The Sunday Times - UK (2022-04-10)

(Antfer) #1

14 The Sunday Times April 10, 2022


MONEY


FIVE THINGS
YOU NEED TO
KNOW ABOUT...
INVERTED
YIELD CURVES

THE


FIVER


5


5


5


5


1


Financial events are
nearly impossible to
predict, but it could
be argued that a US
economic recession is
different because of one
key indicator: an inverted
yield curve.

2


The yield curve
shows the returns
available from
bonds issued by a
government for different
maturity periods. The
US curve runs from
short-dated bonds of
between three months
and two years, to longer-
dated bonds of between
five and 30 years.

3


Usually, investors
demand a higher
return for longer-
dated bonds and less for
shorter-dated ones. An
inversion of the yield
curve is when a bond with
a longer duration yields
less than one with a
shorter duration. Last
week, the two-year bond
briefly yielded more than
the ten-year bond.

4


This is worrisome
because an
inversion of the
curve has preceded each
US recession since 1955
by between six months
and two years, according
to a report in 2018 by the
Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco, with only
one false alarm.

5


Should we worry?
Many fear that
central banks will
raise interest rates too fast
and too high, forcing
mortgage rates up and
causing a recession.
Others noted that the
inversion was brief and
other parts of the curve,
such as ten-year bonds
versus three-month
bonds, are nowhere near
inverting. Only time will
tell if this is one of the few
exceptions to the rule.

David Brenchley

CASH ISAS
INSTANT ACCESS
Provider Account name Min deposit Interest Transfers in Contact
Marcus Cash Isa £1 1% No marcus.co.uk
Shawbrook East Access Cash Isa Issue 20£1,000 0.92% Yes shawbrook.co.uk
FIXED RATE
Provider Account name Term Min deposit Rate Transfers inContact
Shawbrook Bank 1 Year Fixed Rate Cash Isa Bond Issue 591 year £1,000 1.4% Yes shawbrook.co.uk
United Bank UK 2 Year Fixed Rate Cash Isa2 years £2,000 1.71% Yes ubluk.com

Source: savingschampion.co.uk — 0808 178 5354

CHILDREN’S ACCOUNTS
Provider Account name Account type Min deposit Interest rate Contact
Dudley BS Junior Easy Saver Regular Saver £10 3.5% dudleybuildingsociety.co.uk
Saffron BS Children’s Regular Saver Issue 2Regular Saver £0 3% saffronbs.co.uk
Santander^1 123 Mini Current Account Current Account £1,500 2.96% santander.co.uk

