The I-Bond boom is about to end with rates on the inflation-protected assets set to plunge below cash yields
- The 2022 boom in I-Bonds appears set to end as interest rates tied to the security plunge.
- I-Bonds are expected to pay an interest rate of just 3.8% next month as inflation cools down.
- I-Bonds will be less appealing to investors due to its long lock-up period and higher interest rates at money market funds.
The 2022 boom in I-Bonds appears poised to end as the interest rate offered by the securities are set to plunge next month to levels below most money market funds and high-yield savings accounts.
Interest rates for I-Bonds are estimated to fall to 3.8% in May as inflation continues to ease. The Treasury bond resets its interest rate every six months based in part on the latest inflation data.
The past six-month period for I-Bonds offered investors an attractive interest rate of 6.89%, and before that the security offered a rate of 9.62%.
The surge in I-Bond interest rates to levels that were competitive with stock market returns attracted more than $40 billion of inflows last year, according to the Treasury Department. That's a sky-high figure given that I-Bonds have a $10,000 annual purchase limit and require buyers to navigate a website that appears to not have been updated since 1999.
A significant swing in inflation to 40-year highs, after more than a decade of subdued prices, helped give investors good reason to opt for the bond.
But as long as inflation continues to cool down, I-Bonds should are likely to attract fewer buyers as plenty of cash-equivalent securities offer a higher interest rate without the long lock-up period that I-Bonds require.
For example, Apple's launch of a high-yield savings account this week offers its customers an annualized yield of 4.15, while some money market funds and high-yield savings accounts offer yields as high as 5%.
That's significantly higher than the expected I-Bond rate of 3.8%, and offers much more flexibility than the securities, which have a minimum one-year holding period. Additionally, any I-Bonds that are redeemed within five years of purchase will forfeit three months of interest.
Unless inflation sees a big rebound in the coming months, I-Bonds are likely to continue to lose their luster with investors as cash gravitates towards higher-yielding money market funds and even, potentially, back to the stock market.