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Best Online Savings & Money Market Account Rates 2024

Best Online Savings & Money Market Account Rates

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Bank Savoy Offers 2.60% on Savings Until April 15, 2010

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This offer is available at the branch only and limited to $100,000.

Bank Savoy is a startup bank with only 1 branch and virtually no internet presence. They do have an internet site which unfortunately gets their name backwards; it is www.banksavoy.com.

The bank has one branch on 52nd and Broadway.

The occasionally offer good CD rates when I pass buy. I noticed that now they are offering 2.60% on savings through April 15, 2010 up to $100,000.

I am not sure whether this is available only to NY residents, but you do need to get to the branch.


Ally Bank retention offer

A CD I opened with Ally Bank a year ago matured a few days ago. I called to cash it out, and was very pleasantly surprised by their response.

In general, I find that when a CD matures, the bank will try to roll it over into a low rate CD. Many wont allow you to put the money into a promotional rate. So, when I called Ally Bank a few days ago, I expected that I would need to cash out and look for a new CD. Instead, Ally offered me a retention bonus of 0.5%. So the new 1 year Cd would have a rate of 2.34% (1.84% plus the retention bonus). This is the best rate available anywhere. In addition, they allowed me to put additional money into the CD at that rate.

I was also very pleased with their customer service- I was actually able to speak to a real person, with minimal hold time, on three occasions and they were helpful in terms of arranging a wire transfer of more money into the account.


Banks Asking for More Regulation with Record Bonuses

Even in the midst of the worst financial meltdown since the Great Depression, the biggest Wall Street banks, the same banks that relied on hundreds of billions in government cash to stay afloat, are paying out record bonuses to their employees. This, of course, is old news.

What they don't realize is that this is a Pyrrhic victory for them. The banks are twisting the dagger in their own side and lopping off the ears of their shareholders. If you own bank stocks, get out now.

Record bonuses are in. Goldman Sachs handed out $16.7 billion in bonuses in the first nine months of 2009 according to Bloomberg. That's just shy of the $16.9 billion given out in the pre-crash record year of 2007. Not only did this result in bad press, but there are several shareholder lawsuits pending. Shareholder Ken Brown is claiming that in 2008, Goldman handed out $4.82 billion in bonuses in 2008, despite earnings of only $2.32 billion that year. The lawsuit alleges that the company spent 259 percent of its income in the first quarter of 2009 on compensation. (see the lawsuit).

Bloomberg is reporting that Bank of America is also planning to award record bonuses to some of its investment bankers. “We have to compensate our people competitively,” spokesman Robert Stickler said. “If we don’t do that, we lose our talent.” I'd expect we'll see some more lawsuits aimed at BofA.

But the lawsuits aren't really the problem for these banks. The problem is that the compensation as well as the bad press it's getting is setting the stage for some very nasty regulation. The bank lobby has 0 credibility and the public's antipathy to the banks is at an all-time high. In this setting, legislators will be tripping over each other to pass legislation that will control and reduce bank profit. Don't believe it? It's already happening.

Congress recently passed a credit card reform bill as well as a bill that changes the way banks process overdrafts. Both are expected to cost the banking industry over $50 billion per year. And that's just the beginning. What the bank bonuses are signaling is that the banks are so profitable once again that perhaps it's time for them to start sharing some of that treasure chest. Especially when that treasure chest was maintained via public bailouts and funds.

I predict that 2009 will be the high water mark for the finance industry in the United States. The banks overplayed their hand and now they are going to watch as the government and general public begin to slowly dismantle the profit-making system that succors them. Expect a lot of hand-wringing and talk about how regulation of the banking system is bad for everyone, but most of it will be ignored. The public is mad and has come to realize that what's good for the banks is no longer good for Main Street.