This sounds about right. It's not quite correct to say that 15 held for 30 years has the same odds as 15 x 30 held for one year, but it's a rough approximation. Throwing that number into my calculator tells me that you had a 51% chance of winning nothing, a 34% chance of winning a single €50 prize, a 12% chance of winning 2 x €50, and 3% distributed among all other possibilities. You'd have to hold them for 100 years before your chance of winning something went to 90%. As has been said ad nauseam on this thread, a low number of prize bonds really makes no sense as an investment, because the time horizon in which you are likely to achieve the average return is too long for most people. (And recently, the average return has become not worth it anyway).I have decided to start tidying up some of my odd purchases of Prize Bonds over the years and to encash these.
My first batch being sent off today were purchased in 1985. A lot of 15. I have never won any prize from any of this batch, even though a rough calculation would show that they would have participated in about 24,000 draws during that time. So a nil return for my €95 investment in just over 30 years.
Most prize bond purchases probably never made any sense, unless you were buying at least several tens of thousands of euros worth. I'd say the short answer is people aren't very good at assessing probabilities, and the thought of having a permanent entry in a draw in which you never lose your stake is tantalising (even though you actually do lose your stake ... to inflation).a question...why are people still buying prizebonds?,It kinda makes no sense at the moment at least until interest rates start to rise again.
Received the above funds 9 days after I sent them in.I have decided to start tidying up some of my odd purchases of Prize Bonds over the years and to encash these.
My first batch being sent off today were purchased in 1985. A lot of 15. I have never won any prize from any of this batch, even though a rough calculation would show that they would have participated in about 24,000 draws during that time. So a nil return for my €95 investment in just over 30 years.
Does tax have to be paid on a win in the Prize Bonds?
If the number of prize bonds in issue was the same as today, there'd have been nearly half a trillion other entries in those same draws. Allowing for historical fund growth, there might well have been a hundred billion. Sixty-odd thousand really isn't even a drop in the ocean by comparison. It would be a surprise if you had won anything. The government won big though -- allowing for inflation they're only giving you half your money back.Next batch being redeemed today. 40 Prize Bonds that I have owned since 1984. Not one winner amongst them, despite being included in about 62,400 draws. So a nil return on my £200 purchase in 31 years on top of the previous nil return on a £75 lot held for 30 years.
The NTMA doesn't need your money since they can borrow so cheaply elsewhere.Out of curiosity why are the rates being cut ?
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