£10k savings........whats best to do with it?
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From: Wickford, Essex - GamerTag - lCE
I think most people on this thread don't realise that A: it's not all my money, and B: we need it lol. Won't be blowing it that's for sure.
Might look at offset mortgages then.
I think I'm worrying too much as even if I drop to 1.5% ill only lose £100 a year on £10k. Not the end of the world
Might look at offset mortgages then.
I think I'm worrying too much as even if I drop to 1.5% ill only lose £100 a year on £10k. Not the end of the world
If you get a £50 cheque every couple of months it's worth it as the interest at what £6 a week isn't going to make you rich
It's like the lottery as well
One day you might win a bigger amount but worth a punt at 10k as you can withdraw the capital at short notice which is important with a new baby and the costs involved in that
It's like the lottery as well
One day you might win a bigger amount but worth a punt at 10k as you can withdraw the capital at short notice which is important with a new baby and the costs involved in that
Better than sitting in a bank hey?
Prices have indeed gone nuts! I hired one for my sisters wedding; she loved it! The other sister had a massive Yank Cadillac. We went for a new one; maybe it will eventually go up in value?! But by that time, internal combustion engines will probably be banned.
It's a real nightmare investing in this day and age - it used to be so simple.
Offset Mortgages are great. Let's say you wish to put your money into a safe investment - use an Offset Mortgage ..... maybe borrow £200,000 - but (and this is where it's great) put £195,000 of your savings into it. Pay interest on just £5,000!! Result!
Savings can come out whenever you like, you are earning no interest on the money - BUT saving paying interest! At your highest rate - so, saving tax too!!
Put the money to good use - maybe a property on Buy-To-Let .... ensure you can get at least 7% yield and you're quids in.
Money is so cheap at the moment that saving is a mugs game - borrow as much as you can, offset it, and invest!
Offset Mortgages are great. Let's say you wish to put your money into a safe investment - use an Offset Mortgage ..... maybe borrow £200,000 - but (and this is where it's great) put £195,000 of your savings into it. Pay interest on just £5,000!! Result!
Savings can come out whenever you like, you are earning no interest on the money - BUT saving paying interest! At your highest rate - so, saving tax too!!
Put the money to good use - maybe a property on Buy-To-Let .... ensure you can get at least 7% yield and you're quids in.
Money is so cheap at the moment that saving is a mugs game - borrow as much as you can, offset it, and invest!
What no one has mentioned is the rate of inflation. If you get 3% on your savings and inflation is at 3% you are standing still.
Basically, if it is making less than inflation you are losing money. A cash/shares ISA should achieve the level of return needed otherwise you are better off spending it (which is what the government wants so it helps drive a bit of growth in the economy)
Basically, if it is making less than inflation you are losing money. A cash/shares ISA should achieve the level of return needed otherwise you are better off spending it (which is what the government wants so it helps drive a bit of growth in the economy)
At present I have it in a Santander esavings account getting 3.06% interest.
My mortgage is 2.99% so after tax I'm only losing a very small amount by not paying it off the mortgage.
The trouble is anything I pay off the mortgage I cannot get back again. Very happy with my mortgage apart from this though.
So the £10k is a little nest egg to help us through now that my wife will be going part time as we just had a baby son.
My esavings account is soon to go to pretty much 0%. I can start a new one up but I will only get 1.5%!
So what do people suggest?
Just been looking on money savings expert and it looks like you can't get 3% that easily Even ISAs are worse than my current rate.
I'd like to keep access to it really as we might need to drawn £100-200 a month to help us out.
Any ideas?
Does any one have the Santander 123 current account? You get 3% in there but then it would get mixed up with my personal money. £2 a month fee
My mortgage is 2.99% so after tax I'm only losing a very small amount by not paying it off the mortgage.
The trouble is anything I pay off the mortgage I cannot get back again. Very happy with my mortgage apart from this though.
So the £10k is a little nest egg to help us through now that my wife will be going part time as we just had a baby son.
My esavings account is soon to go to pretty much 0%. I can start a new one up but I will only get 1.5%!
So what do people suggest?
Just been looking on money savings expert and it looks like you can't get 3% that easily Even ISAs are worse than my current rate.
I'd like to keep access to it really as we might need to drawn £100-200 a month to help us out.
