Last time I updated you on my high-yield savings accounts, interest rates were going up and so were my savings. Since then, my LendingClub account has increased the interest rate on my savings three more times!
Back in June, LendingClub raised my rate to a 1.05% annual percentage yield (APY). By the end of June, it was 1.26%, and at the start of August it went up to 2.07%. A few days ago on September 21, it went up to 2.25%. According to LendingClub, this is 13 times the national average savings account yield. When the interest rate was 2.07% at the beginning of August, I decided to transfer more money into the account. Through the end of August (September’s interest doesn’t hit until the end of the month), I had made almost $30 on my savings since I opened the account in March 2022!
My LendingClub account is designated for a future down payment on a house, so it’s a longer-term goal that I have more funds allocated to. My other high-yield savings account with SmartyPig is for saving money before it is invested.
Though I haven’t been contacted about the interest rate going up on my SmartyPig account, it has increased from 0.75% in June to 2.05% in September. Not too shabby! When I signed up for SmartyPig, one of its offerings was the ability to set savings goals. What I didn’t realize is that the interest rate is higher when I designate funds for a specific goal—2.25% (same as my LendingClub account)!
So, I set up my first official savings goal with SmartyPig, which is to have $2,000 ready to invest by the start of 2023. When I began investing in March 2022, that was my Schwab account’s starting balance. At that point, it was all I was willing to part with; I knew I should only be investing money I was comfortable losing. Since then, my threshold for losing money has increased (since the market has been down for most of this year). However, I also know that I’m in my investments for the long term, so the short-term ups and downs aren’t crucial to my end goal. Maybe 2023 will be a better year if people stop saying the world “recession”—don’t let the market hear you!
I’ll keep you updated on how this savings goal goes and when I solidify a better plan for transferring my savings to all of their different homes on a more regular basis. Half the battle is just figuring out what works for me and my money, the rest should be relatively easy (fingers crossed!).
