Transferred the Bruce money into Schwab via indirect rollover with a Bruce cheque. It sat as "cash" for ONE day in the account. That one day generated 13 CENTS of interest. After a chat on the Schwab website, there is clearly nothing to be done except to let that 13 cents ride, like a flea on a hippopotamus, for 438 years until it grows to be at least $1.00. THEN, it can be used to buy shares in the chosen mutual fund.
Truth is stranger than fiction. I shit you not.
Comments
Slightly more seriously, you might be able to move the cash into SWVXX. According to Schwab's webpage for the fund, that has a true zero minimum, as opposed to, say, SNXFX that requires $1.00 to open. With the higher interest you'll get (assuming rates don't fall), you'll be able to open up that SNXFX account in just half a century give or take.
For tax purposes, was the Bruce cheque made payable to Schwab FBO your IRA? If it was, then it counts as a trustee-to-trustee transfer, and not an indirect transfer. This matters because you are allowed just one 60-day (indirect) transfer per year, but an unlimited number of trustee-to-trustee transfers. Just in case you want to move that 13¢ to Fidelity
And I bet it costs them more then 13 cents to administer/track/journal that amount, too. LOL
Cash management @ Schwab still sucks bigtime but I don't see that changing anytime soon unless there's a large exodus of AUM.
So, move the $s right away to a Schwab m-mkt fund.
In 1976, you could have mailed a letter first-class for 13-cents
But, TBH, this is something I've never fretted over.
(I deposited the check into the rollover IRA.)
I'll add, where the low interest rate is painful is in their robo accounts. Those portfolios typically put 10 to 12% in the cash sweep. That's how they make their money on the Intelligent Portfolios. Seemed ok when all cash vehicles made close to nothing. But times have changed. I dumped the robo last year, mostly because of that.
I started RMDs in 2022 and I have to hand it to Schwab, they make it very easy and it was something I was fretting over. They tell you in January the amount you will owe for the year down to the penny, and you can have it transferred out in any time frame you want -- I like monthly and you can select any day of the month you want. I have it transferred into my brokerage account automatically, although I could have it moved to my local bank checking account automatically if I wanted.
I could keep the cash in my brokerage account cleaned out and into the MM, and do when it gets high enough, but I never leave it empty.
Now with 5%+ MMs, that has changed a lot of things. I have a lot in the MM where previously I would have had it in some kind of short bond fund.
Ha, the robo accounts? I never got sucked into that for numerous reasons, the main one being that I want total control over my portfolio. When they came out with them I was still in the accumulation stage and I sure didn't want 10%+ of my portfolio sitting in cash.
Oh well, so far so good.
But there's a wall around wifey's Trad IRA.
EDIT TO ADD: By law, are we even able to add to an IRA, if we both have no EARNED income? Even if we were to do it on a non-deductible basis?
*Her IRA is at $11,000.00, and so I'm not seeing much use in diversifying and splitting up only that much.
There are a few angles going on. Neither of us has any earned income. Not officially, I mean. I don't think we are even eligible to put anything more into either of our Trad. IRAs. Years ago, you were recommending that we convert to Roths. We didn't, and it's worked out better for us.
So... It's too early to withdraw anything from wifey's IRA without a penalty. She's not 59 and a half, yet. And we can't ADD, either. Neither can we add to my own IRA. No earned income. Which is why we created the taxable trading account.
Here at MFO, we religiously don't speak in terms of raw dollar amounts. That's a good idea. So, in practical terms, we have erected our OWN wall around wifey's IRA, because it's premature to make withdrawals, and also because the whole thing is worth just a hair more than $11k. Kinda useless to be rearranging and "diworsifying," while dealing with only that much money.
Bottom line: you might be able to make a temporary contribution, but the complexities and risk don't seem to make it worthwhile to earn a couple extra pennies interest.
Since you have posted the size of the account ($11K), I can now illustrate how disclosing just a little information may reveal more than intended. People should be careful about posting any dollar amounts. (Percentages are usually okay since they don't say anything about the size of accounts.)
Schwab's cash account (or bank sweep) pays 0.45% APY Assuming daily compounding and a 365 day calendar, that's 0.00123%/day.
An account of $10,568 would earn 13¢ in a day at this rate. An account less than $11,381 would earn less than 14¢. So without being told that the account size was $11K, we already knew that the IRA cash transferred in amounted to between $10,568 and $11,381.
Holy Jaypers crow! I dunno how you got there, but that's amazing. Of course, you're correct. When I grow up, I wanna be just like you!