Skip the Bank: Host Says Short-Term Bond Funds Offer Superior Yields Without the Savings Account Risk

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By Don Lair Published

Quick Read

  • Ultra-short and short-term bond funds now yield 3.65% to 4.27% depending on maturity, substantially outpacing most bank savings accounts while offering FDIC-insured alternatives with minimal duration risk.

  • With the Federal Reserve holding rates steady at 3.75% and the yield curve normal (no inversion), these funds attract three buyer types: savers seeking better returns, retirees funding near-term expenses, and income investors using them as defensive positions that historically see inflows during market drawdowns.

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Skip the Bank: Host Says Short-Term Bond Funds Offer Superior Yields Without the Savings Account Risk

© Tessa Chung from capturenow and PashaIgnatov from Getty Images

The math on parking cash has shifted again. With the Federal Reserve holding its target rate steady at 3.75% since December 11, 2025, and short Treasury bills clearing well above what most banks pay on savings, a recent Investing Insights discussion reframed short-term bond funds as something bigger than an income play.

The host walked through how flows into ultra-short and short-term bond funds follow a rhythm: when stress hits, money pours in. When stocks recover, it leaks back out. "Every time we see like a decent drawdown in the market," those flows show up, calling the pattern "predictable." The host described these vehicles as "some of the safest ETFs and mutual funds on the planet."

Why the Yield Math Now Favors Short Bonds

The current Treasury bill curve tells the story. As of May 18, 2026, 4-week bills yield 3.65%, 13-week bills yield 3.68%, 26-week bills yield 3.74%, and 52-week bills sit at 3.80%. Stretch out a bit further and the 2-year Treasury yields 4.07% while the 5-year offers 4.27%. Most national bank savings accounts still pay a fraction of these rates.

The yield curve is also behaving normally. The 10-year minus 2-year spread sits at 0.54%, positive throughout the past 12 months with no inversion, according to FRED data. That removes the prior dynamic when the short end paid more than longer maturities, yet short-term yields remain compelling on their own.

Three Buyers, One Vehicle

The host pointed to a broader user base than the traditional income crowd:

  • Savers chasing yields above what bank accounts deliver.
  • Retirees earmarking funds for near-term spending, what the host described as "groceries, vacations, house maintenance, whatever it may be."
  • Traditional income investors using these as a defensive sleeve.

The Caveats Worth Repeating

Two trade-offs separate these funds from a savings account. They "don’t come with the FDIC insurance that you would get on a bank savings account," and shareholders "are subject to a small amount of volatility." The volatility is modest at the short end because duration is low, yet the NAV can still wobble when rates jump. The 10-year Treasury yield, for instance, climbed to 4.59% on May 15, 2026 from a February low of 3.97%.

What to Watch

With the VIX at 17.82 and the S&P 500 up 24.31% over the past year, conditions look calm. History suggests the next drawdown will pull flows back into short-term bond funds quickly. Investors treating these vehicles as a cash management tool rather than a yield trade are positioned for either outcome.

Photo of Don Lair
About the Author Don Lair →

Don Lair writes about options income, dividend strategy, and the kind of boring-but-durable investing that actually funds retirement. He's the founder of FITools.com, an independent contributor to 24/7 Wall St., and a former writer for The Motley Fool.

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