Submitted by ncrowley t3_11dgqow in personalfinance
I would like to save some cash for a trip in 6 months. I thought the easiest way to save this money might be a six month CD. When I checked Chase for their rates, I noticed that the six month CD rate is 0.05%, while the three month CD rate is 3.50%. The 12-month is 3.25%, while the 18-month goes back down to 0.05%. Why are these rates so drastically different? And why would the shorter term have a higher rate? The pattern in this table looks paradoxical to me: https://www.chase.com/personal/savings/bank-cd
As an aside, would anyone recommend an option other than CDs for a 6 month time horizon?
fluffy_bunny22 t1_ja8hf6i wrote
They need more money for the length of the terms that they are offering higher rates for. A bank determines what their money needs are in advance and for how long they need that money.