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In related news, I got a job!
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Fantastic! What is it?Tsukiyumi wrote:In related news, I got a job!
On purpose?Tsukiyumi wrote:Good deal, Reliant.
In related news, I got a job!
That's where it's going. I'm taking maybe £20 of a month for myself (along with the £30 my parents give for fuel) and the remaining £100 i'll earn a month into savings. It will get used quickly once I'm 17 as there is no way in HELL i'm staying on a bike that can't do more than 30mph. but every little helpsTsukiyumi wrote:Nice.
Put it in a savings account!
The point is that there are better things to do with your money than a savings account. Even a typical money-market account will earn better than basic savings. A CD, even a short-term one, will pay better than that so long as you are dedicated to not using that money for a set term. I don't know if the UK offers "federal" or national mortgage funds, but I imagine you could buy into American ones through a decent broker, and those will generally return 8% - 9.5% guaranteed.Reliant121 wrote:Most bank accounts pay around 2% at the moment. I don't get your point...
Simply put...no. There isn't anything like that. As far as I know, we've basically got current accounts (with interest at like...0.5% if you're lucky), savings (which aren't much better) and cash ISAs which are at 2.5-5% at the moment. Unfortunately, most banks wont let me open an e-savings account since I'm not 18 yet. I'd rather have a savings account with the bank I have a current account with (they offer good rates too, so I'm happy). I don't believe I've ever encountered a CD but I imagine that it will be 18+ again like most of our banking. As for mortgage funds....no. There is no such thing like that, since the state concentrates on rented accomodation through council housing and leaves owned housing entirely private.Mikey wrote:The point is that there are better things to do with your money than a savings account. Even a typical money-market account will earn better than basic savings. A CD, even a short-term one, will pay better than that so long as you are dedicated to not using that money for a set term. I don't know if the UK offers "federal" or national mortgage funds, but I imagine you could buy into American ones through a decent broker, and those will generally return 8% - 9.5% guaranteed.Reliant121 wrote:Most bank accounts pay around 2% at the moment. I don't get your point...