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How to invest £40 a month?

Maddy25
Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
edited 26 May 2014 at 7:22PM in Savings & investments
Hi

I would like to invest £40 a month, for the next 5 years.

I'm not sure about investments and stuff, but I know that one of my family members invested in a 10 year "thing" and this year she got approximately £20,000! And she said that the monthly amount was fairly small, that she didn't even realise it was leaving her account!

I want something which;
- is risk-free,
- at least keeps up with the rate of inflation,
- does not allow early withdrawals,
- trustworthy and worry-free company.

So in 5 years, I will hopefully have a lump sum which I could use to buy a nice car or something! I'm rubbish at savings so, it has to be strict to not allow me to withdraw money early.

If anyone can please guide me to the right direction?

Thanks.
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Comments

  • Maddy25
    Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
    And maybe also a longer investment for 10 years at £20ish a month.
    Oooookay. A signature you say? :think:............

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  • ColdIron
    ColdIron Posts: 10,039 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Hung up my suit! Name Dropper
    Maddy25 wrote: »
    I want something which;
    - is risk-free,
    - at least keeps up with the rate of inflation
    Such a thing doesn't exist I'm afraid, if it did everyone would get one
  • Maddy25
    Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
    ColdIron wrote: »
    Such a thing doesn't exist I'm afraid, if it did everyone would get one

    So what is the best way to invest?
    Oooookay. A signature you say? :think:............

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  • JohnRo
    JohnRo Posts: 2,887 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    I'd suggest the first thing to do is lower your expectations, £40 a month won't buy you a nice car in 5 years without taking on some serious risk and being extremely lucky.
    'We don't need to be smarter than the rest; we need to be more disciplined than the rest.' - WB
  • Maddy25
    Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
    JohnRo wrote: »
    I'd suggest the first thing to do is lower your expectations, £40 a month won't buy you a nice car in 5 years without taking on some serious risk and being extremely lucky.

    £40 a month, for 5 years, is £2400. Knowing me I won't have single penny to upgrade my car unless I tie myself to an investment.
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  • Maddy25
    Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
    The main thing is, I need a investment which I cannot back out of or I'll just spend the money on the latest iPhone or something!
    Oooookay. A signature you say? :think:............

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  • ColdIron
    ColdIron Posts: 10,039 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Hung up my suit! Name Dropper
    With your timescale and objectives investing isn't really suitable, what you want is a bank account. Savings accounts pay poor rates of interest right now so have a look at a current account like the TSB Plus one below, there are others like it. You'll need to transfer £500 in and out a month but it's easy to do. At 5% on balances up to £2,000 it'll pay you 5% but even then, as JohnRo says, you won't be able to buy a car with it

    http://www.tsb.co.uk/current_accounts/classic_and_classic_plus_accounts.asp
  • Maddy25
    Maddy25 Posts: 86 Forumite
    edited 26 May 2014 at 7:32PM
    ColdIron wrote: »
    With your timescale and objectives investing isn't really suitable, what you want is a bank account. Savings accounts pay poor rates of interest right now so have a look at a current account like the TSB Plus one below, there are others like it. You'll need to transfer £500 in and out a month but it's easy to do. At 5% on balances up to £2,000 it'll pay you 5% but even then, as JohnRo says, you won't be able to buy a car with it

    http://www.tsb.co.uk/current_accounts/classic_and_classic_plus_accounts.asp

    What about something more long-term 10-15 years? Something that after I sign up I don't have to do anything, money will automatically leave my account.

    About £50 a month.
    Oooookay. A signature you say? :think:............

    Don't forget to thank me if you think it's useful:T
  • Smithy101
    Smithy101 Posts: 37 Forumite
    Maddy25 I think you would be wise to educate yourself a little about investing my dear.
    In particular I'm talking about risk.
    You use the term risk free. The reason that there is no such thing is inflation. In short, it eats up the value of your investments.
    If you can afford to save for 5 years you should consider saving in investments that are exposed to the stock market.
    the reason for this is over time stock markets always go up. They always have.
    Over the short term they go up and down but the direction of travel is much like an escalator in that it's always up, but it's unlike an escalator it's never straight up.
    Have you heard about an investment trust savings plan? I would go for that.
    I saw someone else post on this forum that Scottish investment Trust has increased its dividend every year for the past 29 years in a row and by an average of 7% per year - that's well ahead of inflation.
    Does that fit with your risk profile?

    I can't post links because I just registered and I'm not allowed to do so but theie is a post on Moneysavingexpert about it that links to the which investment trust.com website or just Google it.
  • ColdIron
    ColdIron Posts: 10,039 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Hung up my suit! Name Dropper
    Almost all fixed term (1 to 5 years) bank accounts don't allow additional deposits, lump sum only and prepare for even lower interest rates

    You are going to have to compromise your requirements I'm afraid
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