logo
Why high street banks may not be the best place for your regular savings

Why high street banks may not be the best place for your regular savings

Yahoo21-05-2025

Several banks have announced rate reductions on their savings accounts since 8 May when the Bank of England cut the base rate to 4.25%.
HSBC, for example, will cut the rate on its flexible saver account from 1.35% to 1.30% AER on 21 July, while Barclays will cut the rate on its everyday saver from 1.16% to 1.11% AER on 4 August.It's not only high-street providers that have cut rates. At the beginning of the year, before the Bank of England made its first rate cut in February, the top unrestricted easy access account available was with Gatehouse Bank and was paying 4.75%.
Today, after two base rate cuts amounting to 0.5%, this account is now paying 4.15% - so has fallen at the same rate.
"The difference, of course, is that the Gatehouse account is still fairly competitive - paying just a little less than base rate - and importantly more than CPI inflation," says Bowes.
So, although high street banks are cutting rates by a smaller amount, they are still very uncompetitive.
For those who are willing to shop around, there are still good rates to be found, with the top easy access accounts changing very little since January.
"At the beginning of the year, the average of the top five easy access accounts was 4.79% - at the time of writing it's 4.66% with the top rate from Chip paying 4.77% AER," Bowes adds.
"So, for those with cash in their high street bank's easy access account, don't wait for the rates to be cut - you are likely to already be getting a raw deal, so switch today to get your cash working harder."
Here's how the high street banks compare to the best easy access rates for a balance of £10,000...
And for a £50,000 balance...
Taking a wider look at the savings market, we saw the average rate for one-year and two-year bonds fall slightly.
But those willing to lock their cash away for three or five years could benefit more as the average rates on these accounts increased.
"This now means that the rates for all terms are very similar, which could mean that locking in for the longer term is more appealing to those people who were put off by the fact that the rates were much lower in the past," Bowes says.
"Of course, there is a possibility that with inflation expected to increase again, certainly in the short term, further rate cuts may not happen immediately, but the trajectory is still downwards.
"Therefore, if you're locking some of your cash up for the long-term you might be pleased you have done so in one or two years' time when your bond comes up from maturity, if the rates available then are lower."
Here's a look at the best rates available...
We saw similar movement in fixed-rate ISAs, which have been very resistant to the recent base rate cut.
The top one-year rate is slightly higher than it was a week ago, as is the five-year rate.
"Remember, although the ISA rates look like they're lower than that of the equivalent fixed-term bonds, after tax is deducted from the bond often a cash ISA will provide a better return to those people who are paying tax on their savings now," Bowes points out.
"Of course, it's also important to shop around to earn as much interest as you can."
Here's a look at the best rates available...

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ThinkCareBelieve: Week 21 of America's Progress under President Trump
ThinkCareBelieve: Week 21 of America's Progress under President Trump

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

ThinkCareBelieve: Week 21 of America's Progress under President Trump

Washington D.C., June 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- You can find the article here: has published an article on the 21st week of America under the leadership of President Donald J. Trump. America is making strong progress toward prosperity and ThankCareBelieve's article shows this weeks numbers and indicators supporting that. Prices are going down. Tariffs are working. Inflation is gone. The economy is strong and once the One Big Beautiful Bill is passed, the economy will be booming. The article has a report by Maria Bartiromo that the CPI (Consumer Price Index) is out and the numbers are better than expected, surprising everyone. The trade deal with China is now complete, allowing China's markets to open up for American products which will help American business soar. The article shows this week's Los Angeles riots have sparked several investigations where they actually were paid anarchy by those wanting to disrupt American 21st week ends on Flag Day, the 25th Anniversary of the U.S. Army and the Birthday of President Donald J. Trump. The article shows how strong America has become with record number of enlistments and re-enlistments, President Trump attended an Invest in America Event and the President signing an end to costly and impractial EV Mandates. The Halt Fentanyl Act has been passed and is ready to be signed. The article also covers Secretary Kennedy's huge steps to restore public trust by appointing a new board to the Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices (ACIP), including the appointment of Dr. Robert Malone, M.D. is an outlook. ThinkCareBelieve's mission for Peace advocacy facilitates positive outcomes and expanded possibilities. To achieve Peace, we will find the commonalities between diverse groups and bring the focus on common needs, working together toward shared goals. Activism is an important aspect of ThinkCareBelieve, because public participation and awareness to issues needing exposure to light leads to justice. Improved transparency in government can lead to changes in policy and procedure resulting in more fluid communication between the public and the government that serves them. America needs hope right now, and Americans need to be more involved in their government. ### CONTACT: CONTACT: Joanne COMPANY: ThinkCareBelieve EMAIL: joanne@ WEB: in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Canada Is Gathering Global Leaders in a Province That Wants Out of the Country
Canada Is Gathering Global Leaders in a Province That Wants Out of the Country

