How To Buy UK Government Bonds (Gilts)
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Now that yields are higher there’s more interest in owning government bonds, or gilts as they’re known in the UK. But why should you buy them, where can you buy them, how can you buy them, how can you hold them, and what does it cost?
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Timestamps
00:00 Introduction
00:25 Why buy single gilts?
02:42 Where can I buy gilts?
05:34 How can I buy gilts?
08:17 How do I hold gilts?
09:05 How much does it cost (secondary market)?
12:42 Primary market
14:51 UK Treasury bills
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Would be great to get a similar video on buying index linked gilts
Thank you Ramin. I've been waiting for this for a while!
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
My pleasure! @kostaskolotouros4345
Was waiting for this. Thank you
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Enjoy @RajaseelanGaneswaran
This is awesome. Thank you Ramin for making this accessible to us!
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Glad you like it! @LD-vn3zu
Love your updates. Thanks.
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Glad you like them! @barkingdadprofessionaldogw2371
Great informative video, thank you
Thank you! Some great information
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
You're welcome @fullstack5461
This channel is very useful
@kobalos73
3 ай бұрын
That's an understatement!
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Glad you think so! @cb8608
This is what I've been waiting for. I'll be honest I really don't understand bonds.
@thecount3965
3 ай бұрын
Don’t worry, neither do the people creating them
@dsfgkasguyrebfv
3 ай бұрын
Governments spend more than they receive in taxes. To fund the extra spend, governments borrow money by creating bonds and theb sells them to investors. The government will then pay you for the bonds when they expire and also annual interest specified on the bond. You can buy 3month up to 50 year long bonds. If you buy bonds that pay 5% yearly interest and central banks have lowered interest rates to 3%, then the value of your bond will go up and you can choose to sell the bond before it expires. If central banks don’t control inflation and lets say inflation is at 10%. Even if your bonds pay 5% interest, your real interest rate would be 5% - 10% = -5%. So you would be losing real purchasing power by 5% each year and the value of your bonds would be lower because the return is not great when compared to inflation. I personally think real inflation is a lot higher than the official figures and believe bonds are a terrible long term investment.
@bobdigi500
3 ай бұрын
@dsfgkasguyrebfv ok thank you so much for that. I had to read it a few times but I get it. Thank you!
@dsfgkasguyrebfv
3 ай бұрын
@@bobdigi500 It is all very confusing which they don’t teach you at school. It took me years to understand how it works and even then I don’t think I have a complete understanding.
@Divide_et_lmpera
2 ай бұрын
@@dsfgkasguyrebfv Are you trading/investing in anything yourself? Or just interested in this topic like me? :) I opened my first brokerage account this week, but I'm just holding some cash in it for now.
Thanks Ramin. Great video. Could you do one on indexed linked bonds please to include clean and dirty yields etc? Thanks
Very skilled and engaging Presenter….
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Thanks @charleshutchinson7012
Excellent video
@Pensioncraft
3 ай бұрын
Thank you very much! @alancameron9593
Very clearly explained. It wasn't in scope of this video but I'm confused about the yield to maturity calculation as I'm mainly interested in the capital gain - if I make a 4% gain between purchases price and coupon, why is this considered an annual gain rather than one off at maturity?
Great video as always Ramin. It’s thanks to you and your peers that I am so much more educated than I used to be. I am actually in the process of building a bond ladder - which is something I don’t even know existed last year! Your videos are helping normal people like me take control of our finances and therefore our lives. You offer a wonderful service to us all. Thank you. Re the fee comparisons, it’s good that you show the different trading and holding fees for each platform in an ISA and SIPP. However, given the tax advantages on capital gains, it would be nice to see the same comparison for a GIA, to get the full picture - as I assume at least some people would go down that route for gilts. For example, whilst HL charges £11.95 to purchase a gilt, it is completely free of charge to hold it in a GIA until maturity. So that’s a one off fee which could be a very low % indeed - and this isn’t shown in this video
do you have to be a uk citizen to buy in the primary or secondary market?
Hi Ramin, Can you do video on best ETF/Funds for AI stock?
