Where are your ISAs?
New statistics show that cash ISAs remain a popular investment.
Every autumn HMRC publishes a set of annual savings statistics, setting out detailed information about individual savings accounts (ISAs), lifetime individual savings accounts (LISAs), child trust funds (CTFs) and Help to Save. Unsurprisingly, ISAs dominate, with by far the large
st amounts, both in terms of subscriptions and the overall value invested. Unfortunately, the data is usually about 18 months out of date by the time it arrives. The latest information relates to the tax year 2022/23, which is also classed as ‘provisional’.
Even so, a dig into the HMRC spreadsheets highlights some interesting facts:
· In 2022/23, there were 12.5 million subscriptions to adult ISAs (including 767,000 to LISAs). That was down by 15% on the subscriptions made ten years previously, in 2012/13.
· Despite the fall in the subscription numbers, the amount subscribed increased by 26% over the same period to a total of £72.6 billion, roughly in line with inflation between April 2012 and April 2022.
· The increase in subscriptions was not evenly spread, with the money flowing into cash ISAs virtually unchanged, whereas stocks and shares ISAs enjoyed a 70% increase. Nevertheless in 2022/23, cash ISAs still attracted nearly half as much again as their stocks and shares counterpart.
· In terms of value, stocks and shares ISAs accounted for 59% of the total ISA worth of £726 billion in April 2023, with cash ISAs at 41%. Ten years previously, the split was just about 50/50.
The relative decline of cash ISA subscriptions and values is unsurprising, but its modest fall is perhaps much more so. The Bank of England Bank Rate was stuck at less than 1% from March 2009 until May 2022, making the returns on many cash ISAs next to invisible at times. In addition, the introduction of the personal savings allowance in April 2016 allowed many savers to receive interest on cash deposits tax free without needing to use an ISA.
If you have existing cash ISAs or are intending to subscribe to one before 5 April 2025, it is worth asking yourself – or your adviser – three questions:
· What interest rate am I earning now, and will it fall if the Bank of England keeps cutting rates?
· Am I making the most of the personal savings allowance?
· Would a stocks and shares ISA be more appropriate, given my financial goals?
Articles on this website are offered only for general informational and educational purposes. They are not offered as and do not constitute financial advice. You should not act or rely on any information contained in this website without first seeking advice from a professional.
Approved by Best Practice IFA Group on 13/11/2024.
Comments