Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The catch is that these are measly returns. 7% on 10k? Sure, 700 is nice, but no one is going to be getting rich off these things.
You forgot a very important word - "guaranteed" return.
No one is suggesting an I-bond be the primary vehicle for wealth creation. But they can be an incredibly helpful part of it.
Yep, especially since most 2 parent 2 kid households could buy 80k in the next 6 months which would bring it up to 5.6k. But more importantly, that safe anchor frees up the ability to take risks elsewhere with investments.
Most two parent two kids households have 80k spare to invest??? What planet are you living on???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The catch is that these are measly returns. 7% on 10k? Sure, 700 is nice, but no one is going to be getting rich off these things.
You forgot a very important word - "guaranteed" return.
No one is suggesting an I-bond be the primary vehicle for wealth creation. But they can be an incredibly helpful part of it.
Yep, especially since most 2 parent 2 kid households could buy 80k in the next 6 months which would bring it up to 5.6k. But more importantly, that safe anchor frees up the ability to take risks elsewhere with investments.
Most two parent two kids households have 80k spare to invest??? What planet are you living on???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The catch is that these are measly returns. 7% on 10k? Sure, 700 is nice, but no one is going to be getting rich off these things.
You forgot a very important word - "guaranteed" return.
No one is suggesting an I-bond be the primary vehicle for wealth creation. But they can be an incredibly helpful part of it.
Yep, especially since most 2 parent 2 kid households could buy 80k in the next 6 months which would bring it up to 5.6k. But more importantly, that safe anchor frees up the ability to take risks elsewhere with investments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The catch is that these are measly returns. 7% on 10k? Sure, 700 is nice, but no one is going to be getting rich off these things.
You forgot a very important word - "guaranteed" return.
No one is suggesting an I-bond be the primary vehicle for wealth creation. But they can be an incredibly helpful part of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, 2nd highest I bond rate ever seems like a bad bad thing.
How so? What is the implication?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, 2nd highest I bond rate ever seems like a bad bad thing.
How so? What is the implication?
Anonymous wrote:Man, 2nd highest I bond rate ever seems like a bad bad thing.
Anonymous wrote:The catch is that these are measly returns. 7% on 10k? Sure, 700 is nice, but no one is going to be getting rich off these things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy sh#t.
So let me make sure I understand this:
-The rate is reset every 6 months. The rate from Nov 2021 to April 2022 is 7.12%
-You must hold the bond for at least 12 months.
-If you cash out before 5 years, you lose the last 3 months of interest earnings.
-No state taxes on the income, but you will owe federal taxes on income.
-$10K max per year in electronic bonds, $5K max in paper bonds.
What's the catch?
No catch, other than the $10K limit
Anonymous wrote:Holy sh#t.
So let me make sure I understand this:
-The rate is reset every 6 months. The rate from Nov 2021 to April 2022 is 7.12%
-You must hold the bond for at least 12 months.
-If you cash out before 5 years, you lose the last 3 months of interest earnings.
-No state taxes on the income, but you will owe federal taxes on income.
-$10K max per year in electronic bonds, $5K max in paper bonds.
What's the catch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy sh#t.
So let me make sure I understand this:
-The rate is reset every 6 months. The rate from Nov 2021 to April 2022 is 7.12%
-You must hold the bond for at least 12 months.
-If you cash out before 5 years, you lose the last 3 months of interest earnings.
-No state taxes on the income, but you will owe federal taxes on income.
-$10K max per year in electronic bonds, $5K max in paper bonds.
What's the catch?
Good that on one hand there’s no tax until you redeem or matures. On the other hand, you cannot reinvest the dividends. This might matter more for longer term investors.
Anonymous wrote:Holy sh#t.
So let me make sure I understand this:
-The rate is reset every 6 months. The rate from Nov 2021 to April 2022 is 7.12%
-You must hold the bond for at least 12 months.
-If you cash out before 5 years, you lose the last 3 months of interest earnings.
-No state taxes on the income, but you will owe federal taxes on income.
-$10K max per year in electronic bonds, $5K max in paper bonds.
What's the catch?