Another great video with lots to bear in mind. If you had a SIPP with a provider that didn't sell bonds, would it be worth moving the SIPP to one that did (maybe with a slightly higher platform fee) or open a separate SIPP just to hold the single bonds (if it was say £2k to start with the intention of learning to build a bond ladder) or is it just not worth it for the little guy (with a relatively small SIPP under £100k) to do as most of the SIPP providers who also sell single bonds seem to be more expensive until a SIPP is over £150k. Wondered if the ii monthly cost £5.99 (for a SIPP under £50k) was worth using as a good place to hold just bonds as their dealing fees were also lower.
I looked at II for more details and noticed that information seems quite minimal as related to each Gilt. It would seem that they expect one to source the information elsewhere - perhaps it is fairly new?. What information would you expect to see? Different platforms display different identifiers for what must be the same gilt? Long vs short TR25. I was just comparing II and HL Price, maturity date (full not just 2034?), return on maturity , dates coupon paid etc
Ramin, how certain can we be that the CGT rules will not be changed? I buy index linked gilts and over say 20 years the CGT bill would be enormous if the rules ever changed. Is the CGT free status somehow contractual or just current over policy?
Would be good if you can talk next time about the clean and dirty costs when buying please.
What’s the maximum one can purchase gilts in uk let’s say somebody wanted to invest £20 million or so can there or restricted
What’s a good reit fund?
Ok but now.. how do we choose the right gilt to buy ?
Thanks for your great videos. They are invaluable. One thing I cannot understand with gilts traded in secondary market is what price you get at maturity. For example TR25 is maturing next year and now trades at around £100.2. If I put £5000 now when it matures how much money will I get back(excluding coupons) ? Will I get the initial £5000?
Are capital gains on gilts guaranteed to be free of tax in the future or could the government change the rules?
I’d like to hear more about how to take advantage of the tax relief on bond capital gains rather than paying tax on savings outside of an ISA
@DK-oy6ee
3 ай бұрын
My concern is that they change the rules and you end up paying capital gains tax. Especially concerning for index linked gilts
Thank you for this video. Can non-citizens who reside in the uk buy treasury bills?
Non-UK investors can access UK gilts on Saxo, though the fees aren't the best. I'm looking for other options.
I don't understand your reference to "capital gain". You said you don't sell the bond... so there is no capital gain?
Thanks for this, very helpful. Seems to me that unless you're investing a lot in single gilts then fees are gonna be a problem. Also what is the point of bond funds? it seems that bond funds don't actually have any of the benefits of bonds and you're just hoping interest rates don't blow your capital gain?
So you still have to pay tax on interest but not on capital gains, correct?
Another great video Ramin. I'm holding T42 in HL ISA for a steady 4.5% income over next 18yrs till maturity or emergency sale. What's not to like?
@martinaston1715
3 ай бұрын
Seems like a very poor investment to me ….
@jonaudis5432
3 ай бұрын
@@martinaston1715 horses for courses! 99% predicability for 18 years for 1% risk/volatility as a counter to other, equity, investments...
Are there still index linked bonds ? I was looking through 1990s adverts in the Newspaper archive and NS&I had an advert for index linked bonds.
@1001ewaste
3 ай бұрын
You're referring to Index Linked Savings Certificates which are no longer available. Index Linked UK Government Bonds i.e. Gilts are available but they aren't a retail savings product like NS&I savings bonds or certificates.
Can you do something on buying and selling gold via Brittania's (ie. legal tender) and the CGT implications please Ramin? =D
@laarm888
3 ай бұрын
It would be a short video - there’s no CGT
Ramin. Do you know how gains are handled within a Ltd company structure (so, not held personally)? Does the cgt exemption when held personally extend to corporation tax exemption?
@DK-oy6ee
3 ай бұрын
And could the government change the rules?
I don't understand whether my portfolio should be heavily weighted towards bonds when interest rates go down or up. Recently I changed to a balanced portfolio of stocks and fixed income bonds. Previously, I was heavily weighted towards bonds. Now I just want steady growth for the next few years.
What options are there available to EU citizens, living in the EU?
