Not if you're maxed out. It automatically sends it to your registered funding source.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 6:09 pmBank account!Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 5:21 pm Had a win email but will see how much when it hits the bank account. Probably £25.
All ours automatically re-invest. It's like a proper savings account.
premium bonds.
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Re: premium bonds.
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Re: premium bonds.
I'm still £15k off max, that's a lot of £25Taipan wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 7:21 pmNot if you're maxed out. It automatically sends it to your registered funding source.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 6:09 pmBank account!Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 5:21 pm Had a win email but will see how much when it hits the bank account. Probably £25.
All ours automatically re-invest. It's like a proper savings account.
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Re: premium bonds.
I'm way off maxed out. I just opted to have wins paid into the bank when I first bought some, rather than into more bonds. If I want more I buy them in chunks but the £25s and £50s are for little treats.Taipan wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 7:21 pmNot if you're maxed out. It automatically sends it to your registered funding source.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 6:09 pmBank account!Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 5:21 pm Had a win email but will see how much when it hits the bank account. Probably £25.
All ours automatically re-invest. It's like a proper savings account.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: premium bonds.
It's like they planned it that way!
Where have you seen 5% BTW? Is that on an instant access account or one where you have to lock it away for X years?
Where have you seen 5% BTW? Is that on an instant access account or one where you have to lock it away for X years?
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Re: premium bonds.
Most of the 5% accounts in the UK seem to come with conditions. 3% seems typical on instant access. Interest is taxable. Some ISAs are close to 5%. By comparison, dividend yield on Legal & General is 10% Others like GSK, and Vodafone aren't bad. A mix of savings inc ISAs, Premium Bonds and the more boring income shares isn't a bad option. (Some shares are high income but may be higher risk - Persimmon, Rio Tinto, Antofagasta etc).Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 7:22 am It's like they planned it that way!
Where have you seen 5% BTW? Is that on an instant access account or one where you have to lock it away for X years?
Markets will probably drop but if you can buy during the recession and then hold you can hope that it doesn't last for ever.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: premium bonds.
Now that's when you know you're wealthy... When you call it a Portfolio you have very little in the money world to trouble you
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Re: premium bonds.
Me too, and not in a good way
Still - lookin' on the bright side, I'm paying into my pension at bargain rates
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Re: premium bonds.
I thought I'd seen a 5% but the best 2 year fixed seems to be 4.65 and Virgin do a 4 .35. There should be better ones after the interest rate hike and after the predicted future hikes. 5% from the bank is a good, low risk 'base-load' investment. Risk is everything retirement-wise. Even 'safe' places get spanked - one of my pension pots is in a 'lifestyle' fund where the risk is reduced as you approach the point where you plan to retire/move it into SIPP so it's ended up in cash funds and bond funds. Got a statement dated a few days after Kwarteng's fiscal intervention - he/the markets knocked 30% off the value I won't say what that means in £ terms but it made my eyes water a bit. Hopefully the statement was on the rock bottom day...I can't bring myself to look. In comparison, my 'Plucky Little Portfolio' , that I run for (hopefully) pocket money, of income shares dropped 10% and recovered half of that in the last few weeks. So I'm reinvesting the dividends during the drop, normally I'd be spending them.Potter wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:09 amThere are going to be conditions if you want 5% today. And despite what I said I don't plan to solely rely on high street banking as a pension, it's safe and quite possible, but you need at least a million quid cash to bring in £50k a year - and as you rightly say you'll be taxed on it.Count Steer wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 7:58 amMost of the 5% accounts in the UK seem to come with conditions. 3% seems typical on instant access. Interest is taxable. Some ISAs are close to 5%. By comparison, dividend yield on Legal & General is 10% Others like GSK, and Vodafone aren't bad. A mix of savings inc ISAs, Premium Bonds and the more boring income shares isn't a bad option. (Some shares are high income but may be higher risk - Persimmon, Rio Tinto, Antofagasta etc).Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 7:22 am It's like they planned it that way!
Where have you seen 5% BTW? Is that on an instant access account or one where you have to lock it away for X years?
Markets will probably drop but if you can buy during the recession and then hold you can hope that it doesn't last for ever.
Over the next couple of years I don't know if I'd consider any shares as safe as two years guaranteed fixed 5% interest from a high street bank though.
I've got a portfolio that's pretty diversified and I've been spanked on quite a bit of it recently. Hopefully like you say, just hold on and hope it doesn't last forever.
I haven't seen 5% on ISAs, which ones are close to that?
