Altoona, PA – A fellow Investor Coach shared a story about a Senior Citizen on a radio talk show the other day, lamenting about the ultra-low CD rates the banks are now paying. He had recently spent an entire afternoon visiting one bank after another, trying to eke out a few extra pennies to help with his retirement. As you can imagine, he wasn’t very happy about this, and unfortunately, he didn’t know where else to turn. Such is the dilemma of many Senior Citizens today. So, I decided to do a little research and was absolutely shocked at what I found out. It was “the Bank’s Dirty Little Secret.” According to Market Rates Insight, a research firm, the national average that banks paid to savers in 2015 was just 16 cents for each dollar of total interest that the banks earned. This was the lowest pay-out rate recorded since records were kept.
Now, let’s see how this affects savers in the real world:
Suppose you have $250,000 that you want to rollover from your 401(k) to a bank CD. Like the radio caller above, you want the highest CD rate you can find. Well, a check of bank rates online this week revealed that, nationally, current 5-year CD rates ranged from 1.00% to 1.80% APY. The national average was listed as 1.14%.
So, let’s say that you found and locked into that “high” 1.8% five-year CD with your $250,000 rollover. Your annual interest was going to be $4,500. Not great, but at least your money was “safe.”
The national average that banks paid to savers in 2015 was just 16 cents for each dollar of total interest that the banks earned