Savings account interest?

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.
 
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.

I do the same thing you are talking about.
Money Market accounts are easy to access for withdrawals.
 
A bank savings account is only good for access to quick cash. It is not an "investment" by any means. You want an investment? Get into the market and don't pay attention to the daily ups and down. The baseline always goes up. Get into it for the long haul.
 
Greetings! Perhaps I'm stuck in the 1970s when banks paid reasonable interest, but ...

This morning, I checked the savings account that I recently opened with Wells Fargo, and I was in a state of shock! My 30 day deposit of $1000 garnered the grand sum of $0.01 in interest!

Can anyone recommend a bank that actually pays better interest?

As always, thanks in advance for your help!
Nope.
But I can recommend ditching your commercial bank and moving your money to a credit union.
Commercial banks are all about making money off your deposits.
Credit Unions are all about making money for the members and "spreading the wealth" in the form of higher interest rates on your deposits, and giving you lower interest rates on loans.
I have a savings account with one of my local credit unions that pays 3.75% on all deposits. No fees, no minimums.
I think you'd be pretty hard pressed to find that at any commercial bank.
FWIW, I ditched commercial banks and started doing all my banking with credit unions over 40 years ago - and I have never regretted that decision.
YMMV...
 
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Just a little curious

With the interest rates so low - the banks spend more for the postage mailing you statements than the interest they pay you.

bekeart
 
I moved my savings to FDIC insured CD's 2 years ago, interest rates between 4% to 5.5%.
I've been very pleased with them since I can redeem them anytime with a reasonable penalty. Currently have 8 in rotation.
 
If you want a fixed income relatively safe investment, Treasury Bonds, CD's and money markets are good. The problem is they will only pay you about 4.3% as of today unless you go out to 10 or 30 years. Muni bonds are very low now unless they are rated very low. Corporate bonds will usually pay higher rates but who knows what their stability is.....
 
I'm pulling 4% locked in on a MM account in my small town bank. Minimum to get that rate is 25K. Money from that account is available to me anytime the bank is open.
 
A bank savings account is only good for access to quick cash. It is not an "investment" by any means. You want an investment? Get into the market and don't pay attention to the daily ups and down. The baseline always goes up. Get into it for the long haul.

Historically proven.
 
I've been banking online for 5-6 years with Barclay's. Even after the last 3 or 4 interest rate cuts, my savings account is still at 4.25%. Have several CD's with them as well. Last CD I had mature, I just rolled it into the savings as CD rates have fallen a lot. I still have a local account at a credit union I've been with close to 50 years. Pension and Soc. Sec. direct deposit to them. Their interest rates suck. I keep enough there to pay the bills and buy groceries, etc. Any extra goes to Barclay's. If I need monies, they usually have it to my C.U. in a day or 2 providing it's not the weekend. No fees, no hassles. I've been real satisfied with their service.

Tiered Savings | Barclays
 
The first best step is to reduce debt; most of ours has been paid monthly.
Irrelevant to the question of savings interest, but most certainly TRUE!

One of my favorite quotes comes from "David Copperfield," by Charles Dickens. The character of Wilkins Micawber says...

"Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen and six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds nought and six, result misery."

In other words, the first step on the road to happiness is to LIVE WITHIN YOUR MEANS! Amazing how many people refuse to do that these days.
 
Wells Fargo is your first problem.
The SEC has stuck it's foot up their backside a number of times in the past decade, and they don't seem to change much
 
In other words, the first step on the road to happiness is to LIVE WITHIN YOUR MEANS! Amazing how many people refuse to do that these days.

Because the system runs on debt. If you live within your means and don't borrow money, when you decide to borrow money for a big purchase, like a house or car, you are treated as a higher risk than someone with already crippling debt.
Want a job? They're gonna check your credit score. Want an apartment? They're gonna check your credit score. It's what matters now.
Hell, I wanted to upgrade my internet, so I went to Comcast and signed up for their internet. $60 a month, electronic withdrawals, no problem. Then they told me I could upgrade my phone service at no extra cost. They would even upgrade my phone to the newest model. All at no extra cost.
I've already signed a contract to pay them this money every month. But the phone, which was no extra cost, remember, I couldn't get because my credit score wasn't good enough. Never mind that I have enough money to buy a dozen phones in my bank, I can't get the phone because I haven't put myself in debt. Never mind that I could buy a phone, or just use the one I have now, I can't do it because of my credit score.
Oh, and the fact I have had the same plan for over 20 years with the same carrier and never missed a payment, that's irrelevant. But did I buy a ton of useless **** with my credit card? Very important.
Banks are like Vegas. They're gonna come out on top no matter what. And like Vegas, they get to change the rules to suit them.
 
Because the system runs on debt. If you live within your means and don't borrow money, when you decide to borrow money for a big purchase, like a house or car, you are treated as a higher risk than someone with already crippling debt.
Want a job? They're gonna check your credit score. Want an apartment? They're gonna check your credit score. It's what matters now.
Hell, I wanted to upgrade my internet, so I went to Comcast and signed up for their internet. $60 a month, electronic withdrawals, no problem. Then they told me I could upgrade my phone service at no extra cost. They would even upgrade my phone to the newest model. All at no extra cost.
I've already signed a contract to pay them this money every month. But the phone, which was no extra cost, remember, I couldn't get because my credit score wasn't good enough. Never mind that I have enough money to buy a dozen phones in my bank, I can't get the phone because I haven't put myself in debt. Never mind that I could buy a phone, or just use the one I have now, I can't do it because of my credit score.
Oh, and the fact I have had the same plan for over 20 years with the same carrier and never missed a payment, that's irrelevant. But did I buy a ton of useless **** with my credit card? Very important.
Banks are like Vegas. They're gonna come out on top no matter what. And like Vegas, they get to change the rules to suit them.
Well, FWIW, you can build your credit score without carrying debt.
We charge a LOT of our day to day spending to our credit cards. BUT, we pay them off at the end of every month. Have for years.
We paid off our home 2 years ago.
We have NO car loans.
Our only debit is a small, low interest mortgage on our lake place - and the only reason we haven't paid that off is we can earn more in interest with a CD than what we're paying on the loan.
Our credit score is just over 825.
So, no, you don't have to be in debt to have an excellent credit score. You just have to use credit regularly, but pay it off every month.
 
Well, FWIW, you can build your credit score without carrying debt.
We charge a LOT of our day to day spending to our credit cards. BUT, we pay them off at the end of every month...

That's what I do, I use my credit card to pay many of my bills online and then pay it off on payday... and even when I couldn't afford to pay it off I paid as much as I could over the minimum payment. That's the only way I can think of to ultimately be debt-free.
 
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