Submitted by PandaKing550 t3_zzw04b in personalfinance
DeluxeXL t1_j2dv93z wrote
> Does CD rates lock when opening account?
Yes.
> I opened couple of cds with discover last year for a year term. Looking back I could of sworn the interest rate was good.
Because interest rates only really started going up in March of 2022. They were pretty low before.
- March 2020: Interest rate tanked, stayed pretty much on the floor.
- March 2022: Interest rate started increasing
PandaKing550 OP t1_j2dvjal wrote
When researching to confirm I thought APY was the percent of how much I would get as interest into my account. But online says the APY is how much interest would be charged to me if I were to withdraw early. So say a 12m is offering 4.15% APY I thought that's the amount I'd get back so 100->104.15 end of month VS it being if I need to withdraw it'll be 100-> 95.85 I'd get back
DeluxeXL t1_j2dx0zb wrote
> When researching to confirm I thought APY was the percent of how much I would get as interest into my account.
Correct, if you are able to hold continuously for 365 or 366 days.
> But online says the APY is how much interest would be charged to me if I were to withdraw early.
Wrong.
> So say a 12m is offering 4.15% APY I thought that's the amount I'd get back so 100->104.15 end of month
$104.15 after the 365 days (1 year), yes.
> it being if I need to withdraw it'll be 100-> 95.85 I'd get back
No. Early withdrawal penalty varies from CD to CD. Read the terms for that specific CD. Sometimes it's 3-month interest, sometimes it's 6 months. You will also still keep the interest you earned so far. It's just that the penalty might be greater than the interest you earn.
PandaKing550 OP t1_j2dz2l9 wrote
Thanks for the clarification initial thought about apy rate being the rate I earned at end of term is correct
NorthofDakota t1_j2dxbxy wrote
APY is the annual yield, so $100 at 4.15% will yield $4.15/12 per month ~$0.36/month. The penalty for breaking a CD early will depend on the bank you purchased it from. I don't think you should lose any principle, but will likely lose a certain number of months worth of interest.
PandaKing550 OP t1_j2dz59m wrote
Thanks for clarifying!
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