What is a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?
Have some extra cash you don’t need for a few months? A few years? Want a little extra interest over what you would make on a Savings Account? (What is a Savings Account?)
What is a Certificate of Deposit?
More commonly known as a C.D., a Certificate of Deposit is a non-accessible account that you can open with a bank. The depositor purchases a “CD” for a predetermined amount of money (often in hundred or thousand dollar increments). The bank then has the right to loan out the depositors money without fear of depositor withdrawal, and in exchange, the bank pays a higher interest rate.
Larger principal (amount) CD’s will yield higher interest rates. Longer term before repayment will yield higher interest rates. Penalties will be incurred if the depositor decides to cash in their C.D. before term completion.
The C.D. is also insured by the FDIC (What is the FDIC?) which makes it virtually risk free. These are great tools for investors who want more interest that would be yielded from a Savings Account, but want to remain risk free.
