In a recent thread somewhere at OTT I mentioned that I was fortunate to have invested in US Treasury I Bond savings bonds years ago. Me and the wife that is...
Anyway, they are paying quite good interest at the present time.
There are limitations with them, such as you cannot cash them in for 12 months, and if you do cash them in before 5 years, you lose the last three months of interest. And the maximum purchase per SSN is $10K per year.
Still, comparing to what I was getting for over a year, which was essentially 0% ( after cashing in an unneeded life insurance policy) it is a pretty good deal with essentially no risk.
Without getting into details, I got in under the wire at the end of April, and will get 7.2% for six months, and 9.6 percent for the following six months. This is real money. It never decreases, unlike the stock market where you only really know you made money when you cash out. This was money that was sitting in a bank account earning nothing basically. I plan on using it after 12 months, whenever I need some extra cash.
If purchased today, the first six months will pay 9.6%, and the second six months will be determined later, according to inflation.
The I Bonds we bought back in 2000 and 2001 are paying 11.9% for 2022, but they were an exceptionally lucky purchase with a fixed rate on average of 3.5% which is added to the inflation adjustment.
Just wondering how you guys are handling extra cash on hand that you do not need at the moment...
By the way, I also have a stash the wife doesn't know about in my workshop where I keep some other small money...LOL Her mistake was mentioning to me once that her dad had a secret stash himself. Quick learner here sometimes...LOL
Here is a link to the treasury department if any one is interested:
Anyway, they are paying quite good interest at the present time.
There are limitations with them, such as you cannot cash them in for 12 months, and if you do cash them in before 5 years, you lose the last three months of interest. And the maximum purchase per SSN is $10K per year.
Still, comparing to what I was getting for over a year, which was essentially 0% ( after cashing in an unneeded life insurance policy) it is a pretty good deal with essentially no risk.
Without getting into details, I got in under the wire at the end of April, and will get 7.2% for six months, and 9.6 percent for the following six months. This is real money. It never decreases, unlike the stock market where you only really know you made money when you cash out. This was money that was sitting in a bank account earning nothing basically. I plan on using it after 12 months, whenever I need some extra cash.
If purchased today, the first six months will pay 9.6%, and the second six months will be determined later, according to inflation.
The I Bonds we bought back in 2000 and 2001 are paying 11.9% for 2022, but they were an exceptionally lucky purchase with a fixed rate on average of 3.5% which is added to the inflation adjustment.
Just wondering how you guys are handling extra cash on hand that you do not need at the moment...
By the way, I also have a stash the wife doesn't know about in my workshop where I keep some other small money...LOL Her mistake was mentioning to me once that her dad had a secret stash himself. Quick learner here sometimes...LOL
Here is a link to the treasury department if any one is interested:
Home — TreasuryDirect
www.treasurydirect.gov