Question:

Name of bank which is giving highest rate of intrest?

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Name of bank which is giving highest rate of intrest?

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  1. Interest factor for both Lending & deposits in India by BANKS AUTHORISED TO DO MONEY TRANSACTIONS  are bound to obey the R.B.I guidelines . Hence don't be trapped in the hope of getting higher rate from any unauthorised entity.


  2. all banks give 9% intrest at max in india

    tell me also if it is more than that

  3. visit Ratekhoj.com (http://www.ratekhoj.com) for getting the highest fixed deposit rates in India. compare rates across all banks before investing your money.

  4. City Union Bank (CUB) and Lakshmi Vilas Bank

  5. Standard Chartered..9.35% for 361 days..

    next is Oriental bank of Commerce 9.25% for 366 days.

    BTW, which country are you in?

  6. SBI- State Bank Of India

  7. www.bankdealsblog.com keeps track of the highest interest rate paid by all US banks every day.   Usually it is a bank CD where you must leave your money for 5-12 months without withdrawals.

    One warning:  many of the highest interest rates have weird little features.  With some, you are agreeing to accept advertising from a 3rd party.  You might wish you hadn't agreed to this.

    You can check what US Treasury bonds (3 month bonds, 6 months bonds) pay in the local newspaper the Wall Street Journal or NY Times.  The bank CD's are just a little higher than this.

  8. all banks give the same rate of interest. only some co operatives banks give u a higher rate of interest, but your money is at risk there. if u want to earn interest and keep your money safe for u , go to any nationalised bank.

  9. I think if what I interpret is correct, you are asking for the highest yield on a safe account to put your money. If so, the link below is bankrate.com's rate comparison site. Its quite nice it compares the highest yields across the nation. Typically E-trade is about the national average. Honestly if this is money you do not need anytime soon, there are great corporate bonds yielding 4-6%. Also, look into DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment Programs). This is all to assume you are in no need of this cash in the near short term.

    http://www.bankrate.com/brm/rate/chk_sav...

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