Wall Street Journal

timean hour ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Canada Is Gathering Global Leaders in a Province That Wants Out of the Country

MIRROR, Alberta—Prime Minister Mark Carney wants to use a Group of Seven summit starting Sunday to showcase Canadian strength and unity. But global leaders will be visiting an oil-rich province that is considering a divorce from Canada. Rising disaffection in Alberta presents a challenge for Carney, who was governor of the Bank of England when U.K. voters decided to leave the European Union in the 2016 Brexit referendum. Carney has promised since winning election in April to strengthen Canada's economy and reduce dependence on the U.S.

Mark Carney's conversion from eco warrior to oil and gas champion
Mark Carney's conversion from eco warrior to oil and gas champion

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mark Carney's conversion from eco warrior to oil and gas champion

Once considered the Bank of England's greenest-ever governor, Mark Carney has seemingly undergone a Damascene conversion. During his time at Threadneedle Street, he called on the world to leave 80pc of oil and gas in the ground. But now, as Canada's new prime minister, he wants to pump as much as he can to protect the country's economy from Donald Trump's trade war. Canada is going to become an energy powerhouse, Carney told reporters last week. And he didn't mean just in renewables. 'When I talk about being an energy superpower, I mean in both clean and conventional energies,' he said. 'And yes, that does mean oil and gas. 'It means using our oil and gas here in Canada to displace imports wherever possible, particularly from the United States. 'It makes no sense to be sending that money south of the border or across the ocean, so yes, it also means more oil and gas exports – without question.' This embedded content is not available in your region. Credit: CTV news These comments are remarkable given they come from a man who repeatedly called for an end to drilling during his tenure as Bank governor between 2013 and 2020. One such call came in a 2015 speech at Lloyds of London, when he described 80pc of the world's known fossil fuel reserves as 'unburnable'. He said: 'The catastrophic impacts of climate change will be felt beyond the traditional horizons of most actors – imposing a cost on future generations that the current generation has no incentive to fix.' Given Carney's influence, his dramatic warnings inevitably shaped UK government decision-making at the time, as he championed the cause of net zero to a total of five different energy secretaries. Claire Perry, who served as Tory energy minister between 2017 and 2018, recalls: 'Mark had a huge impact on global climate issues. 'He created all the momentum around carbon markets and energy transition investment.' Sir Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader who served as energy secretary in the 2012-15 coalition government, echoes this. 'Mark Carney had a real understanding of where the wind was blowing globally on energy, and recognised the risks to the economy of over-reliance on fossil fuels,' he says. After leaving the Bank, Carney also wrote a book called Value(s): An Economist's Guide to Everything That Matters, where he advocated powerfully for the introduction of carbon taxes. 'One of the most important initiatives is carbon pricing,' he wrote. 'The best approach is a revenue-neutral, progressive carbon tax.' The UK has since faithfully implemented that plan with a raft of carbon levies on consumers and industry, which many argue has left Britain burdened by some of the highest energy prices in the world. Jump ahead to 2025, however, and Carney – now a Canadian politician instead of a British bureaucrat – has adopted a wildly different approach. Immediately after succeeding Justin Trudeau as prime minister and winning Canada's election in April, he wasted no time in signing a directive cancelling Canada's existing carbon tax and confirming rebates for many of those who had paid it. He's now gone even further by pledging to build oil and gas pipelines, LNG export terminals, and to relax the emissions restrictions that have angered many of Canada's biggest fossil fuels producers. And his plans don't stop there. 'All this is not enough just to make Canada an energy superpower,' he said. 'It's not enough to build our full potential. 