Savings account interest?

If you have account with any of the online Brokerage Companies, they all have Money Market Funds.
Since they are ‘funds’ they are insured by SIPC, same as Stocks.
Most of my ‘cash’ is in 3 Charles Schwab funds.
Presently making 4+ %.
If you want to hold to the higher yields, these same folks have CDs, Bonds and Treasuries.
Nowadays, Bonds and CDs often have Calls. Recently I’ve had several called.
Depending on how much you have to invest, Treasuries are hard to beat.
Tax Free interest which rivals the other stuff which is taxed.
Starting small? You can open a Charles Schwab Money Market Account with $1!
 
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Fully agree. My wife's late aunt had what she thought was a revocable trust fund set up legally in FL. After she died (at 93), it took 10 months to even get close to sorting it out. It turned out that the "Trust Fund" was simply a regular savings account delivering all of 0.2% sometimes!! My wife met with the bank in Eastern FL and was simply told that she could not cash it in as they did not have enough funds at the branch to do anything!! As I said above, 10 months arguing with American until we were able to even begin to sort out the problems. Moral, as mentioned above "remove all monies from BoA as fast as you can!!" Dave_n

Besides sloppy and flat out dishonest handling of money, Bank of America management can be VERY anti American.
We all know about the practice in smaller towns of when a US service member is killed and returned home, local veteran and civics groups often locate the funeral procession route from the church where the funeral service will take place and the cemetery where the soldier is to be buried, and stick hundreds of miniature American flags in the grass by the road along the route.
On more than one occasion, if a BOA branch is along the route, the branch manager or their designated flunkie will go out before the funeral procession and Honor Guard comes by and pull up all the flags on bank property.
Some branches will not allow employees put up a large, or even small Christmas tree in the building anywhere because it is not “inclusive” enough, and is considered to be offensive to muslims and atheists.
I am not saying the above listed practices are universal to all their individual banks and employees, but the fact that at the corporate level such behavior is tolerated at all, would be a deal-breaker for me.
 
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I belong to a credit union and for whatever reason my checking account accrues interest at a higher rate than my savings account.
 
I bank with a local bank and have two accounts there. One is a checking account that pays about .5% and the other is a money market account that was paying 4.75% but dropped to 4% recently. The money market account is fully FDIC insured and total liquid. So what is nice about this setup is I keep a very low checking balance and move money into it from the market account as needed with a simple transfer on line or with their app.

Being local I can walk in and speak to, or deal with, a real person anytime. Big plus IMO.
 
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A bit off topic but, my daughter worked for Bank of America prior to the 2008 housing/banking crisis. During a performance review she asked why certain employees that were newer than her were getting promoted and she wasn't. Reason, they were making more and larger loans than she was. Daughter quit. Some loans that she had denied were made by the other employees. Daughter could foresee what was coming. Good job for a small town gal just a couple of years out of college.
 
I keep a very low checking balance and move money into it from the market account as needed with a simple transfer on line or with their app.

Being local I can walk in and speak to, or deal with, a real person anytime. Big plus IMO.
Those reasons are precisely why I have dealt with PNC for over 20 years through at least two name changes that I can recall...Everyone at my branch knows me by name when I walk through the door...:D...Ben
 
I belong to a credit union and for whatever reason my checking account accrues interest at a higher rate than my savings account.
Could it be because you keep a larger balance in your checking account than you do in your savings account?


A lot of institutions will pay you a larger or smaller interest rate, depending on the balance in the account.
 
That’s the kicker.
The when savings account and CD rates go up, loan interest rates go up even higher.
Me and the wife got lucky. In 2018 we got a 30 year house loan at 2.38% (Fixed). That’s only a dream for borrowers now.
We could pay it off tomorrow if we wanted to, but we take the money we are saving on home loan interest and plow it into Roth IRA, CD’s and existing Schwab accounts mutual funds.
We are not wealthy, but we are doing okay. I retired 15 July 2024.
One of the best things I ever did.

Stellar mortgage rate. I thought I did well in 2018 getting 3.625%. I could have gone for a refi, but I could not stomach the greed of the mortgage broker types and their percentage cut. I'm buying a house, not feeding half of Vegas.
 
I have a money market savings account with VIO Bank, the online division of Midfirst Bank in OK City. When I first opened it they were paying over 5%. I think it's around 4.3 now. Not great, but it's better than nothing and fully FDIC insured. It's easy to transfer money in and out whenever I need to. Transfers happen pretty quickly - within a day or two.
 
I am not a financial wizard by any stretch. My trust in banks to manage my money is nearly the same level of trust I have in doctors.... nearly zero.

But I like to have some "cash" more readily available.

I have a PenFed Credit Union "Premium Online Savings" account that pays 3.00% APY, and it has a reasonably quick access if I need to get a chunk of cash or make a transfer to one of my other financial accounts.
 
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There is risk, but some of the money center banks have investment grade preferred stocks yielding 6 to 7%. Plus there are tax advantages. But the stock price can fluctuate both up and down. I have quite a bit in a Morgan Stanley preferred that yields around 6-6.5%. I do not worry too much about its price fluctuations. Ditto for an M&T Bank preferred with an approximate 7% yield.
 
Could it be because you keep a larger balance in your checking account than you do in your savings account?

A lot of institutions will pay you a larger or smaller interest rate, depending on the balance in the account.

Could be, I’m not much of a money man. I’ve spent the last fifteen years paying off a lot of debt (without going bankrupt) thanks to a divorce so I don’t have much in savings but I do have a roof over my head, food to eat, and my plan is to be debt-free in a couple years. (My credit rating has jumped ~ 200 points in the past decade.)
 
Local banks and credit unions always pay better than online investments and nationals that spend a lot on advertising and emails.

My bank pays interest on my checking, and a good rate on savings, but I was not getting the returns I needed, and had too much in my checking. At the first of the year, I moved balances from checking and savings into higher yield CD's, leaving myself with what I feel are enough liquid assets. When the first CD's roll over later this year, I may move more savings to them.
 
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My bank tried that rate drop thing with me. I told them if the FED drops a quarter of a point, I do not expect to move any more than that, or I will move my money and you can borrow from the FED at 5%. They are not Gods. they really do want your money at a discounted rate below prime. They just won't admit how badly they want it

The past few years have been an interesting learning experience.

I have been a member at one credit union for 51 years, another credit union for 42 years, and a third one for 15 years. Occasionally I see tellers and customer service reps come and go, but I've also been dealing with the managers and officers since they started on the job. When I call by phone I ask for a specific person by name. When I walk into the office I am usually recognized.

Last month I dealt with a CD account at maturity I asked for a check to redeem. Why? Another credit union was willing to pay significantly higher interest. A new CD was issued quickly, at the rate and term offered by the competition.

Sure, I'm talking about a fairly good chunk of change, not a smaller account. But the point is that many places will be competitive when offered the opportunity. Most of them don't like to see large deposits walking out the door. They all spend a lot of time, effort, and advertising budget to generate deposits.

Another CD account due to mature next month. I need a new insulated coffee mug so I will be driving a hard bargain.
 
I've avoided banks. I have my money in a local credit union. For the month of Jan. I received a dividend of $2.77 on the $1073 in their money market account.
 
OpenBank, an online bank, is paying 4.75% on savings account. FDIC insured. It was paying 5% when I opened an account a few months ago. CitiBank online saving is paying 4.45%. You have to be comfortable with strictly online transactions. At 79 it has taken me awhile to get comfortable with online banking, but I manage fairly well at this time.
 
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