We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.
This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.
📨 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!
buying an individual gilt question
A_T
Posts: 975 Forumite
I may have got this all wrong :-)
the gilt Treasury 4.75% 07/12/2030 (TR30) is selling at £104.62
if I buy £10462 worth of these (100 of them) I will get approximately £475 per year until 2030 at which point I will get £10000 back
am I right?
0
Comments
-
Yes
(Too short)
I am an Independent Financial Adviser. Any comments I make here are intended for information / discussion only. Nothing I post here should be construed as advice. If you are looking for individual financial advice, please contact a local Independent Financial Adviser.2 -
Be aware that some of these trade in units of £1 (one) so don't be surprised when your stockbroker's quote looks far too low. Obviously, you just buy more units to arrive at the amount you want.0
-
Yes you are right, of course that interest rate reflects the risk the market currently associates with UK Gilts, but is still way below inflation.“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”0
-
Great question, I was going to ask it too!
"For every complicated problem, there is always a simple, wrong answer"0 -
I guess it's like buying an annuity - but with the principle returned on a certain date.I'm not sure what platforms allow investors to buy individual gilts - I know HL do but not Fidelity.0
-
If you would have to pay income tax on the coupon payments, it's worth looking at gilts which pay low interest. They will be priced lower (eg TN30 maturing 22/10/2030 with a coupon of 0.375% is priced around £74) and the 'capital gain' of £26 is tax free.
Do you have a solution to that issue?bostonerimus said:Yes you are right, of course that interest rate reflects the risk the market currently associates with UK Gilts, but is still way below inflation.3 -
Interactive Investor do. I believe iWeb/Halifax do, but it may be telephone only.A_T said:I guess it's like buying an annuity - but with the principle returned on a certain date.I'm not sure what platforms allow investors to buy individual gilts - I know HL do but not Fidelity.
1 -
A_T said:I guess it's like buying an annuity - but with the principle returned on a certain date.Also, you can sell it before the 'certain date'. Not really like an annuity then - more like a fixed term savings account that lets you (perhaps with xx days' loss of interest) redeem it early.On a wider point, I think individual gilts are looking a good alternative to cash or bond funds. I have held a short duration bond fund (mostly BBB or thereabouts) for a few years and it has served me well in limiting losses this year (though not as well as masonic who saw what was coming and got out of bonds) but a gilt which returns close to 5% over the coming few years feels like a better place to be than in a fund.1
-
out of curiosity, what percentage loss is your portfolio showing at the moment?aroominyork said:A_T said:I guess it's like buying an annuity - but with the principle returned on a certain date.Also, you can sell it before the 'certain date'. Not really like an annuity then - more like a fixed term savings account that lets you (perhaps with xx days' loss of interest) redeem it early.On a wider point, I think individual gilts are looking a good alternative to cash or bond funds. I have held a short duration bond fund (mostly BBB or thereabouts) for a few years and it has served me well in limiting losses this year (though not as well as masonic who saw what was coming and got out of bonds) but a gilt which returns close to 5% over the coming few years feels like a better place to be than in a fund.0 -
My overall portfolio? the fixed interest element? the short duration fund? and over what period?MarcoM said:
out of curiosity, what percentage loss is your portfolio showing at the moment?aroominyork said:A_T said:I guess it's like buying an annuity - but with the principle returned on a certain date.Also, you can sell it before the 'certain date'. Not really like an annuity then - more like a fixed term savings account that lets you (perhaps with xx days' loss of interest) redeem it early.On a wider point, I think individual gilts are looking a good alternative to cash or bond funds. I have held a short duration bond fund (mostly BBB or thereabouts) for a few years and it has served me well in limiting losses this year (though not as well as masonic who saw what was coming and got out of bonds) but a gilt which returns close to 5% over the coming few years feels like a better place to be than in a fund.
0
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply
Categories
- All Categories
- 352.1K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.6K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 454.2K Spending & Discounts
- 245.2K Work, Benefits & Business
- 600.8K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 177.5K Life & Family
- 259K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.7K Read-Only Boards

