Fortune and luck favors the brave!
Nowhere that statement is more apt than the stock markets. As seen before, timing does have a pretty sizeable impact. And if there is a way to automate those thought process or maybe even put an algorithm that could help in managing swings. Now, this is not a novel thought and there are plenty of algorithms and strategies out there which run in an automated fashion where +/- 15% or 20% is something that triggers a rebalancing or buy/sell decision. That is pretty solid move for sure.
But for those that are safe and want to time the market a bit or just wait till the opportunity presents itself, the way to go is to have some squirreled away in a CD or an online savings account. Here will go thru which ones are some of the good ones.
Of course, you can go to the bankrate.com or similar websites and plug in your city and get the list and you can also go to the list of your local credit unions for better rates since they often almost come at top. However the drawback of the CU is that the website is often not that great and transfers etc take time. Be prepared for additional paperwork such as faxes and scans etc. With online national banks etc those can be saved. The rates are good at online banks as well as CUs while the national banks unilaterally suck. As for 2016, for about 7-8 years now, all the big banks give about 0.1-0.5% max. There are few of the online versions that are coming up and many of them are simply bad.
Some standouts are American Express online savings but they have only general savings and no IRA. Barclays is also the same.
Standout here is Discover Savings. They are really good.
So is Ally Bank. Nationwide Bank. Synchrony Bank.
Credit Unions affiliated with Govt or military are good with rates such as PenFED CU, Navy FED CU, NASA CU, Airforce CU among others. Alliant CU is one of those which are really good with rates and worth a checkout.
Here are the rates in no particular order:
http://www.alliantcreditunion.org/bank/credit-union-certificate#rates
https://www.depositaccounts.com/banks/air-force-fcu.html
https://www.discover.com/online-banking/ira-cd/
https://www.penfed.org/IRAs-Overview/#tabs-2
https://www.navyfederal.org/assets/rates/view-all.php and https://www.navyfederal.org/products-services/checking-savings/iras.php
https://www.nationwide.com/bank-IRA.jsp
https://www.ally.com/bank/savings-account-rates/
A big shout out to Ally bank since they offer the 1% as online savings which is very nice since a lot of banks carry penalty when you have to withdraw the money or transfer over to your brokerage account. If you see an opportunity, such as the oil crisis in early 2016, when you feel to transfer a portion over to a brokerage account, with CUs and other places there are penalties while the online savings such as Ally, there is none. Discover also excels in this department. And honestly, one wants minimum number of hoops to jump before making any transfers. It is fine if it takes about 2-3 standard days to transfer over. But it is altogether different mental block if there is a CD break and issue a new CD, think about penalty and all that. Maybe you might come out ahead or whatever, but in the long run, from a psychological perspective, it is better to keep things simple and straightforward. And predictable.