(^1) Interest paid on balances between £1,500 and £2,000 2 0.25% paid on balances above £3,000
JUNIOR ISAS
Provider Account name Min deposit Interest rate Rate Contact
The Family BS Cash Junior Isa £3,000 2.4% Variable familybuildingsociety.co.uk
Coventry BS Junior Cash Isa (2) £1 2.35% Variable coventrybuildingsociety.co.uk
Tesco Bank Junior Cash Isa £1 2.25% Variable tescobank.com
Source: savingschampion.co.uk — 0808 178 5354
Best Buys
FOREIGN
CURRENCY
Interbank rates at 5pm
on Friday, which show
where the market is
trading. They are not
indicative of the rate
you could get.
EURO
GBP>EUR
1.20
USA
GBP>USD
1.30
SWITZERLAND
GBP>CHF
1.22
AUSTRALIA
GBP>AUD
1.75
ENERGY DEALS Supplier Average annual bill Rate Contact
Ovo Energy £2,850 Fixed 0330 303 5063
Scottish Power £4,161 Fixed 0800 027 0072
Phone numbers provided will call through to theenergyshop.com switch support team. Source: theenergyshop.com — 0800 448 0205
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
INSTANT ACCESS
Provider Account name Min deposit Interest rate Contact
Chase Chase Saver Account
£0 1.5% chase.co.uk
Tandem Instant Access Saver £0 1.1% tandem.co.uk
Cynergy Bank Only Easy Access (Issue 49) £1 1.1% cynergybank.co.uk
NOTICE ACCOUNTS
Provider Account name Notice period Min deposit Interest rate Contact
United Trust Bank 200 Day Notice Account Issue 2 200 days £5,000 1.3% utbank.co.uk
Oaknorth Bank 120 Day Notice Account Issue 13 120 days £1 1.25% oaknorth.co.uk
Shawbrook Bank 120 Day Notice Personal Account Issue 52120 days £1,000 1.22% shawbrook.co.uk
FIXED-RATE BONDS
Provider Account name Term Min deposit Interest rate Contact
Zopa 1 Year Fixed Saver 1 year £1,000 1.81% zopa.com
SmartSaver 2 Year Fixed Saver 2 years £10,000 2.16% smartsavebank.co.uk
SmartSaver 3 Year Fixed Saver 3 years £10,000 2.2% smartsavebank.co.uk
DEALS ARE LISTED ONLY IF THEY ARE COVERED BY THE UK FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPENSATION SCHEME (FSCS) OR A EUROPEAN EQUIVALENT MUST HOLD A CURRENT ACCOUNT WITH THE PROVIDER
Source: savingschampion.co.uk — 0808 178 5354
MORTGAGES
2-YEAR FIXED RATES
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Barclays 1.94% Fixed to 31.05.24 40% £999 LV 0333 202 7580
Allied Irish 2.1% Fixed to 31.05.24 15% £0 L 02890 479 221
Nationwide 2.19% Fixed for 2 years 15% £999 RS 0800 302 010
3-YEAR FIXED RATES
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Barclays 2.17% Fixed to 31.05.25 40% £999 LV 0333 202 7580
Nationwide 2.14% Fixed for 3 years 15% £999 PV 0800 302 010
Nationwide 2.19% Fixed for 3 years 10% £999 PV 0800 302 010
LONG-TERM FIXED RATES
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Barclays 2.09% Fixed to 31.05.27 40% £999 LV 0333 202 7580
Nationwide 2.14% Fixed for 5 years 15% £999 PV 0800 302 010
Coventry 2.45% Fixed to 31.08.27 10% £999 LV 0800 121 8899
Nationwide 2.09% Fixed for 10 years 40% £999 PV 0800 302 010
TRACKERS
/ DISCOUNTS
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Skipton 1.39% Tracker + 0.64% for 2 years 40% £995 ELV 0345 850 1755
Skipton 1.65% Tracker + 0.90% for 2 years 10% £995 ELV 0345 850 1755
Newbury BS 1.69% 2.26% discount for 5 years 25% £850 LV 01633 555 5777
First Direct 2.69% Tracker+1.94% for term 25% £490 ELV 0800 482 448
FIRST-TIME BUYER / LOW DEPOSIT
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Barclays 2.63% Fixed to 31.05.24 5% £0 PV 0333 202 7580
Santander 2.99% Fixed to 02.07.27 5% £0 NPV 0800 068 6064
Nationwide 2.19% Fixed for 5 years 25% £999 FHPV 0800 302 010
BUY TO LET
Lender Rate Scheme Deposit Fee Notes Contact
Skipton 1.53% Tracker +0.78% for 2 years 40% £995 ELV 0345 850 1755
Leeds BS 1.92% Fixed to 31.07.24 40% £999 OV 0345 045 4049
HSBC 2.29% Fixed to 31.07.27 25% £1,999 RS 0800 494 999
Early repayment charge applies unless otherwise stated. Most deals track Bank of England base rate.
C = £500 cashback for purchases; E = No early repayment charge; F = £500 cashback for first-time buyers; H = Help to Buy;
L = Free legal work for remortgages; M = £300 cashback for purchases; N = £250 cash back for purchases; O = £250 cash back;
P = Purchases only; R - Free legal work and valuation for remortgages; S = Remortgage only; V = Free valuation
Source: landc.co.uk — 0800 373 300
CURRENT ACCOUNTS
CREDIT INTEREST
Provider Account name Account fee Reward Balance (for reward) Contact
Halifax Reward Current Account None £5 a month – 0345 720 3040
TSB Spend & Save None £5 a month – 0345 975 8758
Virgin Money M Plus Account None 2.02% AER Up to £1,000 0800 678 3654
OVERDRAFTS

Provider Account name Account fee Interest rate^1 0% overdraft limit Contact
Starling Bank Current Account None 15% £0 starlingbank.com
First Direct 1st Account None 39.9% £250 0345 600 2424
Virgin Money M Plus Account None 19.9% £0 0800 678 3654
(^1) Equivalent annual rate.



