William A. Baurle |
04-30-2012 06:17 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Slater
(Post 243498)
I'm wondering why you are surprised. When you bought the CD, for example, didn't they tell you what the fixed interest rate would be? And does the interest they paid correspond with that interest rate?
I know interest rates are horribly low (though I suppose the good part is that they are also extremely low for mortgages right now), but when you buy a CD the fixed interest rate is very clear. It is part of the "name" of the product you are buying.
Your CD sounds a bit low. You should have been able to get a 1% CD for a year, which would mean you should have gotten over $40 in interest instead of just $8.
There are banks that have a "no penalty CD" that would allow you to withdraw early without penalty. Currently they pay just a smidge under 1% (I did a quick check before posting).
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No, I wasn't surprised, since I did know of the rate. I guess maybe I wanted to see if they would actually go through with it. Sounds crazy, but then I'm a bit crazy. If they were even slightly service oriented, mayn't they have given me a call about sitting with an advisor and seeing about how to go about trading, or reinvestment, or somesuch? Online they have a link or two for such things, but I'm an ignoramus when it comes to numbers. And the "help" pages sound like Greek to me. You literally have to go proactive and go out of your way in order to get anything useful out of a bank. I see that as upsidedown and immoral. After all, they depend on their clients' money, on their customers' investments, for their profits.
The question I ask is this: Do they want to accrue more customers? Do they want to have people invest their money with them? Do they have any interest at all in making their clients happy?
And by clients I mean all clients, not just the filthy rich ones.
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