Holding my what, $ 450 for a month should
yield a little cash interest though.
Not exact matches
Bonds, as measured by the Barclay's Capital Aggregate Bond Index, are
yielding less than 2 %, while
cash has very
little return potential at all.
The heightened pressure on the exchange rate in early June saw the
yield on 90 - day bills, which had been a
little below the
cash rate, rise sharply at one stage to 5.8 per cent.
With the
cash rate up by 50 basis points in late 2003 and
yields on 10 - year bonds down a
little over recent months, the spread has narrowed since early November to stand at around 50 basis points (Graph 67).
Excluding net
cash (Amdocs has over $ 9 a share in
cash), Amdocs trades at a roughly 10 % trailing free
cash flow
yield and a
little over 10 times forward earnings estimates.
I recently went back to Fidelity's website to check out what the mySmart
Cash Account is currently offering and I have to say that I am a
little disappointed, especially with the
yield: a miserable 0.20 % APY, though other benefits of account seems to remain intact:
With only a
little appreciation (appreciating from $ 745,000 to $ 800,000 over the next 9 - 10 years) and with enough
cash to pay them off when I retire, those homes could
yield roughly $ 48,000 per year at that time (6 percent of $ 800,000) in today's dollars.
With CDs now at historically low
yields — many earning as
little as.25 % and lower — where does one go to actually earn a decent return on their
cash?
One of the ways that you can get a
little more of a
yield on your
cash is to make use of money market products.
Based on my spending patterns, I calculate that the three
cash back credit card combination above should
yield a minimum return of about 2.8 % of total annual spend with very
little personal time investment other than knowing the right bonus categories for each of the three cards.