I am actually considering buying EE Savings bonds this year.
Series EE/E Savings Bond Rates
1.40%
It is not adjusted for inflation. That's all we get. It is tax deferred, not that it means much. At this point you are probably about done reading and think I've gone certifiably insane. Right?
So why am I considering them? They are sold at half their face value. In 20 years they are guaranteed to double to their face value. In other words, if you hold them the full 20 years you are guaranteed 3.526% per year.
EE/E Bonds Rates & Terms
At a minimum, the U.S. Treasury guarantees that an EE Bond's value will double after 20 years...
If inflation remains somewhat tame, then 3.5% per year might not be so bad. If we actually slide into an ongoing deflationary mess, then 3.5% might be very good.
Let's compare that to the current yields on long dated treasuries. The 10-Year yields 3.59%. The 30-Year yields 4.41%. A 20-Year would be in the 4% range. 3.5% is a bit light.
There is one major advantage here though. We can bail anytime we like (must hold one year, three-month interest penalty before 5 years) without taking a loss. If interest rates rise substantially then we won't lose money. We can simply cash them out and reinvest into something that pays better. That's the main reason I am considering them.
Here's the worst case. We earn 1.4% interest for 10 years and then inflation really takes off. We clearly want to cash them out at this point. In hindsight, we would have done much better simply buying the 10-Year Treasury that paid 3.59% and holding it for the 10 years. We missed out on the 2.19% interest rate difference. That's a lot of interest.
Here's the best case. We slide into Japan's deflationary mess and we're basically earning 3.5% per year for the next 20 years.
Here's the expected case. We earn 1.4% for a few years. We cash them out. We put the money back to work when interest rates are higher than they are now. That's not exactly my expected case, but most still seem to think it is possible.
There's no hurry on the decision. The 1.4% rate is good through October. It will depend a lot on what interest rates do between now and then. If interest rates fall, then I will probably be buying these savings bonds. If interest rates rise, then I probably won't be.
I mostly just see this as a possible alternative to holding cash, but it could actually end up being more than that. If nothing else, the 1.4% rate is higher than what my online savings account currently pays.
I prefer I-Bonds, but there's only so many we can buy in a year.
Keep in mind that this is not an investment idea and it is most certainly not investment advice. It's simply a savings idea.
Real Estate Newsletter Articles this Week: Existing-Home Sales Increased to
4.15 million SAAR in November
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At the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter this week:
[image: Existing Home Sales]*Click on graph for larger image.*
• NAR: Existing-Home Sales Increase...
12 hours ago
4 comments:
Mark,
Thats not half bad at all, all things considered.
GYSC,
It think it shows us just how dire our situation has become that 1.4% savings bonds start looking attractive compared to the alternatives.
If this economic recovery was for real, interest rates would not be this low.
Here's what I said in April.
I-Bond Rates Reset on May 1st
Both charts imply that 0.1% is the most likely rate on May 1st if we assume that we're still in crisis mode. The stock market may disagree with me, but I tend to think we're in permanent crisis mode now. I'm therefore not convinced that November's rate has a chance of being much higher.
We got 0.2%. The "crisis mode" assumption clearly still applies. I would have predicted a much higher rate otherwise.
"If this economic recovery was for real, interest rates would not be this low."
What a conspiracy nut!
Snark on.
GYSC,
The crisis is our gift to the world and it just keeps on giving!
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