
Earn more interest with brokered cds
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:

If you want to earn 4 percent or more on your money with relatively low risk, investing in certificates of deposit (CDs) can be a way to do so. And if you want to make the job of finding
high-yielding CDs easier, you might consider buying them through your broker. A traditional bank CD is a bank deposit that pays interest for a set period of time — typically one month to
five years, although you can get CDs that mature in up to 20 years. A traditional bank CD comes with an early withdrawal penalty if you cash in the CD before its maturity date. The penalty
is usually a few months’ worth of interest, but you should always check the terms before you invest. Because your funds are locked up, a CD typically pays more than most savings or money
market accounts. For example, the average one-year CD rate during the week of Jan. 11 was 1.41 percent, compared with 0.26 percent for the average bank money market account, according to
Bankrate.com. But those are just average yields. The Federal Reserve has been raising short-term interest rates since March, 2022, pushing its key fed funds rate from 0.25 percent to a range
of 4.25 to 4.5 percent in December 2022. As a result, CDs are sporting higher yields than they have in more than a decade. For example, as of this writing, many top-yielding one-year CDs
yield more than 4 percent. “We’ve been waiting for rates like this for more than a decade,” says Rob Williams, managing director of financial planning and retirement income at the Schwab
Center for Financial Research. BANK CDS VERSUS BROKERED CDS A brokered CD, as you might suspect, is sold by a brokerage, such as Fidelity or Charles Schwab. The broker does not issue the CD,
which is issued by a bank or credit union. The broker simply markets the CDs to its customers and collects a fee from the banks for its services. The brokerage can buy in bulk, so banks
usually offer brokers higher-yielding CDs than they would to small savers. Because banks issue the CDs, the interest and principal are insured up to $250,000 per account per bank by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). You may be able to insure even more, depending on the type of account and how the account ownership is structured. FDIC insurance makes CDs some
of the safest investments on the planet. You will typically receive all the interest at maturity for CDs that mature in a year or less. For CDs with longer maturities, you’ll get interest
at set intervals, such as monthly, quarterly or semiannually. Interest is not compounded.