  • Based on overdraft of £500 for 7 days a month.
    Some accounts require minimum funding/direct debits to open or receive rates shown.
    Source: moneyfacts.co.uk
    Table shows the cheapest fixed tariff now available
    from the cheapest suppliers. Excludes tariffs of less
    than 12 months’ duration, tariffs that do not have
    national coverage and tariffs where payments are
    taken in advance of supply. Variable rate tariffs are
    set by Ofgem’s price cap and may be lower.
    10%
    Of female
    investors started
    in the past year
    Investor has found. It tracked
    the performance of its
    investors over the past two
    years, since the first Covid
    cases emerged, and found
    that the youngest group,
    aged 18-24, had enjoyed the
    highest returns.
    They averaged 22.8 per
    cent, marginally better than
    35 to 44-year-olds. Those
    aged 55-64 had returns of
    14 per cent, and it was 12 per
    cent for the over-65s.
    Interactive Investor found
    that younger investors put
    about a third of their money
    into investment trusts, which
    is higher than average. The
    trusts that were popular
    among all age categories
    were Scottish Mortgage and
    Alliance Trust, which were in
    the top three holdings for the
    18-24 age group. The third
    most popular holding was
    Fundsmith Equity.
    When Hallam started, she
    invested in a tracker fund and
    opened a stocks and shares
    Isa. Tracker funds follow an
    index made up of a group of
    companies. “I’ve got my
    emergency fund in cash in my
    The Break, two years ago
    aiming to make personal
    finance accessible to
    millennial women.
    “It’s important not to get
    swayed by one person’s view
    of what they think is a good
    investment,” Nair said.
    “Look at a range of videos
    and pick out the common
    themes and stocks that have
    been mentioned, then look
    more into the stock by
    googling and reading articles
    to understand the whole
    picture. When choosing
    companies, I made sure I
    aligned with the brand.
    “With Disney I am a big
    fan of ventures such as the
    Disney+ expansion and their
    film franchises. With
    Microsoft, Apple and JP
    Morgan I looked at their
    history. They’ve grown well
    over the years, and have a
    good business model and a
    well-known brand name. Visa
    was a bit more speculative,
    but with society becoming
    more cashless I thought it
    would be a good hold.”
    Most of the stocks in which
    Nair invested have done well,
    growing her £250 to £1,000.
    Her one flop was Cineworld,
    which shot up 392 per cent
    between October 2020 and
    March 2021 but has since
    fallen 73 per cent.
    As well as taking advice
    from YouTubers, albeit with
    caution, first-time female
    investors are looking to social
    media more widely for an
    education in investing.
    The SEO consultant Verena
    Hallam was so inspired by
    what she saw on social media,
    she decided to document her
    personal finance journey on
    an Instagram account,
    @survivingtosaving.
    Hallam has had a difficult
    relationship with money in
    the past. She struggled with
    emotional spending
    exacerbated by ADHD, and
    began investing only in July
    after paying off her £34,000
    debt. At 32, she craved
    financial security for her
    retirement and decided to
    invest through the Vanguard
    trading platform.
    Young people are doing
    remarkably well in investing,
    the platform Interactive
    The new
    way to
    invest —
    just click
    on to
    YouTube
    With spare time — and
    cash — new investors
    have thrived over the
    past two years, writes
    Yasmin Choudhury
    A
    fter lockdown took
    away Remina Nair’s
    opportunities to go out
    and spend, she found
    herself with a lot more
    disposable income to play
    with and a lot more time on
    her hands.
    The 28-year-old found
    herself on YouTube watching
    “how to start investing”
    videos. It looked simple, so
    Nair put £250 into the shares
    of Microsoft, Apple, Disney,
    JP Morgan and Visa.
    She did not know it, but
    she was joining a wave of
    female first-time investors
    who got started during the
    pandemic. In a survey of
    1,000 investors, the funds
    and pensions company
    Fidelity found that 10 per cent
    of female investors had
    started in the past 12 months,
    and 14 per cent within the
    past two years.
    More new investors rely
    on the internet to influence
    their decisions. Another
    study of 1,000 investors by
    the retirement specialist
    Charles Schwab found that
    52 per cent were influenced
    by online blogs and forums
    and 52 per cent by credit
    trading apps, while 51 per
    cent said they used Google
    to find financial advice and
    share tips.
    When Nair, from Harrow
