For me it was just al alternative to leaving it in the money market getting 4.9-5.1% so even if I got called out I did slightly better. I didn't really overthink it
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Evidence that they white knuckling the global economy.
They overconfident. They think they magicians.
They'll do anything to save off going into a death wobble.
We might already be there now. It's clear that numbers released to the public are fudged. Nobody really knows what we looking at.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Evidence that they white knuckling the global economy.
They overconfident. They think they magicians.
They'll do anything to save off going into a death wobble.
We might already be there now. It's clear that numbers released to the public are fudged. Nobody really knows what we looking at.
The fact that the CD's are only callable at a certain date. For a lot of 12mo callable CD's, the rate is good for the first 6 months and then callable every month beyond that up to maturity. So that rate is guaranteed for 6 months. Your HYSA has no rate guarantees. It might pay 5.40% now but could (and likely will) drop significantly sometime this fall.I bleed maroon said:Yep. I'm trying to think of situations where a callable CD will be better at the same rate - FDIC protection? don't think so. Bankruptcy Priority? don't think so. Frictional/operational costs for the bank or enacting the call may make them slightly more reticent to move? Maybe, ever so slightly. Financial statement desireability for individuals or corporations? Doubt it, but there may be situations where CDs are viewed more favorably for some loan applications or other due diligence purposes. Bankers, any insight?Proposition Joe said:
You can get 5.4%+ on a HYSA, which is better than a callable CD.
Baby Billy said:The fact that the CD's are only callable at a certain date. For a lot of 12mo callable CD's, the rate is good for the first 6 months and then callable every month beyond that up to maturity. So that rate is guaranteed for 6 months. Your HYSA has no rate guarantees. It might pay 5.40% now but could (and likely will) drop significantly sometime this fall.I bleed maroon said:Yep. I'm trying to think of situations where a callable CD will be better at the same rate - FDIC protection? don't think so. Bankruptcy Priority? don't think so. Frictional/operational costs for the bank or enacting the call may make them slightly more reticent to move? Maybe, ever so slightly. Financial statement desireability for individuals or corporations? Doubt it, but there may be situations where CDs are viewed more favorably for some loan applications or other due diligence purposes. Bankers, any insight?Proposition Joe said:
You can get 5.4%+ on a HYSA, which is better than a callable CD.
These should be treated as 6mo CD's, then anything you can get beyond that is just a cherry on top.