There are great rates on savings popping up all over the place. While the mega-banks are reducing their interest rates on CDs and savings, a lot of newfangled banks continue to offer good rates. Now there's a new player in the game: Mortgage lenders, which through their bank subsidiaries, are now offering CD rates as high as 5.5 percent. Yet with these new opportunities come hazards. Clark advises people not to sink more than $90,000 into a CD through a mortgage lender. Sure the CDs are FDIC insured up to $100,000 and your principal is always protected. But if you put in the full amount and the mortgage lender goes bust you'll lose your interest. By only putting in $90,000 you'll have your principal and interest safeguarded if the lender fails. You can find the various mortgage lenders' great CD rates through newspaper ads or online. Visit
BankRate.com for more information. Clark also thinks people should ladder their CDs, which means having several CDs of different lengths going at the same time -- six months, one year, two years and five years, for example. This allows you to have access to your money every six months to a year, plus not have to guess where interest rates are headed. When your six-month CD matures, just put that money into one of your other CDs that has a good rate. That way you'll spread your money out and reduce your risk.