financial
@cryptoxic I'd rather tell banks just keep the interest, or redirect to charity and don't even tell me.
financial
@cryptoxic when interest is low, it's better to put the money into a stock that pays dividends. Often the dividend payout is higher than interest.
financial
@resist1984
I guess it depends on the country then. In the US accumulated interest is counted, and taxed at year end, as income. The bank/FCU will supply a 1099-INT form. While I always claim it, I don't think the IRS would notice if I didn't.
I think the maximum amount of return from my particular FCU is ~$500/yr. It's spread out over the 12 months, but even an extra $40/mo is not nothing. It's several orders of magnitude more than a major bank like Wells Fargo.
financial
@resist1984
Stocks, however are high risk. I treat the FCU thing as my safety net. The return rate insulates it against recent levels of inflation without the volatility of market corrections damaging it's worth.
If I already had 1yr salary in my safety net I might start looking at riskier investments.
financial
@cryptoxic in some countries there is a tax on the mere act of /calculating/ interest, and that tax can exceed the full amount of the interest.