NS&I inflation-linked certificates: your best alternatives

Neil Faulkner
by Lovemoney Staff Neil Faulkner on 15 May 2012  |  Comments 10 comments

With the confirmation there will be no new inflation-linked saving deals from NS&I this year, we look at the best inflation-beating alternatives.

NS&I inflation-linked certificates: your best alternatives

We save to protect and preserve our wealth, but there aren't many organisations that are keen to help us do that.

The ultimate protection from rising prices has been available for most of the past 30 years from National Savings & Investments' (NS&I) tax-free, index-linked savings certificates. These certificates have guaranteed to beat inflation, and your entire deposit was protected by the Government.

Unfortunately, after a very long unbroken run, the state-owned savings bank withdrew these products twice in the past few years, and they're currently not on sale. The latest issue sold out after just a few months in 2011.

NS&I has now stated that it's unlikely to bring the savings certificates back before April 2013. That doesn't mean things will change next April either – it's just that they don't plan that far ahead.

The Government decides how much savings NS&I is allowed to attract in a given financial year and currently it doesn't want any more of our money to finance its ongoing borrowing needs. It's apparently cheaper for the Government to borrow elsewhere than for it to pay us more than the persistently high inflation.

What you could have got

Since 1980, if you had put your savings in these certificates and rolled them over to new ones as the years went by, you would have soundly defended yourself from inflation.

That's an impressive feat: today you need around £380 to pay for something that cost £100 in 1980. Most savers will have got nothing like that much.

On top of that, these certificates have given you extra gains, over and above inflation, averaging between 1.5% and 2% per year, leaving you closer to £500. Those “real” gains are extremely impressive for a savings product that has virtually no risk.

Consider what Warren Buffett, the world's greatest living investor, thinks. He reckons that if you're investing in much more risky shares you should be very happy if you manage to get 3% per year above inflation. That's after all investing and other costs.

In that context, 1.5% to 2% with no risk is an extraordinary deal. An extra percentage point from shares is not to be sniffed at, as it could add 15% or more to your retirement pot in the end. However, for the risks taken in the hope of achieving a bit more, it's not a huge edge.

Alternative inflation-beating products also withdrawn

A handful of other organisations have offered products that have guaranteed to beat inflation in the past couple of years.

BM Savings, part of Lloyds Banking Group, withdrew four such products from sale just a few days ago. It had two cash ISAs lasting three or five years and – of interest to non-taxpayers – it had two similar savings accounts as well.

BM Savings couldn't confirm to me if it would bring out another issue of the savings product soon.

Kent Reliance Building Society also had an inflation-beating cash ISA about a year ago, which quickly sold out. A spokesperson told me that it's interested in releasing a similar product again, but nothing has been signed off.

Last year, Yorkshire Building Society, and its two brands Chelsea Building Society and Barnsley Building Society, offered a cash ISA guaranteed to beat inflation too. The group has also been unable to confirm if it would like to bring back this deal.

Tesco Bank offered a couple of issues of an inflation-beating account too, although I didn't personally have a chance to check the small print. That leads me to an important point: beware that some inflation-linked savings products are not genuinely guaranteed to beat inflation under all scenarios, if you look under the bonnet.

Your choices

However, we know of one inflation-beating product that is available at this time. Santander offers an extremely secretive share ISA, the Santander Inflation Linked ISA (Issue 9). It's available until 5 June 2012, but only if it doesn't sell out first.

This is guaranteed to very slightly beat inflation. It ties your money in for six years and will pay the increase in retail prices, plus 1/20th of that gain on top. So if prices go up 30%, your money will go up 30% plus 1/20th of 30%, which means 31.5%. A £10,000 investment becomes £13,150, compared to inflation pushing prices to £13,000.

In the seemingly unlikely event that inflation doesn't rise much over the next six years, you'll still be paid a minimum return of 17%, making you at least £11,700 on your £10,000.

Since it's packaged as a share ISA, your allowance is also double that of a cash ISA, at £11,280 per person. The minimum investment in this ISA is £1,500.

This ISA is not publicised. There is no information about it on Santander's website. You need to go into a branch and specifically ask about the ISA in order to get it.

For non-taxpayers, Santander also offers a savings bond that will guarantee you beat inflation.

What if inflation falls?

It's interesting how many people are just interested in “winning” and not protecting their savings. That's why relatively few people use inflation-beating products but they're happy to take a chance on gold. It's also the reason many people choose long-term fixed rates instead of inflation-linked accounts.

I don't see the point in trying to play guessing games when you don't have to. If you've got your money in a savings product, you should just be happy to preserve what you've got. Most people don't come close. If you're in an inflation-beating product you will more than preserve your savings whether inflation falls or rises.

