Submitted by BDizzleNizzle t3_yiam8u in personalfinance
I've been talking to my parents about considering adding CD ladder as they are getting older inside a brokerage account. I bought a CD inside my own Fidelity account just to kind of test it out and had a few questions if anyone has done this and could comment.
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The "value" of the asset is going to get worse and worse because Fidelity only shows the current resell value of the CD (as time goes on, fewer payments, so value will continue to drop and drop and report close to a -100% loss?)
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Kind of related to the above, the CD monthly payment goes into cash, so it should be reflected in the overall brokerage account % gain or loss?
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Is it worthwhile to do your CDs in an additional brokerage account to keep them separate from stocks and bonds so both are a bit more accurate on gains/losses? I feel like the slowly losing value and then suddenly getting the $1,000 back as cash (or a lot more given their retirement pool) will potentially spook them or something
Werewolfdad t1_iuho2yo wrote
> The “value” of the asset is going to get worse and worse because Fidelity only shows the current resell value of the CD (as time goes on, fewer payments, so value will continue to drop and drop and report close to a -100% loss?)
Yes and no. Brokered CDs are essentially bonds. As rates rise, the value of the bond will decline but as maturity approaches, the value will approach the face value of the bond
> Kind of related to the above, the CD monthly payment goes into cash, so it should be reflected in the overall brokerage account % gain or loss?
Doesn’t matter unless you sell before maturity.
> Is it worthwhile to do your CDs in an additional brokerage account to keep them separate from stocks and bonds so both are a bit more accurate on gains/losses? I feel like the slowly losing value and then suddenly getting the $1,000 back as cash (or a lot more given their retirement pool) will potentially spook them or something
They can be treated the same as a bond, as that is effectively what they are (albeit credit risk free)