Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Analyze your Rates of Return

The days of getting 3% interest on your savings account is not coming back anytime soon but that doesn't mean you should sit back with your money and be happy with the 0.05% they may be giving now.

To grow your money you have several options (even more than I will mention here):

For long term investing go with a Mutual Fund or Exchange Traded Fund. Over the long haul (5+ years) these will allow for 6% to 12% rates of return. However, for money that you may need soon these investments are too volatile.

For short term investing you have a couple of options. The one with the most risk would be a peer-2-peer lending site such as Lending Club or Prosper. This type of site evaluates borrowers and then (if the site accepts them for the loan), they look for lenders. That is where you would come in. You become a lender and lend your money to several different loan accounts and whenever they make a payment you get some of the money back. Unfortunately these loans are unsecured, so if a borrower goes bankrupt, your money invested in that loan is gone. Usually though if you have a lot of different accounts the rate of return on our money will be about 8% over a three year period. (I have not actually tried this myself but I have heard good things).

The next highest rate of return would be in a Certificate of Deposit (CD). These have several downsides, the most daunting is the locked-in term. When you by a CD you do so for a set term, say 2 years. This means that if you need the money before two years is up, you will have to pay a penalty on the interest that you accumulated. Depending on the term length, a current CD can produce a 0.5% to 1.5% APY. (These are FDIC insured so there is no risk of losing money.)

There is also a special type of CD that allows you to make a one-time withdraw without penalty. These are probably your best bet when it comes to CDs. The one I like is offered by Ally Bank and yields a 0.91% APY.

Then the final option is a money market account. This is just a glorified savings account with slightly higher rates of return. Money markets nowadays can range from 0.25% to 0.85% depending on where you bank and how much you keep in the account. These are also FDIC insured.

The main objective here is not the interest rate or how you invest, it is the fact that you are paying attention to your money! Paying attention to your money will lead to wealth. You can easily wander into debt but it is very hard to get out of debt and become wealthy. It starts with paying attention.

--A Future Millionaire

No comments:

Post a Comment