hello everyone and thanks for tuning into the financial investor channel my
name is Brent today we're going to be doing a comparison between the EE bonds
and the AI bonds what is best for you why you should invest in either an EE
bond or an AI bond I do have a breakdown in a chart of why you should do either
of the two now this is mainly up to you guys so I'm going to just be putting out
the information I think this is an important video to understand and listen
to because you know there are differences between the bonds and
depending on the the the timeframe that you're wanting your money invested both
of them are good investments you just have to decide on which one it is so as
we know the yvonne's and I bonds are both lending type of investments meaning
that whoever you lend your money to they're essentially borrowing your money
in exchange for a savings bond that is either issued by corporation or a
government the most common types of savings bonds are government issued
savings bonds and you can buy savings bonds by going to Treasury Directgov and
the link will be in the description below now today we're going to be doing
a comparison between AE bonds and I bonds so if you do watch the videos on a
yvonne's or AI bonds I cover both of them pretty undeath going over their
pages today we're going to be doing a comparison and then what a couple of
what the e bonds and I bonds don't really compare with each other with so
they are both they can be both people they are both electronic let's start off
by saying that paper EE bonds are no longer available but I bonds now are
still electronic through the website all website purchase bonds are electronic
but you can still purchase I bonds paper through your irs refund at the end of
the year so that's the main thing learn how they're different they also have
different interest rates issued the EE bonds currently have a fixed rate of 0.1
zero so the differences between the EE bond and the AI bond as far as interest
rate is they do have differ interest rates the AE bond has a fixed
interest rate no matter what time of the year recession or growth period you know
they always have a fixed rate for those 30 years the AI bonds they have a fixed
rate but then they also get an inflation rate so the current fixed rate of the EE
bond is point one zero the current fixed rate of the AI bond is zero percent
but the inflation makes it 1.96 percent because the inflation rate how are these
bonds the same both of them can be purchased for face value but EE bonds
can be purchased at half the face value available the both form all electronic
bonds they can be bought for $25 or more to the penny so you as example you can
buy an EE bond or an eye bond for 50 dollars and 23 cents the most you can
buy per calendar year for each secure social security number is $10,000
meaning that if your husband and you know your spouse husband and spouse
where to purchase a savings bond for a child they would have to have a social
security number to have that bond underneath their name but that specific
social security number could only have a $10,000 per year so I think this is a
really good idea savings bonds are really good for a long term
EE bonds especially so especially if you have a child who is currently one you
have a social security number you buy a $10,000 Cee savings bond you're
guaranteed to double in 20 years so you buy that when they're won by the age of
21 they that night they now have a $20,000 EE bond that they can use for
their first two year of higher education you buy second $10,000 EE bond when
they're two and now when they're the age of 22 now they have another $22,000 EE
bond that you know doubled now they have a total of $40,000 that they can use
towards their higher education which is the equivalent of what a bachelor's
degree this though in this generation you can use it for that sort of things
aye-aye bonds on the other hand they don't double after 20 years and we're
gonna showcase that in the graph coming up both of them can be redeemed after
twenty twelve months and no less than that both of them have an interest that
is earned monthly and compound semi-annually so the interest is earned
monthly but it doesn't compound and tell us semi-annually and it does earn
interest up to 30 years you can hear if you cash it before five years you do
lose the last three months of interest and they are both taxed at the federal
level but none of the state and of course we've talked about the tax
benefits and how the money can be used for higher education you you can get
excluded from having to pay taxes on your interest off the bond so if you
bought it for $10,000 you cash it out as soon as you hit a 20 year mark when it's
twenty thousand dollars you would only pay taxes on the ten thousand dollars
that you made but if you use that ten thousand dollars on higher education
then you could get it tax-free and you can just keep the ten
thousand dollars that you initially invest it into it so that's a good
breakdown of comparing EE bonds to AI bonds now we're gonna go ahead and I
have an example here if some of the bonds that I currently have and you can
see that the majority of them ee bonds we're gonna see that throughout
time this is 2014 here you can see the block here this shows that the next
external is in 2014 this is 2015 so the I the EE bonds here during the period of
19 the 90s they had interest rates of 4% and you can see that throughout the 2015
there's still 4% 2016 there's still 4% 2017 there's still four percent so no
matter what you purchased the EE bonds app they are still four percent now
these ones the EE bonds that I purchased for $1000 face value I only paid five
hundred dollars up front they're currently getting interest of one to
three percent meaning that some of these may not hit their face value in the next
ten years so some of them I bought in 2008 we're in the year 2017 now so
they're about 10 years they're not halfway there so if I wait ten more
years on these EE bonds they're guaranteed to be a face value of 1000
now I do have about two four six eight ten twelve fourteen sixteen one thousand
dollar bonds so that'll be 18 thousand dollars half of that is eight thousand
so I only paid $8,000 I'm going to be getting eight thousand dollars for my
initial investment of eight thousand dollars within a twenty year mark now
that ain't may or may not be good these were all purchased at a time when I
didn't really need the funds so I just sort of purchase them I did switched i
bonds these do have a little bit of a higher return you can see but they
aren't guaranteed to double in 20 years and you can see that there's
you know the thing with I bonds you can see right here this was bought for
$1,000 in the year 2008 it did not earn any interest I bought it for $1,000 it
had previously made an interest of a hundred and fifty five dollars previous
