The 0 of the Treasury has announced new rates for Series I bonds, setting it at 4.03%, applied to new purchases from tomorrow, November 1, through April 30, according to the US Department of the 1 new bond rate replaces the 3.98% rate that had been available through October 2 new composite rate is made up of a 3.12% variable portion tied to inflation data and a 0.90% fixed portion that remains permanent for the life of each bond once 3 fixed portion is lower than the 1.10% fixed rate announced in 4 for I bonds surged in May 2022, when the composite rate reached 9.62%, drawing in a wave of investors into what is effectively a government-backed, low‑risk savings 5 then, inflation has slowed, and some of those earlier buyers have been redeeming their holdings.
However, others who favored long‑term holding periods continued buying in recent years to secure higher fixed rates before later 6 Treasury adjusts both the variable and fixed portions twice a year, in May and November, but does not explain the formula used to determine the fixed 7 structure applies on a six‑month timeline The I bond structure includes the fixed rate (which never changes once locked in) and the variable rate (tied to inflation and updates every six months). The combined yield is known as the composite rate, and that rate remains for the first six months after the initial purchase 8 the first six months, the variable portion switches to whatever new variable rate has been announced, while the fixed portion remains unchanged, as the timing is based on the month of purchase, not the month of 9 instance, an investor who bought I bonds in March will start with a 1.90% variable rate and then move on to a 2.86% variable rate six months later, while 1.20% remains the fixed 10 bonds’ composite rate would then be roughly 4.06% for that next six‑month period.
I bonds can earn interest for up to 30 years, unless redeemed earlier, according to the 11 cannot be redeemed in the first year, and if redeemed before five years, the last three months of interest are 12 yields respond to fewer expectations of cuts This week saw Treasury yields rise as traders reduced expectations of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut in 13 10‑year Treasury note traded around 4.10% on Friday after beginning the week below 4%. Contracts tied to the December Federal Reserve meeting now show roughly even odds of a cut after recent central bank 14 delivered their second consecutive rate reduction on Wednesday, but Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said further easing at the final meeting of the year “is not a forgone conclusion.” That statement triggered selling pressure in 15 Faranello, head of 16 trading and strategy at AmeriVet Securities, said some of the earlier expectations for aggressive cuts have 17 stated, “The lower rate story in the US needs to be an economic slowdown story.” Investors had been betting that the Fed would keep easing to support a labor market that had shown signs of weakening, even as inflation remained above 18 current 19 shutdown has held back the release of key economic figures, leaving markets with fewer signals and adding weight to Powell’s comments.
Meanwhile, Meta Platforms 20 a $30 billion bond sale this week, adding more corporate debt to the market at a time when investors were already adjusting to higher 21 corporate issuance is expected next 22 were also differing views among regional Federal Reserve 23 Fed President Lorie Logan said she “did not see a need to cut rates this week.” Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid detailed reasons for dissenting against the rate 24 Fed President Beth Hammack said she disagreed with the cut as 25 smartest crypto minds already read our 26 in? Join them .
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