Any ideas?
Does any one have the Santander 123 current account? You get 3% in there but then it would get mixed up with my personal money. £2 a month fee
I have an Accord Offset mortgage, and have my pot to reduce my monthly payments.
I save a fortune every month. More than I'd ever gain with the same amount sat in an ISA.
Last edited by stilover; Mar 4, 2013 at 01:18 PM.
Premium bonds for lowest risk.
If you are a bit of a risk taker then I would consider some shares.
Google are looking strong and there is talk of another 15-20% this year.
Centrica is another good earner. Or you could take more of a risk and throw £5k into something like Dixons. Avoid penny shares etc - you want something thats fairly reliable. I would avoid gold for this reason.
Of course there is tax to pay (probably) so bear that in mind. Look at IWebsharedealing as they are quite cheap.
HTH!
If you are a bit of a risk taker then I would consider some shares.
Google are looking strong and there is talk of another 15-20% this year.
Centrica is another good earner. Or you could take more of a risk and throw £5k into something like Dixons. Avoid penny shares etc - you want something thats fairly reliable. I would avoid gold for this reason.
Of course there is tax to pay (probably) so bear that in mind. Look at IWebsharedealing as they are quite cheap.
HTH!
It doesn't matter though if you offset the whole amount. I have a 50k mortgage but have 50k offset against it therefore my rate of 4.6 % becomes irrelevant, unless of course you start dipping into your savings that you offset against it.
Premium bonds for lowest risk.
If you are a bit of a risk taker then I would consider some shares.
Google are looking strong and there is talk of another 15-20% this year.
Centrica is another good earner. Or you could take more of a risk and throw £5k into something like Dixons. Avoid penny shares etc - you want something thats fairly reliable. I would avoid gold for this reason.
Of course there is tax to pay (probably) so bear that in mind. Look at IWebsharedealing as they are quite cheap.
HTH!
If you are a bit of a risk taker then I would consider some shares.
Google are looking strong and there is talk of another 15-20% this year.
Centrica is another good earner. Or you could take more of a risk and throw £5k into something like Dixons. Avoid penny shares etc - you want something thats fairly reliable. I would avoid gold for this reason.
Of course there is tax to pay (probably) so bear that in mind. Look at IWebsharedealing as they are quite cheap.
HTH!
Indeed. I would not put it all into shares, but a small % of your funds - lets say 25% for round numbers... its a risk - but not a total risk.
Then as you say stick with a safe PLC, or two. Check the price every few days. Try and avoid buying before FY results. Sell after a good results report.
Its easy, when it goes well, just remember to take into account fees and tax.
Then as you say stick with a safe PLC, or two. Check the price every few days. Try and avoid buying before FY results. Sell after a good results report.
Its easy, when it goes well, just remember to take into account fees and tax.
My dad bought a tag 9 years ago and has just traded it in for the same value as he bought it for. Not a private sale, he WOULD have got more.
I honestly wouldnt be investing it, if its too good to be true, it's probably too risky and you'll lose out. And for 3% I wouldnt be arsed at all.
I honestly wouldnt be investing it, if its too good to be true, it's probably too risky and you'll lose out. And for 3% I wouldnt be arsed at all.
Thread Starter
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From: Wickford, Essex - GamerTag - lCE
The interest rate is very important for us
If you have £10K to invest, want to take up to £200 a month and want more than high street rates then I'm not sure anything other than a S&S ISA will do the job. At least the only thing that will give you any chance of making the £10K last more than 4/5 years.
You could split it 50/50 Cash ISA S&S ISA but the Cash ISA will just drag the overall growth down.
You could split it 50/50 Cash ISA S&S ISA but the Cash ISA will just drag the overall growth down.
Last edited by EddScott; Mar 5, 2013 at 03:56 PM.
If i could go back in time 10 years with £10k id buy as many sunbeam lotus's and chevette HS's as i could find and ping them into storage ...... whats todays GA rally car?
Saab 900 carlsson???
Lotus esprit jps???
Or what about a pair of P1's????
Id put money (if i had any) on any of the above making more cash than any interest rate over the next 10 years .... game is knowing which!
Saab 900 carlsson???
Lotus esprit jps???
Or what about a pair of P1's????
