Jobs & Education1 min ago
Stocks and Shares ISA
2 Answers
First of all thanks for all the helpful replies to my ISA post of last week. The next answer I am trying to get my wrinklie brain roun is if I let my existing ISA remain dormant now, no more deposits to it, can I open a cash ISA in another bank and put the remainder into a Stock's and Shares ISA in my present bank by monthly payments to both banks. Once again thanks for any help. The reason for the 2 banks is that one bank's rate for a Cash ISA cannot be matched by my present bank.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by BJS. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Are you a higher rate tax payer, or are you likely to make Capital Gains that would leave you open to CGT? If you are neither of those, then to be quite honest investing in a Stocks/Shares ISA is not worth doing.
The last Government removed the ability to reclaim Advance Corporation Tax (ACT) on dividends paid on Stocks/Shares held in ISA wrappings. This effectively removed the tax exempt benefit of receiving dividend income from Stocks/Shares ISAs. Leaving only the exemption from CGT benefit.
In terms of where you hold your mini-cash ISAs, you should move them to optimise any returns, no matter where they are invested. I would advise against leaving any investment account dormant, move it and any new investment so your returns are optimised! Most ISA's that have been held for a while were attractive because they had an initial interest rate that included a bonus, which disappeared after a year, and now may pay 0.5% or less.
Some ISA providers give tiered rates based on how much you invest with them, just beware of the maximum amount that you can invest in any one Financial Institution before you exceed the FSA/Government protected limit, which I believe is currently £85,000.00
By the way I am also a wrinklie!
The last Government removed the ability to reclaim Advance Corporation Tax (ACT) on dividends paid on Stocks/Shares held in ISA wrappings. This effectively removed the tax exempt benefit of receiving dividend income from Stocks/Shares ISAs. Leaving only the exemption from CGT benefit.
In terms of where you hold your mini-cash ISAs, you should move them to optimise any returns, no matter where they are invested. I would advise against leaving any investment account dormant, move it and any new investment so your returns are optimised! Most ISA's that have been held for a while were attractive because they had an initial interest rate that included a bonus, which disappeared after a year, and now may pay 0.5% or less.
Some ISA providers give tiered rates based on how much you invest with them, just beware of the maximum amount that you can invest in any one Financial Institution before you exceed the FSA/Government protected limit, which I believe is currently £85,000.00
By the way I am also a wrinklie!