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| "anoop" <ghanwani[at]gmail.com> writes: - quote - > BreadWithSpam[at]fractious.net wrote:
and follow the link on the bottom of the page to> > An I bond may be reissued if all registrants are deceased. > Who can request the reissue and in who's name will the bond > be reissued? > From my earlier post: See <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/sbireiss.htm <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/sbidies.htm In particular: A court-appointed representative of a deceased person's estate may decide to have the estate's bonds reissued (with the same original issue dates) to change the registration so that someone entitled to receive a portion of the estate's property may be named on the bonds as sole owner. If the person entitled wants to have another living person as co-owner or beneficiary, the person entitled should also complete and sign a reissue request. The Bureau of the Public Debt really does a pretty good job about putting lots and lots of useful information online. -- Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed. No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow? http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting |
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| BreadWithSpam[at]fractious.net wrote: - quote - > An I bond may be reissued if all registrants are deceased.
Who can request the reissue and in who's name will the bondbe reissued? Anoop |
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| Rich Carreiro <rlcarr[at]animato.arlington.ma.us> writes: - quote - > BreadWithSpam[at]fractious.net writes:
It's a good-news/bad-news thing. If you buy EE bonds when> > treasury yield. EE Bonds issued after that will have > > fixed rates for the life of the bond. > That's very interesting. I think that would make I-bonds more > attractive relative to EE-bonds, since EE-bonds will no longer be > able to (indirectly) adjust to inflation as they could when they had > a floating rate. rates are relatively high, and then we go into a low-inflation, lower-rate period, you can come out way ahead. And if you buy them and then rates and inflation soar, you can still cash them in, pay your taxes (and, depending on how long you've held them, a three month interst penalty) and buy new, higher-rate ones. -- Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed. No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow? http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting |
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| BreadWithSpam[at]fractious.net writes: - quote - > While we're at it, it's worth noting that the means
That's very interesting. I think that would make I-bonds more> of calculating interest on EE bonds will be changing > this May, too. EE Bonds issued until then will > continue to get a floating rate based on the 5-yr > treasury yield. EE Bonds issued after that will have > fixed rates for the life of the bond. attractive relative to EE-bonds, since EE-bonds will no longer be able to (indirectly) adjust to inflation as they could when they had a floating rate. And the "doubling" guarantee was moved from after 17 years to after 20 years, lowering the guaranteed minimum return to 3.53% (and you have to hold for the first 20 years, since the guarantee is implemented as a one-time adjustment in the 20th year, if needed). -- Rich Carreiro rlcarr[at]animato.arlington.ma.us |
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| tseverson[at]mn.rr.com writes: - quote - > As part of estate planning, can my mother gift her I Bonds to her
An I bond bearing the name of one individual as owner> children? may be reissued to add the name of another individual as a co-owner or a beneficiary. An I bond may be reissued to eliminate the name of a beneficiary or to substitute the name of another beneficiary in place of an existing beneficiary (in the case of an I bond which already has both an owner and a beneficiary). An I bond may be reissued if all registrants are deceased. A sole owner may *not* "gift" an I bond. It is not transferrable that way. A co-owned bond (as opposed to an owner/beneficiary one) is a little more complicated but the complications effectively eliminate any utility to trying to use a co-ownership structure to sneak in an ability to gift the bond. See <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/sbireiss.htm A bond may be bought as a gift for someone else *at purchase time*. - quote - > If it is possible, does the gift impact the maximum amount of IBonds an
If you are buying a bond as a gift for someone else at> individual (i.e. one of my mother's children) may purchase? the time of purchase, it won't count towards your annual limit on buying I bonds. See <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/sbigift.htm Note that the interest rates on I Bonds will be getting reset in about three weeks at the beginning of May. The CPI-U portion of all existing I Bonds yields will be updated and the "real" or "fixed" portion of newly issued I Bonds will likely be different from what it is now. You may want to factor this into your timing. While we're at it, it's worth noting that the means of calculating interest on EE bonds will be changing this May, too. EE Bonds issued until then will continue to get a floating rate based on the 5-yr treasury yield. EE Bonds issued after that will have fixed rates for the life of the bond. This was announced only a few days ago: See <http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/com/comeefixedrate.htm -- Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed. No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow? http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting |
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#-1
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| As part of estate planning, can my mother gift her I Bonds to her children? If it is possible, does the gift impact the maximum amount of IBonds an individual (i.e. one of my mother's children) may purchase? Thanks for your input, Terry |
| Tags |
| existing, gifted, ibonds |
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