Savings Accounts vs. CDs: Where to Keep Your Money in 2010?
If you’re a savvy investor, you most certainly have a fair bit of cash tucked away for general spending and emergencies. The stock market is a long term investment and if 2009 taught us anything, it was to not have money you need to spend in the stock market. So where do you put the money you don’t want in the stock market?
There’s 3 main options to place your cash and get it FDIC insured for up to $250,000.
- You can put your money in a checking account where you have fast and easy access to funds.
- You can put your money in a savings account where you can take money out and put money in while still earning interest on your funds, or
- You can put your money in a certificate of deposit, which typically has higher yields than savings but your money is locked into the account for the agreed upon term.
So where should you put your money? Well all 3 of course.
For money that you plan on spending you should keep in a checking account. It’s the easiest account to get money into and out of so it makes sense to keep spending money in it. You shouldn’t keep more than you need to however because you don’t get a return on your investment in a checking account.
This is where savings accounts and certificates of deposit jump into the picture. Your strategy becomes more complicated now because of the fact that you must lock in a rate when opening a CD.
So what is the best cash strategy for 2010?
If you pay attention to CD rates you know that they’re at the lowest levels since the 80s right now. So it doesn’t make much sense to lock in to a long term CD right now because they’re bound to increase when the unemployment rate drops and the Fed decides to raise interest rates. So there’s 2 main strategies you should consider. The first is to convert any maturing CDs you have into savings accounts.
The yields on savings accounts are not that much lower than what banks are offering on CDs so there isn’t that much incentive to lock in your money. You could keep your extra cash in savings accounts which will leave you ready to jump on a CD when rates start climbing back up. Just make sure you stay under the ...