Posts with keyword interest rate→
Buy I Bonds by April 30 to earn 4.28–6.06%
I just came across this Savings Bond Advisory:
Given that the current fixed base rate is 1.20%, it would much better to invest in I bonds this month rather than waiting until May 1 or later. I bonds you purchase today will earn a composite rate of 4.28% for six months, followed by six month of 6.06%. These are much higher rates than are available in bank CDs or even other US Treasury securities
What determines the “real” interest rate?
(This post is a part of the series on Basics of Finance and Investing.)
An interest rate is the monthly rate you pay as a borrower, or receive as a creditor/lender. If you save money in bank, or invest in a money market, you are indirectly lending money to a borrowing corporation (or the government). If the interest rate goes up, the borrower must pay you more, which makes them unhappy but you happy (your bank balance soars). The mood swings the other way when interest rate goes down.
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Anticipating Bernanke’s next move
I generally avoid reading predictions of the government’s move every time the market hits a rough patch, as is happening now. Guessing the mind of Fed chief Ben Bernanke – if he will cut the interest rate again to soothe investor sentiment – has become as much a suspense as predicting the stock market.
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