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The jury is in. It’s a good time to sell those I bonds you bought when they became fashionable two years ago amid blisteringly hot inflation, which pumped up the annualized rate to 7.12% in ...
I-bonds purchased in April — before the rate reset in May — will still earn the annualized yield of 6.89% for six months. That’s the fifth-highest rate since the bond’s introduction in ...
Oct. 28 was the last day to purchase government-backed I bonds earning a record 9.62% interest rate. The rush of buyers actually crashed the Treasury Direct website. The U.S. Treasury sold $979 ...
The bond will continue to earn the fixed rate for 10 more years. All interest is paid when the holder cashes the bond. For bonds issued before May 2005, the interest rate was an adjustable rate recomputed every six months at 90% of the average five-year Treasury yield for the preceding six months.
The following reports on economic indicators are reported by United States government agencies: Business activity Wholesale Inventories; Industrial Production (Federal Reserve) Capacity Utilization; Regional Manufacturing Surveys (purchasing managers' organizations and Federal Reserve banks) Philadelphia Fed Index (Federal Reserve Bank of ...
Inflation has cooled from a recent peak of 9.1% in June 2022. I Bond rates have pulled back, too. What's will new rates look like beginning in May?
The elements of financial reports are regulated by the Office of Federal Financial Management. At the state and local level of the United States, the Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) make the accounting and financial rules. A major change came in June 1999, when GASB introduced accrual and consolidated rules with fund accounting ...
Find out how the I bonds current rate of 3.11% impacts returns for both new and current investors in today’s inflation environment.