The Scotsman

Where should I put my savings to get maximum returns with inflation rising?

Dont let ‘reckless conservati­sm’ put you off stocks and shares Isas – or even a punt on premium bonds

- Jenny Ross is the editor of Which? Money

QAAs a newly retired person who does not want to have to go back to work in the event of investment­s “that can go down as well as up”, I would like to know the best way to invest my savings, which are currently held in two instant access savings accounts. I am reluctant to tie them up for three years to earn a pitiful but slightly bigger interest rate, in case I need/want to use the money. Also inflation is rising, interest rates may rise, so it seems like the wrong time to tie it up. What are the options? With inflation at a 30-year high, savers have to accept a very deflating fact: that their money is losing value in real terms. That’s because no account on the market can come close to matching inflation – even if you tied your money up in a five-year fixedterm account you wouldn’t earn much more than two per cent.

So first of all, it’s worth asking yourself if you really need to keep all of your savings in cash. You say that you’re reluctant to invest because you don’t want to take any risks with your money in retirement, which is completely understand­able. But the erosive effects of inflation means that holding too much in cash is also a risky approach. It even has a name: “reckless conservati­sm”.

While investment­s rise and fall in value over the short term, they stand a much better chance than cash of beating inflation over the long term.

Over the past year, the average stocks and shares Isa fund returned 6.92 per cent – more than 13 times the average cash Isa rate (0.51 per cent), according to financial data provider Moneyfacts.

But whether or not you decide to invest, you’ll still need to keep any money you think you’ll need access to in in cash. So what’s the best home for it? Generally speaking, the longer you can tie up your money, the more interest you’ll earn. The market-leading instant-access accounts today are paying around 0.7 per cent, compared with around two per cent for a three-year fixed account. Over three years that’s a difference of £400 on a lump sum of £10,000.

But you’re right to point out the potential drawback of locking your money away – you could miss out on better deals elsewhere if rates pick up in the meantime. And that’s exactly what’s been happening recently, as providers start to pass on increases in the Bank of England base rate.

Notice accounts are a halfway house between accounts that allow you to withdraw your money whenever you want and those that require you to lock it away for several years. The best notice account on the market as I write this is Shawbrook Bank’s 120 Day Notice account, which pays 1.15 per cent. If you were to deposit £10,000, you’d get an extra £45 over a year compared with the best instant-access account. As the name suggests, you’ll need to plan your withdrawal­s in advance.

If you’re happy to limit your withdrawal­s but don’t want to have to give notice first, you’ve got a choice of accounts that restrict you to two or three withdrawal­s a year. The top rate is offered by Paragon Bank, which pays 0.8 per cent on its Triple Access Cash Isa, as well as its non-isa equivalent.

Another potential home for your savings that gives you the flexibilit­y to withdraw cash whenever you want penaltyfre­e – as well as the possibilit­y of impressive returns – is

NS&I’S premium bonds. There are no guarantees, though. Instead of earning interest you have the chance of winning between £25 and £1m in monthly prize draws. Of

course, you could win nothing – or very little – which means your savings will still be at the mercy of inflation. But the possibilit­y of winning big has kept savers flocking to them, and

the paltry rates offered by traditiona­l savings accounts has only made them look like a better bet.

 ?? ?? Ernest Marples presses the button of ‘Ernie’ to generate the winning number in the first premium bond savings draw in June 1957
Ernest Marples presses the button of ‘Ernie’ to generate the winning number in the first premium bond savings draw in June 1957

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