I had a CD with a 5.5% interest rate and the bank wants it back early. Now what?

Interest-rate conditions are ripe for banks to call back CDs if they can. - Getty Images

I made a bit of an investing mistake recently. I had my CDs all planned out and laddered to come due for the next few years so I could easily make required withdrawals from an inherited IRA. I was happy and even felt savvy, because all of the interest rates on the CDs were higher than the going rate in an environment where rates were due to soon slip even lower. Then I got an email last week from the bank giving me notice that they were taking back one of the CDs three months early.

My 5.5% CD was what’s known as a “callable CD,” which means that after a specified period, the bank can “call” it back. I knew this going in, but had picked the CD anyway because the rate was the highest of the options available at the time. I thought, like many do, “What’s the worst that could happen?”

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With an FDIC-insured certificate of deposit, the worst-case scenario is not really that bad, at least with a small amount of money. When a CD is called, the investor gets back what they paid, plus the interest earned up to that point. What they face is reinvestment risk, which is that they have to do something else with the money at the prevailing rate — which is going to be lower, because the only reason banks call a CD is because rates are lower now than they were when they issued it. If you’re talking about $5,000, the difference can be a few hundred dollars. If you invested $100,000 or more in a callable CD, it would be thousands.

“It’s a ‘heads I win, tail you lose’ proposition,” said Greg McBride, the chief financial analyst for Bankrate. “The call feature benefits the bank, not savers.”

This imbalance in favor of banks is why industry experts like McBride, or Ken Tumin at DepositAccounts, generally advise against consumers investing in callable CDs. But the problem is that most consumers don’t always know what they are getting into; they just see rates, and callable CDs have higher rates to offset the reinvestment risk involved.