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Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: June 8th, 2018, 1:07 pm
by brightncheerful
ime, bondholders whose prizes/winnings are paid direct into the bondholder's bank account are normally received at least a week before cheque/warrant payments arrive in the post.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 2:59 pm
by AleisterCrowley
July's full results are now available.
Another £25 for me (wow) - that's 1.82% return YTD
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 3:12 pm
by PinkDalek
I knew it wouldn't last:
Sorry you didn't win
Good luck next month
Tax year to date, annualised, therefore down from a mahoosive 3.0% to 2.0%, after three draws.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 3:34 pm
by AleisterCrowley
I account PBs by calendar year - always have. No idea why...
I've won something ever month so far this year, on a relatively meagre £12,400-ish starting balance @ 1 January
It will not last! Even so, 1.82% isn't bad
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 4:18 pm
by Bouleversee
£75 for me this month, slightly better but still not great on £50k.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 6:29 pm
by Mike88
Nothing again for me. I am one of the unlucky few who wins zilch unless you call a £50 return over 3 years for an £18000 investment to be fortunate.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 7:30 pm
by swill453
Bouleversee wrote:£75 for me this month, slightly better but still not great on £50k.
It's more than you should expect to win really.
Scott.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 7:52 pm
by Bouleversee
swill453 wrote:Bouleversee wrote:£75 for me this month, slightly better but still not great on £50k.
It's more than you should expect to win really.
Scott.
Why? Some months I win nothing, others £25 and over the year it isn't more than the notional rate which is not a brilliant return. Actually, I expect to win £1m every month but unfortunately my expectations are never realised, though there is always next month. It's a lottery where you don't lose your stake and we have to accept it as such and take what we get, regardless of expectations, or get out. We can still have a moan if our winnings don't amount to all that much, though.
Anyway, what do you think I should expect?
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 8:48 pm
by swill453
Bouleversee wrote:Anyway, what do you think I should expect?
Well the equivalent interest rate is 1.4%, which would get you £58.33 per month. But some of the fund is taken up by the high value prizes, which most people don't get.
Martin Lewis's probability calculator says a person with £50K bonds and average luck would expect to win roughly £50 per month.
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savin ... calculatorScott.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 3rd, 2018, 10:41 pm
by Bouleversee
OK, but it varies from month to month. Last fiscal year I won £400 in total which equates to 0.8% on £50k. In two months I won £75 but there was one zero and the rest were 1 x £25. So don't begrudge me my £75 this month. We'll see what the year brings.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: July 4th, 2018, 10:55 pm
by XFool
Bouleversee wrote:OK, but it varies from month to month. Last fiscal year I won £400 in total which equates to 0.8% on £50k. In two months I won £75 but there was one zero and the rest were 1 x £25. So don't begrudge me my £75 this month. We'll see what the year brings.
So it's working exactly as one would expect, if not how you'd like.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 12:53 pm
by PinkDalek
Bouleversee wrote:OK, but it varies from month to month. Last fiscal year I won £400 in total which equates to 0.8% on £50k. In two months I won £75 but there was one zero and the rest were 1 x £25. So don't begrudge me my £75 this month. We'll see what the year brings.
August's results now available
https://www.nsandi.com/prize-checker£25 for me only so hoping Boulee's hit the jackpot.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 12:58 pm
by Bouleversee
I have indeed, PD: 3 x £25!
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 12:58 pm
by swill453
£100 (4 x £25) for my wife and me, so keeping up almost bang on the average 1.4%.
Last time the BoE base rate rose, NS&I were quick to apply the full .25% increase to the Premium Bond prize fund. Hope they're about to do the same again.
Scott.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 6:02 pm
by Mike88
Nothing for me again. I must be the unluckiest on here. £50 in 2 years for a holding of £18000 is poor and I'm seriously thinking of cashing in.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 6:16 pm
by Bouleversee
Yes, that is disappointing, but what would you do with it otherwise? You are only gambling the after tax interest on anything else or otherwise would be taking a risk of losing some of your capital. I took money out of poor paying savings accounts some years ago and put it into an equity ISA and am down 20% even though dividends have been reinvested. My £50k premium bonds produce a very low return but there's always hope of a biggle and a little frisson every month till I find I haven't had one. I suppose fixed interest accounts will improve when the interest rate change takes effect so might be worth considering.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 6:54 pm
by PinkDalek
Mike88 wrote:Nothing for me again. I must be the unluckiest on here. £50 in 2 years for a holding of £18000 is poor and I'm seriously thinking of cashing in.
Have you looked at the calculator Scott mentioned?:
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savin ... alculator/This I guess is for the future (and wouldn't include any prize rate rises):
With £18,000 in Premium Bonds, if you have average luck[1]
you would expect to win roughly £450 over 2 year(s) … [1]We use an estimate of the 'median average'. This means if everyone with £18,000 in bonds stood in ascending order of amount won, the person in the middle of the line has 'average luck'.As for your £50:
Sorry you are unlucky! Almost 100% of people who have put £18,000 in premium bonds over 2 years win more than £50.Based on that, with average median luck, I'd probably continue to hold. That is if you think 1.25% per annum is worthwhile and you don't mind losing out to inflation but no more, rather than throwing it into, say, the quagmire that is AIM, which Boulee and I excel at.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 9:08 pm
by Mike88
PinkDalek wrote:Mike88 wrote:Nothing for me again. I must be the unluckiest on here. £50 in 2 years for a holding of £18000 is poor and I'm seriously thinking of cashing in.
Have you looked at the calculator Scott mentioned?:
https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savin ... alculator/This I guess is for the future (and wouldn't include any prize rate rises):
With £18,000 in Premium Bonds, if you have average luck[1]
you would expect to win roughly £450 over 2 year(s) … [1]We use an estimate of the 'median average'. This means if everyone with £18,000 in bonds stood in ascending order of amount won, the person in the middle of the line has 'average luck'.As for your £50:
Sorry you are unlucky! Almost 100% of people who have put £18,000 in premium bonds over 2 years win more than £50.Based on that, with average median luck, I'd probably continue to hold. That is if you think 1.25% per annum is worthwhile and you don't mind losing out to inflation but no more, rather than throwing it into, say, the quagmire that is AIM, which Boulee and I excel at.
Thanks for that. It has not made me feel any better. Below average luck is not an unexpected conclusion. I shall probably keep them for a few more months and see what happens. I wonder if there is any advantage in cashing them in and buying £18000 in one bond as at presently my holdings are £10k in one and £8k in another.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 9:23 pm
by AleisterCrowley
I wonder if there is any advantage in cashing them in and buying £18000 in one bond
No.
Re: Premium Bonds
Posted: August 2nd, 2018, 9:35 pm
by swill453
AleisterCrowley wrote: I wonder if there is any advantage in cashing them in and buying £18000 in one bond
No.
Agree. And you will miss at least one month's draw.
Scott.