Id put money (if i had any) on any of the above making more cash than any interest rate over the next 10 years .... game is knowing which!
I wish I'd bought a Lancia Integrale EVO1 when I had the chance rather than another Impreza.
I was looking at £6.5K for a decent one and now the sheds from Japan are £20K.
I was looking at £6.5K for a decent one and now the sheds from Japan are £20K.
Last edited by EddScott; Mar 5, 2013 at 05:42 PM.
Thread Starter
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From: Wickford, Essex - GamerTag - lCE
Well I've upgraded my current account to a sandanter 123 account which enables me to do a 2 year fixed ISA at 2.5%. As there's no tax that's better than what I'm getting now.
Will max that out and keep the rest in a normal savings.
I just can't risk investing it etc
Don't like the idea of premium bonds as I'd have to be lucky to make more than the ISA
So what's the cheapo car to buy now that will go up in value?
Will max that out and keep the rest in a normal savings.
I just can't risk investing it etc
Don't like the idea of premium bonds as I'd have to be lucky to make more than the ISA
So what's the cheapo car to buy now that will go up in value?
(many a moon ago, just before i got my licence), with a 0-60 of 8.6 seconds which is only "run of the mill" these days!How things change?
mb
Well I've upgraded my current account to a sandanter 123 account which enables me to do a 2 year fixed ISA at 2.5%. As there's no tax that's better than what I'm getting now.
Will max that out and keep the rest in a normal savings.
I just can't risk investing it etc
Don't like the idea of premium bonds as I'd have to be lucky to make more than the ISA
So what's the cheapo car to buy now that will go up in value?
Will max that out and keep the rest in a normal savings.
I just can't risk investing it etc
Don't like the idea of premium bonds as I'd have to be lucky to make more than the ISA
So what's the cheapo car to buy now that will go up in value?
If not then the one you've done now will count for 12/13 and just do another one in April for 13/14
If its fixed for 2 years does that restrict withdrawals?
Make a date in your diary to review the ISA in 2 years. After the special rate they drop it to almost nothing.
Thread Starter
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From: Wickford, Essex - GamerTag - lCE
Not had an ISA for years. Just put £5640 into this fixed ISA. Yes withdrawals are restricted but I'm left with £4360 in an esaver getting 1.5%
I can move some more of this into another ISA on 6th April.
Think I'm pretty much sorted for the near future
I can move some more of this into another ISA on 6th April.
Think I'm pretty much sorted for the near future
I think the post 2 up from this one actually answers my question but..........
I have never had a ISA before and have 10k+ that I can put into something to earn some better interest than what it's getting now (this money is still in an old Abbey online savings account, which has since been changed to a Santander account, which I was saving money in when we was saving for a deposit on our house). This remaining money has been sitting in there for the last 3 years or so earning bugger all interest as the rates etc dropped some years ago but to be honest I haven't bothered doing anything with it but thought might be an idea to move it somewhere to get a bit of interest on it (I think at the moment its gets something stupid like 20p interest a month!! lol).
So, having a look at some ISA's (Santander seems to be one of the best at 2.5%), if I open one now before the new tax year starts, can I stick in £5640 now, then in a few weeks when the new year starts can I then put in another £5640 to give me over 11k in a ISA (or move it to anoter account depending who's giving the best rate etc)? Rather than leaving it a few weeks and then only having £5640 in for the next year?
I have never had a ISA before and have 10k+ that I can put into something to earn some better interest than what it's getting now (this money is still in an old Abbey online savings account, which has since been changed to a Santander account, which I was saving money in when we was saving for a deposit on our house). This remaining money has been sitting in there for the last 3 years or so earning bugger all interest as the rates etc dropped some years ago but to be honest I haven't bothered doing anything with it but thought might be an idea to move it somewhere to get a bit of interest on it (I think at the moment its gets something stupid like 20p interest a month!! lol).
So, having a look at some ISA's (Santander seems to be one of the best at 2.5%), if I open one now before the new tax year starts, can I stick in £5640 now, then in a few weeks when the new year starts can I then put in another £5640 to give me over 11k in a ISA (or move it to anoter account depending who's giving the best rate etc)? Rather than leaving it a few weeks and then only having £5640 in for the next year?





