📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

Leeds BS 1 year 3.6% fixed

Options
Those wanting a home for modest savings could consider the Leeds BS fix until 31.8.12 at 3.6%. Penalty free access to up to 25% of your capital. Minimum balance £100, maximum £5,000 (£10,000 joint accounts). http://www.leedsbuildingsociety.co.uk/savings/fixed-rate-bond-1-year-issue-94.html
«1

Comments

  • Great cheers................
  • apt wrote: »
    Those wanting a home for modest savings could consider the Leeds BS fix until 31.8.12 at 3.6%. Penalty free access to up to 25% of your capital. Minimum balance £100, maximum £5,000 (£10,000 joint accounts). http://www.leedsbuildingsociety.co.uk/savings/fixed-rate-bond-1-year-issue-94.html

    Looks like a good rate. Would you go for this or NS&I index linked, say for just over a year? (ISA maxed out)
    I used to have a signature but it disappeared and I just couldn't be bothered writing another, so please feel free to ignore this.
  • ScarletBea
    ScarletBea Posts: 2,921 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    I just opened this one today, super service (unlike the incompetents at Natwest... their loss is Leeds BS gain - and mine!)
    Being brave is going after your dreams head on
  • Sceptic001
    Sceptic001 Posts: 1,111 Forumite
    Looks like a good rate. Would you go for this or NS&I index linked, say for just over a year? (ISA maxed out)
    3.6% gross = 2.88% net for a basic rate taxpayer.

    Index-linked certificates pay RPI + 0.25% tax-free after one year, so inflation (currently 5%) must fall below 2.63% by next August to make the fixed rate a better deal. Forecasts suggest inflation will be falling in twelve months, but my view is that it is unlikely to fall that far that fast. I would go for index-linked and review after 12 months.
  • DragonQ
    DragonQ Posts: 2,198 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts
    Sceptic001 wrote: »
    3.6% gross = 2.88% net for a basic rate taxpayer.

    Index-linked certificates pay RPI + 0.25% tax-free after one year, so inflation (currently 5%) must fall below 2.63% by next August to make the fixed rate a better deal. Forecasts suggest inflation will be falling in twelve months, but my view is that it is unlikely to fall that far that fast. I would go for index-linked and review after 12 months.
    Surely the index-linked certificates are based on monthly averages of RPI, not just what it is in a year's time?
  • Sceptic001
    Sceptic001 Posts: 1,111 Forumite
    DragonQ wrote: »
    Surely the index-linked certificates are based on monthly averages of RPI, not just what it is in a year's time?
    No, NS&I revalue the certificates annually, using the opening RPI and closing RPI figures for the period. There is no averaging.
  • DragonQ
    DragonQ Posts: 2,198 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts
    So if the RPI in September 2011 is 5% and in September 2012 it's 3%, and you got a certificate in September 2011, what would you get after a year? 3.25%?
  • Ark_Welder
    Ark_Welder Posts: 1,878 Forumite
    To confirm Sceptic001's comment:

    We calculate the index-linking by using the RPI figures that apply to your Certificate at the start and end of each year of investment (not the monthly changes in between).

    http://www.nsandi.com/savings-index-linked-savings-certificates#06
    Living for tomorrow might mean that you survive the day after.
    It is always different this time. The only thing that is the same is the outcome.
    Portfolios are like personalities - one that is balanced is usually preferable.



  • Sceptic001
    Sceptic001 Posts: 1,111 Forumite
    edited 27 August 2011 at 4:08PM
    DragonQ wrote: »
    So if the RPI in September 2011 is 5% and in September 2012 it's 3%, and you got a certificate in September 2011, what would you get after a year? 3.25%?
    Yes. It's perfectly logical. The aim is to protect your savings against inflation for the period of the investment. If inflation is 3% at the end of the period, you get 3% plus the 0.25% bonus. The rate of inflation at the time of investment is an historic figure and is irrelevant.

    EDIT: Actually, to be absolutely accurate, for the purposes of calculation, NS&I use the RPI figure published the previous month. So if you invest in September they use the RPI figures published in August 2011 and August 2012.
  • Ark_Welder
    Ark_Welder Posts: 1,878 Forumite
    DragonQ wrote: »
    So if the RPI in September 2011 is 5% and in September 2012 it's 3%, and you got a certificate in September 2011, what would you get after a year? 3.25%?

    RPI won't be 5% - the Rate of Inflation is 5%. RPI is a list of numbers and the changes between to items is used to calculate the Rate of Inflation (i.e. the 5% or 3%).

    So if September RPI is 250 and September 2012 RPI is 257.5 then the rate of inflation for that period is 3%, i.e. (257.5 - 250) / 250
    Living for tomorrow might mean that you survive the day after.
    It is always different this time. The only thing that is the same is the outcome.
    Portfolios are like personalities - one that is balanced is usually preferable.



This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 351.2K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253.2K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453.7K Spending & Discounts
  • 244.2K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 599.2K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 177K Life & Family
  • 257.6K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.