General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: 401(k)s are a sham: Duped by a DIY retirement dream, elderly face staggeringly low living standards [View all]FBaggins
(28,705 posts)That isn't an IRA rollover. (i.e., a "rollover" as far as IRA regulations are concerned).
Your bank may or may not call them CDs, but they're a time deposit of some sort (a fixed or variable rate for a set period of time) and they're set to automatically "roll over" to a new time deposit at whatever the rate is at that point. Some financial institutions stopped calling them "CDs" when they stopped issuing actual certificates, but it hardly matters.
There's no such thing as an "automatic rollover" in the sense that the government is restricting rollovers from IRAs. An IRA rollover has to involve you removing funds from the account and taking them in a form that you could spend (cash or a check made out to you) and re-depositing them into a new IRA account within 60 days.
I've never touched them
Then you've never performed an actual IRA rollover. You don't have anything to worry about (apart from inflation)
Your bank could ease the confusion by calling them "auto-renewals" rather than "rollovers"... particularly when the account in question is an IRA.