to that so this was the year 2014 so it took six years to earn a hundred and
fifty five dollars but in the year 2008 when the recession happened it didn't
earn any interest that is because if we go back to here we can see that the
interest rates for May 2008 was 0% for the fixed rate and the inflation rate
that year was also 0% so I earn 0% fixed rate and zero percent inflation rate so
that that's some reasons you may not always want to go for the i bonds oh you
know the e bonds are guaranteed to double in 20 years so you want to make
sure you're picking the right ones some other things to take a look at that in
the year the AI bonds are the other ones that we're going to be looking at here
and the AI bonds they do change per year so this is calendar year 14 there are
two point five nine calendar year 15 they're three point and two point
calendar year 16 they went down a little bit you can see they're now they're in
the one two percent range and now 2017 calendar year inflation is high this
year it's like two point six five percent someone run there you can see
that the interest rate on some of these is over four percent meaning that
they're trying to battle the current inflation night these ones are really
good at battle the inflation I mean I'm getting a four point one percent back on
a thousand dollars which you know right now it's about four hundred three
hundred dollars back in ten years which isn't great but it's
something right these are not guaranteed to double after ten years so a good
example there now let's go ahead and get into our graph now this is the main
important part that I want to show you guys is the difference between EE
blondes and I bombs now I created this little chart what $10,000 is your start
amount and this is just your interest and this is actually a very on point
scale so I can take the ski bond here as an
example and it was issue price 500 with 1.4 so 1.4% issued a $500 and we can see
here that this one okay this is the year 2017 so we're looking for 2017 that was
purchased in 2010 so seven years we can go here to the seventh year and it
should be worth five hundred and fifty nine dollars and four cents by the end
of the year the semi-annual amount so 555 and 559 so it should be right now
555 to 559 so I go over here whoops where is it 559 right here 555 and 559
so I go back to my chart here 555 whereas the was in Avon or era here 555
and 559 so right at 5:52 so this one doesn't actually hit its it just hit its
what 500 in 2007-2008 have been at seventh year so it would have actually
just started at seventh year in 2017 in may may 2017 so right here the beginning
of 2000 seventh here it would be 551 which is what it's that basically 552 so
you can see that this chart is pretty spot-on it is correct so let's go ahead
and continue with our demonstration here so let's go ahead and bump this up back
to ten thousand dollars with our interest of point one zero that we're
currently getting point zero zero one and of course is the percentage there we
go so after thirty years your initial investment of $10,000 in an EE bond will
be ten thousand three hundred and fourteen dollars but wait after twenty
years it's guaranteed to double to the face value so we paid we paid $10,000
but the face value of the bond is twenty thousand dollars so now at the twenty
thousand dollar mark it is now worth twenty thousand dollars at the 20-year
mark and by the end of the thirty years it is now worth twenty thousand dollars
two hundred and twenty one so that's very good
now over here the current interest rate is 1.96 for ten thousand dollars by the
10-year mark you will have made more than your 10-year mark for the EE bond
you have made about two thousand dollars more so if you are going for short-term
investments I bonds would be the way for you but if you're going for long-term
investments EE bonds would be the best for you
if you're looking at something over 20 years ie bonds are the way to go if
you're looking for something between 1 to 15 years I bonds would be the one way
to go but if you hit 15 years with an eye bond you should have went with an e
bond a Yvonne EE bond and just went 20 years because you would have doubled
your investment so again you start with $10,000 after 30 years your $10,000
investment at 1.96 the 14 thousand seven hundred and seventy one dollars so the
difference here is five thousand four hundred and fifty dollars that's a big
difference but this interest changes remember we had the inflation in our in
our savings bonds so I actually have you know 2014 2015 2016 2017 I have interest
rates that have fluctuated it's what we can do is we take the average of these
years and we'll just start with this first one right here let's go ahead and
actually grab the third one I'm going to use the third one as an example so two
point five nine plus third one is three point two five three point two five plus
two point nine five two point nine five plus four point one eight four point one
eight divided by four gives me an average of 3.2 inflation so 3.2 percent
is our new interest rate that is the average and average interest rate with
inflation so now after 30 years $10,000 with the
average of inflation added in gets as $18,000 eight hundred and sixty eighteen
thousand eight hundred and sixty eight dollars in ninety eight cents that has a
difference of one thousand three hundred and fifty-two dollars now the difference
isn't two you know it's a thousand dollars it's about a thousand dollars
off but you could have easily cashed out your AE bond at the 20 year mark where
it was worth twenty thousand dollars whereas your I bond is worth about
$16,000 that would have been a four thousand dollar difference right there
now the inflation it's not always guaranteed to move with this average but
you're a Yvonne is guaranteed to double to its face value after 20-year mark so
it's really up to you what you think is the best investment to be made for you
in your long term investments I think that's a good question for you guys to
kind of figure out if this is something you guys are interested in I think it
was a good video to kind of put out I think savings bonds are kind of
overlooked sometimes and they're not really invested and you can see that I
am invested in AE bonds and Islands and I plan to go long-term and hold these
out because you can see that the interest rate in 2014 was 45 2015 49
2016 57 2017 62 so I'm gaining a pretty nice
floo there you know between 15 and 16 I had nearly $1000 I'm trying to probably
had the same thing by the end of 17 and it's just gonna continue to increase and
compound in the years to come so that is it for this video I hope you liked it
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will see you next time bye
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