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Are
You Laddering Your CD Maturities?
Choosing the length of savings certificates is an important decision.
The issues of liquidity and the future direction of interest rates can
make the decision difficult. Longer maturity certificates usually provide
the highest return, but they also tie up your funds longer. Shorter maturities
provide flexibility to take advantage of rising rates, but usually lower
returns. Ideally, you would want the highest current return coupled with
the ability to invest at higher rates if interest rates rose.
Creating a "ladder"
of maturities is a way to create a "portfolio" of certificates
that will put you in a position to earn good rates and invest at higher
rates if interest rates rise. Simply stated, with this strategy, you divide
your funds into pieces and buy equal amounts of different maturity certificates.
Here is an example:
Let's
assume you have $25,000 and want to buy certificates with maturities up
to five years. The rates on certificates are:
| 1 year |
5.1% |
| 2 year |
5.5% |
| 3 year |
5.8% |
| 4 year |
5.9% |
| 5 year |
6.1% |
By making initial purchases of $5000 each of the different maturities, your
average rate would be about 5.5%. Each year, as a certificate matures, you
would use the proceeds to buy a 5-year certificate. That way, as time went
on, more and more of your funds would be earning the highest rate and you
would still have annual liquidity. If rates rise, you have liquidity to
buy higher yielding certificates. If rates fall, you are still earning high
rates on your existing positions.
No one can accurately predict the future of interest rates. Using this
"Ladder of Maturities" strategy can help position you to benefit
regardless of the direction of interest rate changes.
Click
here to check out our CD rates.
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