Banking

Are Your Savings Working For You?

You cannot prosper if you do not save. Saved money plays a crucial role in not just financial stability but being able to accomplish your plans, hopes, and dreams.

However, the traditional savings accounts offered by many brick-and-mortar banks often fall short in terms of helping your savings grow. The culprit? Low interest rates.

Let me ask you this: ‘Are your savings working for you?’ They should be!

High-yield online savings accounts, as the name suggests, offer a higher yield or interest rate compared to traditional accounts. These accounts are typically offered by online banks or financial institutions and are designed to make your money work harder for you.

Competitive Rates

  • These rates are notably higher than what you'd find with traditional brick-and-mortar banks. While the exact rates may vary depending on the financial institution and market conditions, it's not uncommon to find online savings accounts with rates around 4%!!

Safety

  • Just like traditional banks, many online banks are FDIC-insured. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) provides insurance coverage for up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank. This means that even if the bank were to face financial difficulties, your deposits are protected!

Financial Event Update: The Banking Crisis

Let’s talk about the banking crisis, what happened, and what it means for you. 

What Happened:

Interest rates are so low for so long, that the government sells their debt at the prevailing interest rates and they sell US treasuries.

SVB Bank was putting their depositor's money into these two-year, five-year, and ten-year treasuries. Well, that means they have to hold them for two years, five years, or ten years, or they have to sell them on a secondary market.

With the economic decline, some of SVB Bank's depositors came in and started taking more of their money out than the bank had readily available, some of what was in these treasury bonds.

These treasury bonds had declined in value. Why? Because the Federal Reserve had increased interest rates, making the bonds less valuable. So SVB Bank went to the secondary market and was auctioning several billion dollars worth of these treasuries to be able to get cash to give to their depositors.

When several billion dollars worth of US treasuries hit the secondary market, people begin to talk. And, quickly found out SVB Bank was doing this. Word ran really fast in a digital age and many people raced to the bank to get their money!

And the next thing you know, SVB Bank was on the verge of collapse and ended up going into receivership. As a result, the bank’s depositors would have lost their money if it was outside of FDIC insurance.  With FDIC insurance, the federal government stepped in and made sure all depositors’ money was backed up.

Here is the lesson:

The lesson is that everybody, including very smart bankers, got stuck on low-interest rates and didn't keep themselves with enough margin or enough liquidity to be able to think about what could happen if rates started going up and they couldn't transfer fast enough when the rates increased so greatly.

What could you do personally?

Well, make sure that your deposits, if you have the issue of a lot of cash, don't exceed the FDIC insurance amount. Maybe have your deposits at multiple banks. That's one way that you can secure your money, so that when you need it, when you demand it, you can go get it, get fired up, and have a fully funded life!