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Is the Savings Account Dead? - YouTube
Channel: unknown
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- Thanks to Great Courses
Plus for supporting PBS.
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Hey hon, what's this tiny
deposit in our savings account?
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- Oh, that's the interest payment
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from our new high yield savings account.
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- Are you sure? It's only 42 cents.
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How is that high yield?
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- Are you kidding me?
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The return on this puppy is
16 times the national average.
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We even had to qualify for
this special account type.
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But it takes money to
make money, am I right?
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- I thought this was how we
planned to pay for our next car.
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By my math, we'll hit our
goal in about 140 years.
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- (moaning) On the bright side,
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by then we won't need a car,
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and our great, great, great
grandchildren can use it
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to get a certified pre-owned
teleporter instead.
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(playful music)
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- Finding a high yield place
to park your money these days
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kinda makes me feel like
I'm back in middle school,
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hunting for Carmen San Diego.
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I see ads all the time for
accounts promising high yields,
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cash back, and tempting rewards.
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But as soon as I start
sorting through the clues
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as to where these might be found,
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the query seems to slip
through my fingers.
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Whether it's a money market
account, CD, savings bond,
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or even the old faithful savings account,
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finding one that pays 1/2
a percent is a struggle.
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And if you do track
halfway decent one down,
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there's always strings attached,
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like only for a certain
amount of deposits,
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or only for a limited time.
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Am I missing something?
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- See, once upon a time safe,
secure deposits at a bank
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were a pretty solid investment.
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In 1985, the year Philip was born,
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you could purchase a six-month
certificate of deposit
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at your local bank branch,
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and earn an average of 8.05% interest.
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Ah, good old days, right?
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Eh, sort of.
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See, banks were paying
higher interest rates, yes,
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but they were also charging
higher interest rates too.
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The average rate on a 30
year fixed mortgage in 1985
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was a jaw-dropping 11.85%.
(people groaning)
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- When you deposit your
paycheck at a bank,
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or even put it in a savings vehicle,
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like a CD or savings account,
it doesn't just sit there.
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Thanks to a practice called
Federal Reserve Banking,
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bans can actually lend out 90%
of your deposit, and they do
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in the forms of mortgage loans,
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small business loans, and credit cards,
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any amount they charge
above what they pay you
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is profit for them.
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The difference between
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the 1985 savings account
and mortgage rate?
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3.8%, which is actually extremely close
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to the difference today,
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because as the Federal Reserve
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raises or lowers interest rates,
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it trickles down to everything.
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- So if the difference between
bank deposits and bank loans
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are relatively the same now and then,
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why does it matter what
your investment pays?
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One word, inflation.
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The amount of interest
you earn on bank deposits
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is only half the equation.
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The other half is how much
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the cost of goods and services
increases at the same time.
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Back in the mid '80s, your six month CD
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would pay you about 8%, and
the prices of fanny packs,
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and bottles of New Coke
were increasing by about 3%.
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- This is what economists
call your real return,
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your investment return after inflation.
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A 5% real return is nothing to sniff at,
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which explains why your grandpappy
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might be bugging you about
setting up your savings account.
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Investments like savings bonds,
and even savings accounts,
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made perfect sense decades ago.
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But today, with inflation around 2%,
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and safe money paying close to zero,
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you're looking at a negative real return.
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Suddenly things like
savings accounts and CDs
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seem like the opposite of an investment.
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- Now, before we get
to what you've gotta do
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to earn a respectable, real return,
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let's spare a moment for
the humble savings account.
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Should you just toss the safe
money investment of yesteryear
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in the dumpster, along
with those old CD ROMs
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and GameBoy cartridges?
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No, they still have an important place,
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but that place has changed.
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Savings accounts, CDs,
money market accounts
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aren't really a place to grow your money,
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and likely won't be for
the foreseeable future.
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- But these accounts are the perfect place
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to stash funds you expect
to need in the short term,
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think the next one to two years,
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money to pay bills, your
emergency fund or cash
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for a major purchase are perfectly suited.
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Sure, you can try to spend
hours sleuthing out the best
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high-yield savings accounts,
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in every corner of the internet,
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but the difference will be microscopic,
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and could change in a moment's notice.
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Personally, we've decided to just keep
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all of our one-year money in
a simple checking account.
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Crazy, right?
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- But what about savings
you wanna build up
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for the mid or long-term?
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Where does that belong?
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The reality is the only way to earn
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a positive, real return today
is going to involve some risk.
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Being a crime fighting gumshoe
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isn't a smooth ride all the time.
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We're not talking about
wild, speculative risks,
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like picking individual
stocks, or betting on crypto,
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but something with mild variation
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in the price, over time,
known as volatility.
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Financial planners might refer to this
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as a moderately conservative investment.
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- One option to consider is
simply a bond index fund.
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These investments are generally backed
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by guaranteed government
and corporate bonds,
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and they pay a respectable interest rate,
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at least more respectable than
what your bank account pays.
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One of the most popular bond index funds
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has consistently grown
between 4% and 5% per year,
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over the last decade.
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And while there is some fluctuation
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and the price is dramatically
lower than the stock market.
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The volatility makes it inappropriate
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for money you might need
in the immediate future,
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but could make sense for
a goal a few years out.
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- Another newly emerging option
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is peer to peer lending platforms,
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that effectively allow you to be the bank.
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That's right, you can easily
lend out your own money
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to borrowers and pocket some
of the profit margin yourself.
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Companies like LendingClub,
Prosper, and Funding Circle
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allow you to lend out
your money to consumers,
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hoping to avoid banks, and
you get paid the interest.
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- Some pay you a flat
interest rate, like 5%,
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but you have to commit
your money for a year.
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Others allow you to pick lenders,
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with higher or lower credit risk ratings,
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and pay anywhere from 5%
to the safest borrowers,
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to 13% for the riskiest.
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While these returns may be enticing,
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it's important to remember
that you run the risk
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of paying penalties if you need the money
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before your term is over, or
your borrower may default,
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leaving you with a loss.
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- The bad news is that for
millennials, and gen Z,
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the days of cash savings as a
real investment are long gone.
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- The good news is that
with some strategic risk,
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and a bit of research, you
can still grow your money
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faster than inflation, without
having to make wild gambles.
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- [Both] And that's our "Two Cents."
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- Thanks to Great Courses
Plus for supporting PBS.
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- [Julia] Thanks to our patrons
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Click the link in the description
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- To hear more about bonds,
and my Sean Connery impression,
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check out our video, "Bond, Savings Bond."
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(playful music)
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