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Wait a few weeks until the tax year and open a new cash Isa with the £4,300.
Then transfer the £3000 into this account. You will then be able to top up this account with a futher £800 max. The best intrest rates for ISAs allowing transfers will be about 2.75%.(including bonus) Every year you'll proberbly need to open a new ISA and transfer. Not the best rates but could prove the best strategy in the long term. |
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Get it out of pounds, anything else silver, gold, swiss francs, asian currencies, but NOT pounds.
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Withdraw it all and invest it in the stock market...on quality FTSE 100 stock.
I am being serious. If you have no need for the money for 5 years or so you will be amazed by the returns you will get in comparison to the pathetic savings rates we are being offered. Furthermore, you are young enough to survive should the financial armageddon ever come, which it wont of course. It really is a no brainer...and I honestly would do it f I were you. |
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Thanks for the replies.
I opened a HSBC eISA online, when i opened it i transfered my funds from my HSBC cash ISA but now it wont let me go over my £5,100 limit ??? it says that it allows ISA transfers.. so i gather my previous ISA funds dont count towards my £5,100 limit? my other cash ISA is still in 'my accounts' when i go online banking. Have i done something wrong? & will a phone call sort it out ? Thanks. |
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You didn't draw the money out of the old ISA and put it in the new one did you?
You should have transferred it from ISA to ISA using a transfer form (ie, you don't touch the cash, the old bank talks direct to the new one). A phone call won't help. However, you can now put the rest into a normal ISA, and invest it in shares. You could even watch how the shares ISA massively outperforms the cash ISA, and then sit back and laugh at your mistake. |
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buy a small field or piece of woodland
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Shab -
I got reading this: http://www.fool.co.uk/Investing/guides/How-When-And-Where-To-Invest.aspx By reading that surley it would make sense investing it into BP or Vodaphone (or can i invest in any big firms?), i dont plan on touching this money for many years to come. Should i bite the bullet ? |
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...until the next imminent financial slump and you watch your savings being obliterated :^0
I'd stick to cash personally, variable rate if possible because interest rates are likely to rise |
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£100 a year interest....wow petrol rises will eat that up over next year...
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