'It's not enough to truly get incomes growing across the country. We can do much more. We are going to be very, very ambitious. Build, big, build, bold.' Carney, who also previously ran the Bank of Canada, reconciles such ambitions with simultaneous pledges on green technologies that could theoretically reduce emissions, such as carbon capture and storage. But these will take years or decades to implement. According to experts, Carney's conversation has been driven by the economy, as oil and gas accounted for up to 7.5pc of the country's GDP in recent years. In 2023, crude oil exports alone were valued at $124bn, representing 16pc of Canada's total exports. That figure rises to 20pc if gas exports are included. What's more, Canada has about 171bn barrels of oil in recoverable reserves – far greater than America's 44bn. It means Canada can rely on oil for decades, whereas US production is expected to peak in the next few years. However, most of that oil and gas comes from one province, Alberta. That region alone holds billions of dollars, although its voters blame Carney's and Trudeau's Liberal party for climate restrictions that curbed economic growth. A recent opinion piece for Canada's Globe and Mail by Preston Manning, a retired politician who helped found Canada's conservative movement, warned that his 5m fellow Albertans had had enough of rule from Ottawa and were considering secession. Some go further. Alberta, they point out, shares a border with the US and perhaps has more in common with the likes of Texas than Toronto. These growing tensions have created a political opportunity for Alberta's conservative leaders. Less than 24 hours after Carney's election, Danielle Smith, Alberta's premier, introduced a bill to the province's legislature, making it much easier for a citizens' movement to trigger an independence referendum. The new rules slash the number of citizens' signatures required to trigger a referendum, from 600,000 to 177,000 and give petitioners 120 days to collect them rather than the previous 90. She has done so to pile pressure on Carney, handing him a list of nine energy-related federal laws she wants overhauled to unleash more drilling in Alberta. 'We cannot keep the over $9 trillion worth of oil wealth we have in the ground,' she said. 'Mark Carney has acknowledged that the federal government must address key policy barriers. 'That must include abandoning the unconstitutional oil and gas production cap, repealing the tanker ban, and scrapping Canada's net-zero power regulations. 'I believe in a strong and sovereign Alberta within a united Canada, but we cannot persist with the status quo. I won't allow that status quo to continue.' Smith is also exploiting the tensions generated by Donald Trump, the US president, whose talk of making Canada the 51st state resonates with some Albertans. This embedded content is not available in your region. She sees her demands as a test of the scale of Carney's commitment to oil and gas: 'Given his past actions, I've asked myself what version of Mark Carney are we going to get. 'Will we get the pragmatic Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney? Or will we get the environmental extremist keep-it-in-the-ground Mark Carney? 'I don't know the answer yet. He's saying some of the right things, but we need to see meaningful action.' Such tensions have been around for a long time. What Canada's politicians say and do are often very different things, says Brendan Long, a leading energy analyst and Canadian, whose new book Energy Shocks, compares the politics of energy in the UK, US and Canada. He points out that Canada has a long history of electing prime ministers with stridently green manifestos who then preside over huge increases in oil and gas production. 'While previous premier Justin Trudeau had explicitly anti-fossil fuel agendas, domestic Canadian oil and gas production grew dramatically under his leadership,' he said. 'Today, Canada is ranked fourth in terms of global oil production at 5.8m barrels of oil per day and growing.' By contrast, Long points out that the UK is the only large global oil producer to have deliberately cut its production in recent years, signalling the long-standing net-zero legacy left by Carney. 'It means that while Canada's oil and gas industry is ramping up production under Carney, the UK remains aligned with the anti-oil and gas ideology he promoted when he was the governor of the Bank of England,' he says. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store