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: premium bonds.
Depends what you class as 'in the bank'.
You seem the sort of guy who has both money in the bank and money in 'investments', that already IMO makes you way better off than 99% of people i know. But maybe i just know mostly not wealthy people.
But i also think what i'd consider wealthy and what you'd consider wealthy would massively differ.... massively !
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Re: premium bonds.
Anyone who's in a company pension scheme and has a savings account probably has a portfolio, they just don't call it that.
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Re: premium bonds.
Well for me, if someone has a job still and £50,000 in 'cash' they have in the bank they're in my book pretty healthy... Partly because of £50,000 and partly because they're likely to also have a fair pile of slower access money they could get to if they needed. I'd class £100,000 in the bank they can instantly access as wealthy.
I do understand that things can change in minutes.. but by the same account, even if you lost your job and have £100,000 in the bank you've instantly got 12 months to find a new job... Most people i know would need to find a job within weeks, not a year.
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Re: premium bonds.
I literally don't know anyone who fills that criteria... Well, if you split it in 2, i don't know anyone who fills either
never having to work
more than £1m.
no-one... but i guess that's not a massive shock as that's not the world i live in. I live in a world where a mortgage of £300k and a savings in £0000s is far far more likely.
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Re: premium bonds.
I've now worked for two start ups which have sold up and netted the owners alot of money....millions. >£100m in the case of my current place. The owners still work.
The (former) owner of my current place literally has £100m extra now but he still drives to work in an 8 year old Nissan Leaf wearing an M&S suit.
Wealth is a funny old thing.
The (former) owner of my current place literally has £100m extra now but he still drives to work in an 8 year old Nissan Leaf wearing an M&S suit.
Wealth is a funny old thing.
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Re: premium bonds.
It's something i'd sure struggle to understand as a concept... but i do get where you're coming from.Potter wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:52 am I think in general, as a sweeping statement, in my humble opinion, from watching those people, anyone I know with more than a million quid in the bank seems to get back on a downwards trajectory of unhappiness, and the richest people I know are some of the angriest I've ever met, I wonder what it's all about, all the money in the world and they don't seem to be happy very often.
For me though, heck my life would be incredible if i could just give up work and have the same level of income i have now.... let alone being 'rich'.
Paying off the mortgage would literally be life-changing for me. It's a dream, but will of course eventually become a reality...
If i lived in the world where i could have £1m in the bank though... jeepers, i can't see how i'd be unhappy.
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Re: premium bonds.
Realistically, what does money get you? Once you've got enough that you don't need to worry where your next meal is coming from the rest is down to you.
What do you want to do with it? If you don't know that, all the wealth in the world won't help you.
There have been loads of studies which show paying people more doesn't motivate them. Paying them enough so that money isn't a worry is all you need...after that, motivation and ultimately happiness come from other places.
What do you want to do with it? If you don't know that, all the wealth in the world won't help you.
There have been loads of studies which show paying people more doesn't motivate them. Paying them enough so that money isn't a worry is all you need...after that, motivation and ultimately happiness come from other places.
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Re: premium bonds.
Reminds me of a job interview cartoon I saw recently.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:57 am Realistically, what does money get you? Once you've got enough that you don't need to worry where your next meal is coming from the rest is down to you.
Why do you want this job?
To pay for my hobbies.
Oh. What are they?
Eating hot food and sleeping under a roof.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: premium bonds.
To retire, you don't need anything like your previous wage. No mortgage to pay. No need for expensive holidays or cars etc
My mate's still working for a 5* pension at 66.
I settled for a 5* pension at 54.
Make your choice.
My mate's still working for a 5* pension at 66.
I settled for a 5* pension at 54.
Make your choice.
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Re: premium bonds.
I will be from now on!Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:58 am Anyone who's in a company pension scheme and has a savings account probably has a portfolio, they just don't call it that.
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Re: premium bonds.
That's assuming your mortgage is paid off..
It's not always a 'choice'.... It's time and circumstances too. I can't magically make the mortgage go away currentlyMake your choice.
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Re: premium bonds.
That's about right.Potter wrote: ↑Fri Nov 04, 2022 10:15 am
Like I said, having seen everything I've seen, I reckon the sweet spot is a modest but nice house all paid for, a car of your choice each, your bills all paid and a couple of grand a month in your hand to enjoy life. Any less and you think about money/income too much, any more and you'll still end up thinking about money too much.
Last edited by Yorick on Fri Nov 04, 2022 10:23 am, edited 2 times in total.