I'm seriously thinking of taking it out an putting it in an ISA or something
the prizes certainly seem to have dropped in frequency
I think I saw something about them changing it so there were fewer prizes but "The Big One" was bigger
which isn't how I personally want it!
premium bond payout is currently 3.6% of prize fund, for the averagely lucky
but you need to hold a lot for your annual results to converge on that - a single pb is likely to pay zero for decades, not 3.6% a year (i've a couple i was given in the 1960s, they've not won a penny, let alone a sausage)
even a boring cash isa will get you over 4% at the moment, and an investment isa holding decent index funds is likely to far outdo that long term
once the isa allowance is used up, whilst for higher/additonal rate taxpayers, putting 50k into pb may give better return than a savings account as the pb prize will be tax free, a non-isa investment account is still likely to thrash the pb 3.6% even after capital gains tax
another option is put money into a sipp, you'll get tax relief (up to the limits) and boost your pension pot
unless you're happy to gamble on a big pb prize and willing to accept the otherwise very poor return, you're likely to do far better putting your money elsewhere.
We took ours out ages ago - a total waste of time.
MSE has an excellent analysis of why most people will win less than the amount they would receive if investing in alternative products.
It seems that the gambling (heart) rules the head for many people.
Worryingly, a huge percentage of PB holders have all their liquid cash assets tied up in PB's - not a position I would like to gamble from.
£33 inflation impact is 1650%.yeah, it's a really bad place to park primary cash, the likelihood of prize return is poor, and inflation erodes the value
according to the bank of england's inflation calculator, £2 from the 60s would be over £35 in today's money (seems low to me), but as premium bonds it's still worth just £2
whereas £5k i'd stuck in a 2001 investment account that i forgot/lost track of until a few months ago had become over £31k, just sat in a boring usa tracker fund, nothing special
£33 inflation impact is 1650%.
A £26k isa growth is a 520% improvement.
A fair comparison of the £5k inflated would be £82,500 if it was invested in the 60’s.
Very crudely 20/60th of the £82.5k is £30k so arguably the ISA has kept pace with inflation over the years but not exceeded it.
Turns out that I got £25!!!
which makes £50 this year
which is a very low rate of return when last year I worked ou tI got more than I would have done in an investment account
@sungod the point I was trying to articulate, perhaps not well is that you gave an apples and pears comparison.
If you invested just £2 through the same graphing system, what figure does it come out with and then you can compare that same £2 against the inflation figure.
Same idea with the £5k figure.
The larger the figure invested, naturally the greater the £ and p generated as the risk is potentially greater. However in percentage terms the gain/loss could be the same “margin” as a smaller investment.