2013
L4: Apprentice
> bubble2 312 Posts
162 Reputation
newgun
04-19-2023 at 04:00 PM.
04-19-2023 at 04:00 PM.
Quote from kgorilla :
The 3 month penalty is totally avoidable, just hold the ibond for 5+ years.

You didn't even understand what we were talking about. Nobody said it wasn't avoidable.
2
Reply
Joined Dec 2009
L3: Novice
> bubble2 197 Posts
104 Reputation
mojodmonky
04-19-2023 at 04:04 PM.
04-19-2023 at 04:04 PM.
Quote from anatvass313 :
If you do not have any accounts with CIT it's a pain to open a new account with a new bank. If you have a brokerage account in a brokerage house like Fidelity or eTrade it's much easier to open a brokered CD there with similar or better rates. It takes 20-30 seconds. Then you do not have to monitor your Maturity date. The funds will be transferred to your core account by default.
In case you need your money before maturity it's easier to sell your brokered CD at market price than to contact bank's customer service and try to liquidate your CD before maturity.
huh? i've never banked with CIT and opened a platinum savings account, linked it to my existing checking account with a different bank, and initiated the transfer of funds in like 3 minutes. i probably could have done it quicker if i didnt get up to get a drink during the process.
Reply
Joined May 2011
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,349 Posts
182 Reputation
__JaYMaSTeR__
04-19-2023 at 04:59 PM.
04-19-2023 at 04:59 PM.
Quote from anatvass313 :
If you do not have any accounts with CIT it's a pain to open a new account with a new bank. If you have a brokerage account in a brokerage house like Fidelity or eTrade it's much easier to open a brokered CD there with similar or better rates. It takes 20-30 seconds. Then you do not have to monitor your Maturity date. The funds will be transferred to your core account by default.
In case you need your money before maturity it's easier to sell your brokered CD at market price than to contact bank's customer service and try to liquidate your CD before maturity.
CIT has the easiest account opening process so stop with that #fakenews
easy fund transfer process as well as free wire transfer with 25k in the account
Reply
Joined Mar 2009
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,283 Posts
425 Reputation
kgorilla
04-19-2023 at 05:17 PM.
04-19-2023 at 05:17 PM.
Quote from newgun :
You didn't even understand what we were talking about. Nobody said it wasn't avoidable.

Read the post, I quoted where it said exactly that it was "unavoidable."

I get it, you don't want to hold for the 5 years but saying the penalty is unavoidable is inaccurate, it can be avoiding by holding the ibond for 5+ years, albeit maybe negligible interest in some periods.
Reply
Joined Apr 2023
New User
> bubble2 1 Posts
10 Reputation
BlueSeed7520
04-19-2023 at 07:19 PM.
04-19-2023 at 07:19 PM.
Quote from DrRad :
Maybe I'm wrong, but isn't a 5.0% APY mean 1-year. How does that work for a 6-month CD? Does that only get half?
APY is Annual Percentage Yield. Yes, at 6 month you will get half. Could be 3-month or 11 month or any months CD. There are calculators to do the math.
1
Reply

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Joined Jul 2008
THE TRAVELER
> bubble2 1,703 Posts
354 Reputation
damnthatsadeal
04-19-2023 at 10:09 PM.
04-19-2023 at 10:09 PM.
For some reason can't get CIT added to Mint
1
Reply
Page 3 of 5
Start the Conversation
 
Link Copied

The link has been copied to the clipboard.