I have been watching CD rates closely, and since the FEDs raised rates in July, CD rates are about the same, maybe a little less. Shortly before the FEDs rate hikes in July, I purchased 3 CDs (6 and 9 month) for 5.3%, but at Schwab Brokerage, you can only get 5.3% in the one year category. It appeas CD rates have fallen slightly in all other shorter and longer categories. Money Market rates have gone up significantly at Schwab, since the last FED rate hike, and are now paying over 5%. I now have more CDs maturing, and my inclination is to just put the proceeds into 5+% MMs, and wait a little longer to make investing decisions with some growing cash.
If you have been using CDs extensively for the past year, I would be curious what your plans are with your available cash.
Comments
Anyway, not a big concern - to me.
Regarding 5 year CDs - Seems like a long time to wait and if you need access to that CD (cash), I would be sure I understood the early redemption penalty?
Do you manually transfer such money to another specific MM account?
Thanks- OJ
Honestly, paying little to no interest on the sweep account is THE biggest drawback to Schwab versus Fidelity in my opinion.
Brokerages typically offer to hold your "free credit balance" (cash) as a general obligation of the brokerage (SIPC insured up to $250K).
For example, at Fidelity this account is called Fidelity Cash (FCASH), currently paying 2.69%. At Schwab, this is called the Schwab One® Interest Feature, currently paying 0.45%.
Such cash balances may appear on brokerage statements as "Brokerage".
Schwab pays the same meager 0.45% whether you hold your cash this way or elect to sweep the money into Schwab Bank. At Fidelity, you can elect to sweep cash into a MMF currently yielding 4.94% instead of FCASH's 2.69%.
https://www.fidelity.com/mutual-funds/fidelity-funds/money-market-funds-fcash
@msf, MikeM, and others- Thanks to all for your info. This is what I suspected- that if you want decent interest on your cash at Schwab you have to manually transfer the money to a mmkt fund. I do have a fund there (SWKXX) that I use to hold cash, but it's a Municipal mmkt fund.
The problem with Schwab's mmkt funds is that you can't instantly transfer money from them to buy some other security- you have to sell the mmkt fund, then wait for that to show up in the "brokerage account" before you can redeploy it.
Thanks, Mike- I certainly agree with you on that. I just wanted to check and see if there was a decent automatic sweep-account feature that I was unaware of.
I agree the lack of a sweep account is a very big negative for Schwab. I just forgot to move a large T bill redemption to a MMF for a month and figure it really cost me
Vanguard is a disaster, Schwab is cheap and costing me money, but I hate to put all my accounts at Fido.
I worry about a company that is privately help and does not have to report financial results regularly.
There are problems with them all
Anybody else satisfied with other alternatives?
@hondo- I've passed through that phase and am now in the "my thinking is evaporating" phase. I can hardly wait to see what comes next. Maybe a weekend pass from "the home".
If I really believed in it strongly, I would try to go out as long as I could within the next year at anything over 5.5% -- but really I'm not so sure. I'm afraid inflation might get out of control. If we go out one year now, I think rates will still be this good or better in a year.
btw, there is no reason to buy CDs with an early withdraw penalty. Buy a brokered CD. My broker tells me that he has been able to sell CDs for clients for very minimal losses or even with small gains. (The seller keeps all accrued interest).
Well, there is nothing a person can do but make adjustments and keep going.
Same here concerning the wife's interest. Actually, I already have a fairly simple portfolio, so I should not be so concerned. Two balanced and one bond fund in the IRA/Roth and two balanced and one bond fund in the taxable accounts plus MM and some CDs. I could but don't want to change the taxable funds because of the large capital gains involved. We have owned them for a long time. I suppose that I should stop looking at this stuff so often and let it ride.
DT: I know what you mean about older homes. We have been in ours about 40 years. We have found out that after that long, things just wear out or need to be updated. We have talked about downsizing, but we do like it out here so we have decided to stay as long as we can.