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Certificates of
Deposit for Your Cash Reserves
Certificates of Deposit
(CDs) can be ideal vehicles for investing funds that you do not need in
the near term. CDs are promissory notes issued by banks, credit unions
or thrift institutions. They are time deposits usually having maturities
ranging from 30 days to as long as ten years. The most popular terms are
from 90 days to five years. Since they are time deposits, usually offer
higher interest rates than savings accounts, but they have penalties (often
90 days of interest) for early withdrawals.
CDs of less than $100,000
are usually called regular (or small) CDs and those over $100,000 are
referred to as jumbo CDs. Jumbo CDs often pay slightly higher interest
rates than regular CDs. In addition, CDs with longer maturities usually
pay higher rates. Here is an example of how longer maturities offer higher
rates.
| Maturity |
Rate |
| 3 months |
0.25% |
| 6 months |
0.30% |
| 9 months |
0.45% |
| 1 year |
0.60% |
| 2 years |
1.70% |
| 3 years |
2.15% |
| 5 years |
2.95% |
| 10 years |
3.75% |
When choosing the
maturity of a CD to buy, it is important to consider your liquidity needs
and that interest rates will change over time. Buying a five year CD with
a 2.95% rate may be attractive today, but if rates rise in the next couple
of years, you are locked into that 2.95% rate until maturity. An alternative
is to use a "laddering of maturities" strategy. For example,
instead of buying one five year CD, buy equal amounts of one, two, three,
four and five year CDs. As each CD matures, you then reinvest the proceeds
into a five year CD. While you would not have as high of an initial rate,
over time all your funds would end up in higher rate five year CDs and
you would have annual liquidity of one fifth of your funds. If rates rise,
you would take advantage of the higher rates with new purchases. If rates
fall, you still have the initial higher rate CDs that you already own.
CDs offered by banks
and thrift institutions are insured up to $250,000 by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and those offered by credit unions are insured
by the National Credit Union Share Insurance Funds that is an arm of the
National Credit Union Administration (NCUA). There are ownership rules
applied to determining the insurance limit and you should thoroughly investigate
these rules if you are considering having over $250,000 with a single
institution.
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