Subprime crisis bumping up interest rates

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Supposedly, the Chinese character for "crisis" is a combination of the symbols for "danger" and "opportunity." When it comes to Wall Street behavior in crisis, though, this famous Japanese haiku nails it:

Their hair is on fire

Yet they run around the lake.

Quick! Take their wallets!

In the current credit crunch, the supposedly sober and staid credit markets have done some rather predictably silly things. Fortunately, you can profit from those things.

Let's start with the easiest one: high-yielding bank CDs from troubled mortgage lenders. Normally, you should be wary when any institution offers you interest rates that seem too good to be true.

Still, the subprime lending scandal has prompted some banks to kick up the interest rates a notch on their money-market accounts and CDs. Thanks to the credit crunch, you can enjoy far juicier rates on CDs and money-market accounts than you could just a week ago.

Why? In short, they need the money.

Let's say a bank made many loans to subprime borrowers - by definition, borrowers with shaky credit who are more likely to default.

These loans typically carried low initial rates for two years, which then would revert to a crushingly high rate for the next 28 years. In some cases, the bank would lend the borrower both the mortgage and the down payment. The borrowers had expected to refinance before the loan became a problem. And the bank planned to sell the loan to someone else just as soon as the ink was dry on the mortgage note.

Unfortunately, home prices fell, and subprime mortgage delinquencies started to rise. Suddenly, subprime lenders had a big problem: To lend money, you need money. The flow of new money to subprime lenders came to a halt. Investors didn't want to buy subprime loans any more. Even worse, short-term cash - vital to any company - dried up in the money market.

Banks raise the rates they pay depositors to attract new money. In the case of some banks with a heavy subprime lending business, they push up rates quite a bit.

"As long as you're within the comfortable confines of federal deposit insurance, that additional return is pure gravy," said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst for Bankrate.com.

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