93195

93195 t1_iufilxs wrote

ACH is fine. Wire is just if you’re in a hurry.

Not sure if it matters, but I always initiate the transfer from the receiving account. One, you can’t screw up where it’s going. Two, for interest purposes, I notice it shows the full amount in the account right away, even if it’s not “available” for 5 days. Not sure if interest accrues from the transfer date or available date, but either way, I like seeing that it’s there.

Pull funds, don’t push them.

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93195 t1_iufc6v6 wrote

Your policy covers the stuff in the house, up to your policy’s limits for personal effects.

It provides no coverage for her personally, if you mean life, liability, health, or something like that. Her parent’s homeowners insurance doesn’t either.

Homeowners covers the house and the stuff in it, up to policy limits. It doesn’t all have to be your stuff.

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93195 t1_iucq3cg wrote

You’re really asking if something that costs a dollar or two a month is worth it? That’s like asking if buying a bag of chips at the convenience store once a month is worth it.

What it’s not worth is even thinking about. He should just sign up for a few bucks worth and forget about it until his life situation changes (at which point he should get more).

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93195 t1_iub8fe2 wrote

You do need a credit card for those things, car rental in particular. Many won’t rent without one, debit cards not good enough.

While you may not care about your credit score now, you may later if you want to buy a house or other major purchase.

Just throw them in the back of a drawer.

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93195 t1_iub4mcp wrote

150 Dinars is $212 USD at today’s rates.

Possible the rate was a little worse then, throw in a crappy exchange rate with a credit card, maybe some foreign transaction fees, maybe a 10% service charge, something close to $300 USD is plausible. But yeah, even those things wouldn’t account for $390.

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93195 t1_itzaj04 wrote

Yup, you get each rate for six months. You got the 7.12% for six months, you get the 9.62% for six months, then you’ll get the soon to be announced rate (likely 7.48%) for six months.

No need to buy more to get the new rate, unless you want more.

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93195 t1_itz659l wrote

You go into TreasuryDirect, you make a gift purchase for someone else. There is no limit on the amount you can buy as gifts, only a limit on what an individual can get in a calendar year, either from purchasing it themselves or receiving as a gift.

So for example, a married couple can each buy their own $10K for 2022, then buy another $10K now as a gift to deliver in 2023, or even another $10K to deliver in 2024. Buying now for 2024 only adds three months to the lock up period, as the 1 year doesn’t run out til October 2023 anyway.

It’s not hard to do, you just register it in their name and check the “this is a gift” box when you buy it.

TreasuryDirect explains it:

https://www.treasurydirect.gov/savings-bonds/gift-a-bond/

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93195 t1_ityu47a wrote

If you are married or have a trusted partner to gift with, you can buy future year’s maximum. For example, if you’ve already maxed 2022, you can buy another $10K for your partner as a “gift” to deliver in January 2023. Starts the six months of high interest now, and doesn’t even lock anything up for longer, because ineligible for redemption until October 2023 anyway.

And if you’re willing to lock up the money an extra three months to January 2024….you can buy a third $10K (x2, with partner) now too.

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