Where to lock in 4% yields on CDs ahead of likely Fed rate cut
Investors looking to lock in income ahead of another likely rate cut from the Federal Reserve can still find solid yields in certificates of deposit. Some are even yielding 4%. The market is pricing in 87% odds that the central bank will reduce rates by a quarter of a percentage point at its meeting next week, according to the CME FedWatch tool . Rates on cash instruments like money market funds and high-yield savings accounts are expected to follow suit. The current annualized seven-day yield on the Crane 100 list of the largest taxable money market funds is 3.79%. The median annual percentage rate on high-yield savings accounts is 3.65%, BTIG found. Last week, American Express cut its online savings rate by 0.10 percentage point to 3.40%, BTIG analyst Vincent Caintic said in a note Sunday. “It appears to us that, slowly but steadily each week, each bank will eventually cut once in 4Q25,” Caintic wrote. “Perhaps increasing probabilities of a December Fed Funds Rate cut … is aiding online bank confidence in cutting deposit rates.” To get ahead of a dip in cash rates, investors can lock in yield with CDs. The median one-year CD rate today is 3.8%, Caintic said. No banks in his coverage reduced their annual percentage yield (APY) last week, but Capital One decreased its yield this week to 3.90% from 4.05%. Still, investors should make sure they don’t need the cash while it is locked up in a CD, otherwise they face penalties if they make an early withdrawal. Another option is building a CD ladder. In other words, buy CDs of varying maturities that provide income at different times. Chelsea Ransom-Cooper, co-founder and chief financial planning officer at Zenith Wealth Partners in Philadelphia, suggests investors build a ladder ranging 3 months to 14 months. “It gives them a bit of a hedge in case they need the cash sooner rather than later, so they’re not waiting for their money at one specific date, but they have a few different options on when they could pull the cash out,” Ransom-Cooper, a member of the CNBC Financial Advisor Council , recently told CNBC . While CD rates are down from their highs, they are still attractive from the days of zero interest rates. Back in June 2021, for example, the average one-year APY was just 0.17%, according to Bankrate .