You're guaranteed to win. These accounts are worth watching out for.

More on saving and investing:

How to get higher investment returns with low risk

Peer-to-peer lending: we don't need the banks

The best supermarket financial products

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Comments (10)

  • Ken Rich
    Love rating 15
    Ken Rich said

    So if there are no guaranteed inflation beating savings schemes available - what's the point of this article?

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • enrico bettonagli
    Love rating 4
    enrico bettonagli said

    I agree Ken!

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 600
    Mike10613 said

    This is what my mail from Zopa said yesterday:

    Your average lending rate after fee on loans made...

    in the last week is 6.07%

    in the last month is 6.23%

    since you joined is 6.89%

    Beats banks, beats inflation.

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    Thanks for your comments, folks.

    Sorry that I have upset a few of you with this article by not giving you an inflation-beating alternative, but the article doesn't promise that. It promises to tell you your best choice if you are smart enough to want to buy NS&I certificates, but can't currently do so because they're unavailable.

    If you have the spare cash, you still need an alternative place to put it, even if none of the remaining products out there are as desirable as the one you wanted.

    I feel a bit like you're shooting the messenger for informing you that your choices at present aren't great, but I did give you a couple of sensible alternatives to park your money for the time being, while you wait for the certificates or other inflation-beating products to arrive.

    ...That said, I just noticed the promo line (the first sentence in bold at the top of the article) is completely misleading. Now I can definitely see where you're coming from. However, I didn't write that myself. I'll see if the editor will change it back to my original text, or something similar, so that readers can see instantly what to expect.

    Hi Mike. Thanks for the extra info, especially since I only had space for one line on peer-to-peer investments like Zopa.

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    IMPORTANT UPDATE: Santander has just told me it has an inflation-beating ISA. Sorry for not noticing it when writing this article, but I think you'll understand when I tell you that it doesn't publicise it at all, and you can't find any information about it on Santander's website. The newest issue went on sale the day after I researched this article (which was 10 May) but in all probability I still wouldn't have been able to find out about it.

    I'll get the article updated with details of the bizarre secret inflation-beating account as soon as possible.

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • grelly
    Love rating 27
    grelly said

    "So if there are no guaranteed inflation beating savings schemes available - what's the point of this article?"

    Actually, my usual complaint is that lovemoney keeps insisting on describing sub-inflationary rates as "great". It is refreshing to have someone point out the truth.

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Max878
    Love rating 37
    Max878 said

    I'm also a Zopa lender like Mike10613, and I agree with him that it certainly beats both inflation and the banks, who appear no longer to want to incorporate borrowing and lending into their business model.

    It must be said though (and Mike never suggested otherwise) that 'social lending' is not risk free. If a borrower defaults there's not much you can do about it. Therefore, it's very important that risk-averse lenders lend in relatively small 'packets'. As the recession starts to bite, more people will default, which is why I personally never lend more than £10 to any one person. That way, I'm far less likely to be wiped out by a single defaulter.

    Having said all that, I've only ever had two defaulters in three years.

    My returns are very similar to those which Mike states, and are further liable for tax.

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    OK, the article has been speedily updated, as per my previous post.

    Neil

    Report on 15 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • coloratura
    Love rating 61
    coloratura said

    I took out a Santander (was Abbey National then) share ISA about 13 years ago for £7,000. It was to be a low to medium risk as I had just become a widow and only wanted something for my retirement but I was told that in previous years 12% was the average. The fact that it failed to make no interest at all was at first put down to 9/11 but rarely in the 13 years have these shares ever got above the £7,000 I invested (a high management fee is charged and I can see little expert buying). It was only after I pointed out to the company that a friend of mine, who had no financial qualifications at all (just good sense) had made £1,000 in 3 months from trading in shares and had made better investments that their so-called money managers over a considerable time during the same period as they had had my investment. It was only at this point that I was offered some sort of compensation and although I still have some of these shares I would NEVER invest with a bank again in a shares ISA. You are better to follow what company directors are buying - after all they don't want to make a loss.

    Report on 16 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    Hi coloratura

    I'm sorry you were told to expect such high returns. 12% is insanely unrealistic. On top of that, share ISAs from banks that are actively-managed by fund managers (which appears to be the sort of share ISA you took out) are unlikely to do very well, as per your experience.

    That said, the Santander share ISA I wrote about in the above article could not be more different. How the stock market performs is not important and there is no manager trying to justify his fees by investing the money. Santander simply guarantees you will beat inflation with this ISA.

    Although it is packaged as a share ISA for technical reasons, it acts more like a tax-free savings account.

    Neil

    Report on 16 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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