Leek Post & Times

Millennial­s look to build long-term wealth

- From Brian Mellor Financial Services Oliver Mellor Dip PFS, BA (Hons)

THE number of people in their 20s and early 30s choosing to invest in a Stocks & Shares Individual Savings Account (ISA) prior to the coronaviru­s pandemic outbreak increased according to the latest HM Revenue & Customs annual ISA data.

Research shows that Generation Z and Millennial­s are now more likely to invest than Baby Boomers.

Many have given up on cash altogether, disillusio­ned by today’s dismal savings rates. An ISA is a taxefficie­nt investment vehicle in which you can hold a range of investment­s, including equities.

The different types of investment that can be held in a Stocks & Shares ISA include: unit trusts, investment trusts, exchange-traded funds, individual stocks and shares, corporate and government bonds, and OEICS (Openended Investment Companies).

The data shows that under-25s are now the fastest-growing demographi­c in terms of Stocks & Shares ISA subscripti­ons, followed by those aged between 25 and 34. Subscripti­ons across both age brackets jumped 92.3 per cent from 131,000 to 252,000 between the 2016/17 and 2017/18.

The number of under-25s with both a Stocks & Shares ISA and a Cash ISA also increased by 138 per cent from 13,000 to 31,000 over the same period. The number of people aged between 25 and 34 subscribin­g to a Stocks & Shares ISA leapt 71 per cent from 109,000 to 186,000 between the 2016/17 and 2017/18 tax years.

By comparison, analysis found that the number of people aged between 35 and 44, as well as those aged 65 and over, who subscribed to a Stocks & Shares ISA increased by just four per cent and five per cent respective­ly over the same period.

The analysis also indicated that the figures for people aged between 45 and 54, as well as those aged between 55 and 64, subscribin­g to a Stocks & Shares ISA actually fell over the course of the year, indicating that these age groups had less of an appetite for investment risk.

The introducti­on of the Lifetime ISA, which gives subscriber­s a 25 per cent government top-up on their savings (up to a maximum of £1,000 a year), is at least partly responsibl­e for the uplift in the number of under-35s trying their hand at investing. Those aged between 18 to 39 can open a Lifetime ISA and save up to £4,000 annually, tax-efficientl­y, up to including the day before their 50th birthday.

Since ISAS were launched 21 years ago, savers have accrued billions of pounds in these tax-efficient wrappers. The 2020/21 Stocks & Shares ISA allowance is £20,000 for individual­s aged 18 and over. All savings held inside the ISA’S tax-efficient wrapper are exempt from Capital Gains Tax, dividend tax and Income Tax.

Bear in mind that the amount you can contribute into an ISA is limited by the type of ISA you have. The tax year runs from April 6 one year to April 5 the next, and you can’t carry any unused amount over to a new tax year – so it’s either use it or lose it. The ISA allowance simply resets back to the annual allowance again on 6 April.

Informatio­n based on our current understand­ing of taxation legislatio­n and regulation­s. Any levels and bases of, and reliefs from, taxation are subject to change.

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