Jim_n_NYC Posted May 3 Posted May 3 19 hours ago, handiacefailure said: Why would you invest emergency funds in an Ibond? You can't access the money for one year. As long as you know you can go 28 days without needing the money I would do 28 day t-bills and just renew them if you don't need the money. I've always had the money right on time as T-bills matured into my savings account If you are talking about emergency funds, why put them in a bond or bill at all? I have money in a treasury fund at Schwab that's getting 3.96% (last 7-day yield) and is state and local tax exempt, so just like a US bond. I can get the money out with one day notice, not 28. + Vegas_Millennial and Kevin Slater 2
jayjaycali Posted May 4 Posted May 4 Etrade has a 4.00% high yield savings that you can instantly fund and instantly withdraw.
BuffaloKyle Posted July 5 Posted July 5 Here's a really cool video I just found. There is a option on treasury direct to have federal taxes withheld, from not only i bonds but any security you own at the time, when you partially or fully redeem them. Then you don't have to worry about owing taxes on it when you file your taxes. There really is no reason then to go through the hassle of reporting it every year. You can choose to have 0% - 50% of the redemption amount withheld for federal taxes: handiacefailure and Lotus-eater 2
BuffaloKyle Posted September 4 Posted September 4 Forecast for the new i bond rate coming Nov 1 is a variable rate of 2.8% - 3.0% and a fixed rate of 0.9% for a total rate of roughly 3.7% - 3.9% Forecast: I Bond’s fixed rate is likely to fall to 0.90% | Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities TIPSWATCH.COM By David Enna, Tipswatch.com In two months, probably on Halloween morning, the Treasury will announce a new fixed rate, inflation-adjusted variable rate and... + Vegas_Millennial and Lotus-eater 1 1
Bokomaru Posted September 8 Posted September 8 On 7/5/2025 at 2:09 PM, BuffaloKyle said: Here's a really cool video I just found. There is a option on treasury direct to have federal taxes withheld, from not only i bonds but any security you own at the time, when you partially or fully redeem them. Then you don't have to worry about owing taxes on it when you file your taxes. There really is no reason then to go through the hassle of reporting it every year. You can choose to have 0% - 50% of the redemption amount withheld for federal taxes: I guess I should get off my ass and sell my old ibonds which are now paying less than 3%. Question: why would anyone withhold 50%? Federal income taxes only go to 37%.
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted September 8 Posted September 8 (edited) 1 hour ago, Bokomaru said: Question: why would anyone withhold 50%? Federal income taxes only go to 37%. If one has other sources of income (such as income from escort or masseur activities) where federal taxes are not automatically withheld from a paycheck, then increasing the withholdings on other income streams is a way to make the required tax payments throughout the year in lieu of submitting estimated quarterly payments for the taxes owed on income from other sources in the same tax year. Edited September 8 by Vegas_Millennial Kevin Slater and Bokomaru 1 1
handiacefailure Posted September 9 Posted September 9 I'm really liking the etf "SGOV" Has a dividend yield of around 4.4% and is exempt from state tax since it's government securities and unike a 28 day t-note you have next day access to the money if you need it.
Lotus-eater Posted September 9 Posted September 9 15 hours ago, Vegas_Millennial said: If one has other sources of income (such as income from escort or masseur activities) where federal taxes are not automatically withheld from a paycheck, then increasing the withholdings on other income streams is a way to make the required tax payments throughout the year in lieu of submitting estimated quarterly payments for the taxes owed on income from other sources in the same tax year. New tax law gives $25K deduction for tips (Treasury Tipped Occupation Code 602 for massage therapists), so you can adjust withholding accordingly.
BuffaloKyle Posted October 6 Posted October 6 (edited) The i bond rate is supposed to reset at the beginning of next month but with the shutdown there is a big problem. They are not planning on releasing the inflation report for this month if we are still in a shutdown and that info is needed to calculate next month's i bond rate. Here's an article on the issue: I Bond rate reset: We’re heading toward chaos | Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities TIPSWATCH.COM AI-generated image for savings bond investor in chaos. Source: Perchance.org By David Enna, Tipswatch.com With the U.S. government on indefinite shutdown and... Edited October 6 by BuffaloKyle thomas 1
Kevin Slater Posted October 7 Author Posted October 7 45 minutes ago, BuffaloKyle said: The i bond rate is supposed to reset at the beginning of next month but with the shutdown there is a big problem. They are not planning on releasing the inflation report for this month if we are still in a shutdown and that info is needed to calculate next month's i bond rate. Here's an article on the issue: I Bond rate reset: We’re heading toward chaos | Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities TIPSWATCH.COM AI-generated image for savings bond investor in chaos. Source: Perchance.org By David Enna, Tipswatch.com With the U.S. government on indefinite shutdown and... Thanks for sharing. Kevin Slater
BuffaloKyle Posted October 10 Posted October 10 Forget what I posted above, no i bond crisis on the way. They are going to release the CPI report on October 24, later than the October 15 originally scheduled date but in time for the new i bond rate to not be affected. CPI inflation report will be released by Labor Department, while other data is delayed by shutdown WWW.CNBC.COM The Labor Department will bring back staff to work on a key inflation report. Kevin Slater 1
topunderachiever Posted October 14 Posted October 14 On 9/8/2025 at 5:40 PM, handiacefailure said: I'm really liking the etf "SGOV" Has a dividend yield of around 4.4% and is exempt from state tax since it's government securities and unike a 28 day t-note you have next day access to the money if you need it. Have you held this for any length of time? I'm wondering whether the yield is even the slightest more or less than a short term TBill? I, too, like it's fluidity.
handiacefailure Posted October 22 Posted October 22 On 10/14/2025 at 3:12 PM, topunderachiever said: Have you held this for any length of time? I'm wondering whether the yield is even the slightest more or less than a short term TBill? I, too, like it's fluidity. I started buying it about a year ago. Keith Fitz-Gerald recomended it for emergency/liquid funds. Return is similar to a 28-day Tbill and interest is also state tax free and love how fluid it is. I bought a new condo a few weeks ago and had only ten days to close after I made the offer so it was great having access to those funds right away, where if it would have been in a Tbill I would have had to have waited until maturity. Not sure how they are going about paying the dividend now though with the government shutdown. + Vegas_Millennial 1
jawjateck Posted October 22 Posted October 22 12 hours ago, handiacefailure said: Not sure how they are going about paying the dividend now though with the government shutdown. I had a 2 year Treasury note that matured last week. The face amount of the note and the 6 month interest payment were transferred to my bank account as usual. Treasury is still servicing the national debt. handiacefailure and + Vegas_Millennial 2
mike carey Posted October 22 Posted October 22 1 minute ago, jawjateck said: I had a 2 year Treasury note that matured last week. The face amount of the note and the 6 month interest payment were transferred to my bank account as usual. Treasury is still servicing the national debt. So it would appear that payouts at maturity are automated. That is something I would have expected, but given the nature of bureaucracies, both public and private sector, it would not have surprised me if they were not. handiacefailure 1
BuffaloKyle Posted October 22 Posted October 22 Social Security for instance is paid out by the treasury. They are still operating.
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