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Savings and Investments thread
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Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?0
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Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?2
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The 4.2% one year bond rate offered by @bobmunro Secure Trust has already been withdrawn. Pity, nice clean and simple website. Might move some easy access cash there in the meantime, they offer 2% compared with Chase 1.5% and NSI 1.2%0
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Charter Savings 1 yr bond rate 4.31%
Fixed Rate Bonds Best Buys | Find the best rate. Keep the best rate (savingschampion.co.uk)
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wwaddick said:Charter Savings 1 yr bond rate 4.31%
Fixed Rate Bonds Best Buys | Find the best rate. Keep the best rate (savingschampion.co.uk)1 -
Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?0
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Arsenetatters said:Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?0
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Covered End said:Arsenetatters said:Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?0
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Arsenetatters said:Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?1
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golfaddick said:Arsenetatters said:Rob7Lee said:Arsenetatters said:My two year fixed rate but no has just ended and I’m looking for a one or two year one with monthly interest paid. Having trouble finding one ! Any ideas?
thanks , i already have a reasonable amount of my total money in investments so like to mix it up
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Arsenetatters said:wwaddick said:Charter Savings 1 yr bond rate 4.31%
Fixed Rate Bonds Best Buys | Find the best rate. Keep the best rate (savingschampion.co.uk)2 -
golfaddick said:Mortgage Update.
The Halifax (one of the biggets & well know lenders in the UK) have just released their new rates starting Monday
2 year fixed START at 6.19% (up to 60% LTV) and go up to 6.59% (for 90%)
5 year fixed are lower at 5.74% and go up to 6.15%.
just remind me what the BOE base rate is.........oh that's right, 2.25%.
Anyone not securing a mortgage deal/offer before the start of this month is now royally screwed.
A fixed rate mortgage would surely be correlated with the forward looking SWAP market and not the point in time BoE Base Rate market. 2 yr SWAP is about 5.5% so a mortgage of 6.19% is not a huge margin to a lender.
Given the market expects rates to peak and fall back then the 5yr rate is cheaper in line with the inverted curve of the swap market.
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Pensions crisis - What crisis?
From Reuters:
The BoE has so far offered to buy up to 40 billion pounds' worth of gilts but has only bought about 5 billion pounds.
So much for "bailing out" pension funds to the tune of £65bn0 -
Dippenhall said:Pensions crisis - What crisis?
From Reuters:
The BoE has so far offered to buy up to 40 billion pounds' worth of gilts but has only bought about 5 billion pounds.
So much for "bailing out" pension funds to the tune of £65bn
I don’t like the look of Bailey at all. I would sack him and bring in another “foreign coach”. The most obvious candidate would be Mario -whatever it takes - Draghi😉0 -
i agree re Bailey.1
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PragueAddick said:The 4.2% one year bond rate offered by @bobmunro Secure Trust has already been withdrawn. Pity, nice clean and simple website. Might move some easy access cash there in the meantime, they offer 2% compared with Chase 1.5% and NSI 1.2%3
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Aldermore offering a fixed 1 year rate of 4.35%. https://www.aldermore.co.uk/personal/personal-savings-accounts/fixed-rate-accounts/0
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Fortune 82nd Minute said:PragueAddick said:The 4.2% one year bond rate offered by @bobmunro Secure Trust has already been withdrawn. Pity, nice clean and simple website. Might move some easy access cash there in the meantime, they offer 2% compared with Chase 1.5% and NSI 1.2%
Just sent in application. Need to open by 1st Nov
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Arsenetatters said:Fortune 82nd Minute said:PragueAddick said:The 4.2% one year bond rate offered by @bobmunro Secure Trust has already been withdrawn. Pity, nice clean and simple website. Might move some easy access cash there in the meantime, they offer 2% compared with Chase 1.5% and NSI 1.2%
Just sent in application. Need to open by 1st Nov
Secure Trust was a much faster and more efficient process.
Edit: the Santander welcome e-mail has popped into my box already, just two hours later. I think that's what you call "expectation management"
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With the increase in rates don't forget to watch your savings allowance of £500/£1,000 depending on your tax band if outside of an ISA.2
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FTSE sliding further downwards0
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kentaddick said:PragueAddick said:FTSE 100 back below 7000…..
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Chaz Hill said:FTSE sliding further downwards
So tax cuts funded by increased borrowing alone - the City were never going to welcome that news.
Having said that she will likely U-turn several times in the next few days leading up to the Chancellor's budget. It amazes me how she doesn't get giddy.3 -
bobmunro said:Chaz Hill said:FTSE sliding further downwards
So tax cuts funded by increased borrowing alone - the City were never going to welcome that news.
Having said that she will likely U-turn several times in the next few days leading up to the Chancellor's budget. It amazes me how she doesn't get giddy.1 -
Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?0 -
PragueAddick said:Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?
Most seem to have an online limit of £25k for faster payments but some go lower down to £10k, some go much much higher in branch or by phone (for instance Metro Bank I know do £250k by branch or phone).
The highest I know of, online, is starling at £1m.
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PragueAddick said:Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?
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bobmunro said:PragueAddick said:Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?
Was quite happy to be honest as the company had to take credit card for which I got cash back!0 -
bobmunro said:PragueAddick said:Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?
That was behind my Rees-Mogg question. Or sub in any very rich customer. Do we really believe they are subject to the same rules?. And yet who is more likely to be involved in money -laundering?. A middling punter whose records with HSBC go back to when it was the Midland, or a foreign non-dom?. And thats before we get to the hilarious idea of HSBC, of all banks, being tough on money-laundering.Still grumpy.0 -
PragueAddick said:bobmunro said:PragueAddick said:Grumpy question of the day.
Can anyone give me a good reason why UK banks believe they can slap a limit - £25,000 - on their customers' ability to move money via online banking in a single day? My Czech banks (not generally noted for their service levels) have no such restrictions, and most of them are branches of or owned by big Western European banks.
And if you believe there is a good reason, do you think this applies to the personal bank account of, oh, I dunno, Jacob Rees-Mogg?
That was behind my Rees-Mogg question. Or sub in any very rich customer. Do we really believe they are subject to the same rules?. And yet who is more likely to be involved in money -laundering?. A middling punter whose records with HSBC go back to when it was the Midland, or a foreign non-dom?. And thats before we get to the hilarious idea of HSBC, of all banks, being tough on money-laundering.Still grumpy.0