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NS&I ups rates on British Savings Bonds on competitive savings market

ALN

Savings titan NS&I has increased the rates it is offering on its British Savings Bonds in response to changes in the market.

The provider said the move will help NS&I to meet its net financing target while continuing to balance the interests of savers, taxpayers and the broader financial services sector.

British Savings Bonds are fixed-term issues of NS&I’s Guaranteed Growth Bonds and Guaranteed Income Bonds.

New issues of the one, two, three and five-year bonds have gone on sale.

The one-year version of the bonds now pays 4.69% AER [annual equivalent rate], up from 4.50% previously. The two-year bonds pay 4.67% AER, up from 4.48%. The three-year versions pay 4.65% AER, up from 4.45%, and the five-year bonds pay 4.55% AER, up from 4.40%.

The new issues will be available to both new and maturing customers.

A new issue of NS&I’s three-year Green Savings Bonds has also been released with an increased rate of 4.45% AER, up from 3.82% previously.

Andrew Westhead, NS&I retail director, said: ‘We regularly review our products to ensure they reflect current market conditions, and today’s increases respond to changes in the fixed-term savings market.

‘Our fixed-rate bonds offer savers the choice of different term lengths with the certainty of knowing the interest rate they will receive over the full term, alongside the reassurance that all money invested with NS&I is 100% secure.’

NS&I is backed by the Treasury, so money held with it has 100% security.

Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at AJ Bell, said: ‘The savings market is impressively competitive right now, and NS&I has entered the fray. Since the last time NS&I hiked its fixed-rate deals, future rate expectations have fallen, which should be putting downward pressure on rates.

‘However, banks are pulling out all the stops to compete, keeping fixed-rate deals higher and forcing NS&I to raise rates again to attract the cash it needs.

‘It’s bucking the trend of the rest of the fixed-rate market, which is now rewarding savers very slightly more for tying up their cash for longer.

‘NS&I is still offering the best rate on its one-year fix. This is likely to be an indication of what’s going on behind the scenes.

‘The one-year market takes more money than any of the other fixed-rate periods.’

She added: ‘The hike in the Green Bonds is a separate decision, because it doesn’t count towards the net financing target.

‘The rise is striking though, from a fairly miserable 3.82% to a reasonably competitive 4.45%.

‘The gap between these bonds and the ordinary three-year bonds is much narrower now, so the price you pay for knowing your money is funding green projects has fallen.

‘This is a significant departure, and seems to suggest that the previous policy of hoping green-conscious savers would be happier to overlook a much lower rate for the bonds just wasn’t working in attracting the cash they wanted.’

By Vicky Shaw, Press Association Personal Finance Correspondent

Press Association: Finance

source: PA

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