    in London, chose to invest
    using the trading platform
    Freetrade, she had done her
    research. She was very wary
    of relying on online videos,
    but found the YouTuber
    Patricia Bright’s advice for
    beginners helpful in breaking
    down financial terminology.
    Bright, who started by
    uploading videos about
    fashion, beauty and hair on
    a YouTube channel that now
    has 2.85 million subscribers,
    previously worked as a
    financial consultant. She
    launched a YouTube channel,
    she bought NFTs. These are
    non-fungible tokens that hold
    data including photos, videos
    and audio and can be sold
    and traded.
    Datta bought four NFT
    passes at $300 each on the
    NFT platform Recur. The
    main marketplace for NFTs is
    another platform, OpenSea.
    The passes act as a key that
    gives the owner exclusive
    access to sales of other NFTs
    and are partnered with
    brands such as Hello Kitty
    and SpongeBob SquarePants.
    The passes were available to
    buy for 24 hours and will
    never be sold again except by
    their new owners.
    As they rose in value to
    $900 each Datta was tempted
    to sell, but on the advice of
    friends she chose not to and
    waited for the prices to rise
    further. They fell to $450
    each, however, leaving Datta
    feeling deflated.
    The sobering experience
    showed the east Londoner
    the importance of not
    getting too caught up in the
    excitement when things are
    going well. “It’s scary
    handling all that money, but
    because it’s on a screen it can
    sometimes seem like
    Monopoly money,” she says.
    “I feel like maybe there was
    a stage where I was a bit too
    risky, and if a friend bought
    something I would want to
    buy it too because I had a fear
    of missing out.
    “But you’ve got to do your
    own research and think
    about the risks.”
    For many first-time
    investors, index funds are
    seen as a safe and simple
    place to start because they
    help you to diversify your
    portfolio without buying
    individual stocks. With index
    funds, you do not have to
    directly manage your
    investment and make those
    buy, sell or hold decisions.
    current account and a savings
    account. I would never invest
    that, but other than those six
    months I have in expenses,
    everything is in the market,”
    Hallam said. “I’m invested
    for the long term and in
    diversified funds so I don’t
    consider it too risky. And I’m
    not planning on taking that
    money out for the next ten
    years minimum.”
    Risking capital is
    something Rohini Datta has
    had to come to grips with
    recently. She found herself
    responsible for the largest
    sum of money she had ever
    received in March 2020 —
    a £10,000 inheritance after
    her grandmother died of
    Covid.
    Guided by her father and
    friends, the 22-year-old
    decided to join the ever
    growing number of female
    investors. The investment
    platform AJ Bell Youinvest
    said that the number of
    accounts opened by women
    rose 54 per cent from 2019 to
    2020, and 63 per cent from
    2020 to 2021.
    Datta used Hargreaves
    Lansdown to split her money
    between several companies,
    including the homeware
    shop Dunelm and the AI
    cybersecurity company
    Darktrace. She invested in
    Dunelm after reading in the
    Investors’ Chronicle that its
    share price had been steadily
    rising since March 2020,
    jumping 100 per cent by
    September.
    Datta’s job managing AI
    projects guided her when
    Remina Nair,
    left, Rohini Datta
    and Verena
    Hallam, right,
    have all started
    investing since
    March 2020
    CREDIT CARDS
    INTRODUCTORY RATES
    Provider Card type Introductory purchase APR^1 Reward Contact
    Barclaycard Platinum All-rounder V 0% for 24 months 21.9% No 0800 151 0900
    Sainsbury’s Bank Dual Offer MC 0% for 24 months 21.9% Yes 08085 405 060
    M&S Bank Shopping Offer Plus MC 0% for 24 months 21.9% Yes 0800 997996
    BALANCE TRANSFERS
    Provider Card type Introductory purchase Transfer fee^2 APR^1 Contact
    HSBC Balance Transfer V 0% for 33 months 2.7% (min £5) 21.9% 03457 404 404
    Sainsbury’s Bank Balance Transfer MC 0% for 32 months 2.24% (min £3) 21.9% 08085 405 060
    M&S Bank CC Transfer Plus Offer MC 0% for 32 months 1.99% (min £5) 21.9% 0800 997996
    CASHBACK CARDS
    Provider Card type APR^1 Cashback Contact
    American Express Platinum Cashback 30% 0.75%-1.25%. Intro 5% for 3 months 0800 917 8047
    American Express Platinum Cashback Everyday 24.7% 0.5%-1%. Intro 5% for 3 months 0800 917 8047
    Halifax Cashback MC 19.9% 0.25-0.5% 0345 944 4555
    1 APR = annual percentage rate, dependent on credit rating.^2 Fee charged on the amount of each balance transfer during the introductory period.
    Source: moneyfacts.co.uk

Free download pdf