The 3.75% at PCF is on their main page, and it says this:
Quote:
deposit any amount as often as you wish from September 1 to November 30, 2008
you can deposit into one account or all three!
you earn 3.75% interest on the average total amount of new deposits you make into all eligible accounts
the extra interest you earn will be paid in a lump sum into one of your accounts in December 2008
And Mike, you're off a bit on the PCF calculation... if you have >$1000 in there, then it is 3.05% on the entire amount.
So basically, if you've got less than $1000, it's ING all the way, and with the double interest promotion, which says:
Quote:
Effective January 1, 2009, funds deposited in the promotional Tax-Free Investment Savings Account opened between October 4 and December 31 will be transferred to a new Tax-Free Savings Account so you won’t miss a minute of Tax-Free interest.
Open an ING DIRECT promotional tax-free Investment Savings Account today and on December 31st we will double your interest payment. This should be enough to cover any tax you’ll need to pay on interest earned and will help you get a head start for tax-free saving in January.
Well, I'm not sure on a few terms. ING pays interest monthly normally, and they say they'll double your December 31st interest payment, so it might just be one month of interest doubling. They also will probably limit it to $5000 since that would be the maximum they could auto-move on January 1st into your TFSA. That being the case, even if they double the interest for the 2 and a half months you'd have it in, you're only talking an extra $31.25, worst case you're talking an extra $12.50 if it's just the December payment. (Of course if you're married and your spouse has another $5000 that would be $63 or $25).
The only downside to ING is that it takes longer to get to your checking account (a few days) than it takes PCF to move it from their savings to their free checking (overnight). I also bank with PCF since everything is free, so in my case it was just easier to keep it there, but with the new promotions I may open an ING account, since my existing savings don't count as new money, so I'm still getting 3.05.
In the end though, I think either are equally good for you, and both are WAY better than 0.25%, so do whatever works best for you. If you shop at Loblaws/Superstore anyway, the convenience might win out. If you never go there, ING might be more convenient.