thedaddyman
Registered User
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With deposits, you are guaranteed a return providing it is in an interest bearing account, with prize bonds, you might get a return if you win.Prize bonds are a genuine alternative to deposits. The more so the greater the investment because of the law of large numbers. Ignore the big prizes, as I do*. The tax free return in €75 prizes is 0.79%. This beats our high street banks.
The inflation comparison is of course relevant but quite irrelevant in terms of choosing where to invest your deposits.
* Though it does sort of satisfy any lotto fantasy that I might have. Every Friday I have as much chance of a big win as with the Lotto and the "thrill" of looking up the result. That is simply icing on the cake.
Wow! It would take on average 300 years before you would get a win on 10 bonds.Having got rid of my large holdings last year, I got notified today that I won €50 last Friday on a holding of 10 bonds from 2004 that I hadn't bothered to cash in!
Is there any real advantage to buying prize bonds in larger blocks? When I opened my state savings account my initial invest was done over two or three larger blocks, but since then I've just been topping it up with the minimum €25(4 units) investments on a monthly basis. I've only won once (€50) since opening my account almost one year ago but I've only got around €6.5k worth.Wow! It would take on average 160 years before you would get a win on 10 bonds.
Absolutely no difference. The first 6 numbers have the same chance of coming up on a roulette spin as 6 numbers spread around.Is there any real advantage to buying prize bonds in larger blocks?
That is actually a 0.77% return which is about 3 times the average.When I opened my state savings account my initial invest was done over two or three larger blocks, but since then I've just been topping it up with the minimum €25(4 units) investments on a monthly basis. I've only won once (€50) since opening my account almost one year ago but I've only got around €6.5k worth.
The odds aren’t stacked for or against anybody. The odds are the same for each and every prize bond in each and every draw.the odds are stacked against ?
So you're saying there's a chance ?I have 2 x £5 prize bonds that were bought by a long deceased relative in 1957. No wins in 66 years. I think I saw somewhere that each bond could expect a small win every few hundred years and a big win every 10,000+ years.
Every single prize bond has an equal chance of winning in each draw.So you're saying there's a chance ?
Exactly. It's a ticket for a raffle that is refundable at its nominal face value. No harm in somebody with their finances otherwise generally in order having a few but they're not an investment and there's a distinct possibility that you'll win little or nothing.Basically, its a recurring bet relying on the luck of a draw ..... Not exactly an 'investment'.
Yes there is a chance, lots of people win every month, but if you only have 2 bonds, it looks like you could wait hundreds of years for a small prize, thousands of years for a bigger prize or millions of years for the top prize. Maybe some of the mathematicians on here could give the exact figure on this.So you're saying there's a chance ?
@Duke of Marmalade has previously posted about the stats/probabilities involved.Maybe some of the mathematicians on here could give the exact figure on this.
I guess there are a lot of people with their savings earning 0% or 0.01% on deposit.Basically, its a recurring bet relying on the luck of a draw ..... Not exactly an 'investment'.
Which is sort of dumb given that there are much higher deposit rates on offer these days.I guess there are a lot of people with their savings earning 0% or 0.01% on deposit.
A lot of the higher deposit rates are provided by fairly exotic looking banks. What's the highest instant access deposit rate available from an Irish bank.Which is sort of dumb given that there are much higher deposit rates on offer these days.
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