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cash and stocks and shares ISA 2014
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hedgehogs_2
Posts: 23 Forumite
Hi
I have read all the guides but think I may be being a bit dim asking this question as I am more confused than when I started!
If I was to start a new stocks and shares ISA and also a cash ISA this financial year do they both have to be with the same provider or can one be say with my bank and the other with a building society? All I am sure about is that from 1st July combined they can hold £15,000.
Thanks for the help.
I have read all the guides but think I may be being a bit dim asking this question as I am more confused than when I started!
If I was to start a new stocks and shares ISA and also a cash ISA this financial year do they both have to be with the same provider or can one be say with my bank and the other with a building society? All I am sure about is that from 1st July combined they can hold £15,000.
Thanks for the help.
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Comments
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Hi
If I was to start a new stocks and shares ISA and also a cash ISA this financial year do they both have to be with the same provider or can one be say with my bank and the other with a building society?
As a general rule, banks/building societies do not have particularly competitive stocks and shares investment products, and investment specialists aren't any good with cash deposit products.
So you would use a bank or building society for the cash component and for the S&S component you would go to a stockbroker, an investment platform or in some cases (e.g. investment trusts) direct to the investment manager. There are various threads with summaries of S&S providers.0 -
Yes you can contribute to both, a cash ISA and a S&S ISA, in the same financial year, and they don't have to be with the same provider. From July onwards, you will also see some providers offer a combined S&S and cash ISA, though the interest for the cash part will very likely be even more abysmal than it is for stand-alone cash ISAs.
You would typically not go to a bank for a S&S ISA but instead use a discount broker. Halifax Sharedealing is an exception to that 'rule' but they aren't necessarily the best choice - - it all depends on what you are investing in and how often you trade.
Can I be nosy and ask why you would want to fund both types of ISA?0 -
Thanks both. I think I finally get it! I'm just looking at all possibilities for a friend who is not registered on MSE but knows I rely on the site to help me out when stuck0
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Archi_Bald wrote: ».....Can I be nosy and ask why you would want to fund both types of ISA?".....where it is corrupt, purge it....."0
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[Only joking! but...] Can I be nosy and ask why you ask that question? I've invested almost exclusively in PEPs and S&S ISAs myself, but I can understand that some people might want to have both.
Why?
I can understand the need to split £15K into short and medium/longer term savings. The latter offers itself to S&S ISAs / SIPPs, but it's hard to understand why anyone would put short term money into a cash ISA when you can get more interest from current accounts, even as a higher rate tax payer.0 -
Archi_Bald wrote: »Why?
I can understand the need to split £15K into short and medium/longer term savings. The latter offers itself to S&S ISAs / SIPPs, but it's hard to understand why anyone would put short term money into a cash ISA when you can get more interest from current accounts, even as a higher rate tax payer.
I suppose there just might be some ultra cautious folk who would move "long-term" cash into an ISA at the end of each tax year in the hope of building up a tax-free fund with higher returns in the future.....:undecided".....where it is corrupt, purge it....."0 -
It wouldn't necessarily be short term money, but that's a good point, which is made here frequently. It shows how out of touch I am with cash ISAs in general, but I do use one of those current accounts myself!
I suppose there just might be some ultra cautious folk who would move "long-term" cash into an ISA at the end of each tax year in the hope of building up a tax-free fund with higher returns in the future.....:undecidedRemember the saying: if it looks too good to be true it almost certainly is.0
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