Pensioncraft videos on gilts have been great. I actually own a small bond ladder for years 26,27,29 to cover some known expenses. I would like to extend to 30,31,32 but this is right in that valley in the yield curve. I wonder if i would be better buying into the shorter term gilts like 1 year and then see what happens on maturity
Is WiseAlpha also an option to buy gilts?
@r0tp01nt
3 ай бұрын
Corporate bonds and experienced wealrhy investors are the targets. Gilts are uk governments bonds though. Focus here us on intermediate investors eh wealth an experience
Given the hold-to-maturity, low-risk approach you might want to compare your gilt yields to savings account rates from banks. At the moment there are UK savings accounts that offer better rates than the UK gilt yields, ranging from a few months to 5 years.
@laarm888
3 ай бұрын
Yes, but for some fortunate people the interest earned will be taxed due to the savings allowance being relatively low now. For a higher rate tax payer in particular, gilts are far more attractive because you’re making most of your profit through capital gains (see TN25) rather than interest earned - gilts are CGT free so they’re way better than a standard savings account in that respect.
@eweng903
3 ай бұрын
There is a tax use-case for gilts when you have used up all your savings, ISA, SIPP...etc allowances. But with a Labour government incoming, aren't you worried that they might change gilt exemption from capital gains tax. Gilts used to be subject to capital gains tax in the UK.
Would a single gilt strategy be useful to mitigate sequencing risk?
@blumousey
3 ай бұрын
Not single gilt but you can set up a bond ladder to have 2-3 years of cash flow set up.
@Banthah
3 ай бұрын
@@blumouseyExactly what I was going to say lol. And exactly what I am in the process of doing, having just sold an investment property, already maxed out my ISA and Pension, and being 2-3 years off retirement
I had index linked '24 gilts in my ISA (bought 11/2023). Maturity date was 22/03/2024, should I expect last coupon payment to be on the day (did not get anything)? Can I sell it now, or it will be sold automatically? It feels like lot of hassle, all of it could be done for me by Money Market fund (in short timescale at least).
@jauld360
3 ай бұрын
Check with your broker on Monday. It may be paid by then.
Maybe i missed it, but does anyone know how to actually find bonds that are due to be issued, with their codes and how to "pre-buy" them on ii on float so you get the discount. This detail seemed to be missing from the video?
Can they be bought from India ?
Where can I buy a 1000 pound 1 month old bond
Gosh it's complicated. I'll stick to shares and ETFs
Its still complicated for a normal index investor. Bond ladder makes sense but for a normal investor its not easy language bonds gilts 6:27 etc
Should have talked about the spread.
My question is : the bonds are still relatively small, why people are still buying them ? Why?
What aobut buying gilts - not etfs - by foreigners? From the EU?
🎉
Looking at the FAQ section for Treasury UK Bills and the returns are not even worth it really. You wouldn't be too far off just putting the money in a high yield savings account instead of borrowing the money to the government. I need to do more research into the longer term ones though
For the Treasuries via Freetrade they haven’t been very clear on the tax implications. My understanding is that the yield is taxed as interest. Would you agree?
@lawrencer25
3 ай бұрын
Why not just ask Freetrade? There is a fabulous forum too ❤
@khiburgess5848
3 ай бұрын
Coupon is income tax, gains are free of CGT.
@stephenbrook65
3 ай бұрын
It isn’t the broker’s place to advise on tax implications, that’s for you to determine for yourself (partly because the broker doesn’t know the details of your situation). But yes, coupons on UK Gilts will be treated as savings income unless held in a tax efficient account like an ISA or SIPP.
@chriskeane7276
3 ай бұрын
@@stephenbrook65 I agree with your comments but I have seen other brokers work with HMRC to provide an outline of the facts where there is a new product they are trying to sell.
Lols. I got out of UK gilts when Brexit happened. One of the best decisions i made. It was obvious that there'd be a declin,e and a Truss-like event was going to happen. I probably wont get back in until a change of regime and stability is returned.
@anthonyferris8912
3 ай бұрын
Then you missed out on the 2020 run up in prices because of the vivid lockdown.
@paulbo9033
3 ай бұрын
@@anthonyferris8912 I've run the back dated analysis, my portfolio is up more than any run up in gilts. Run ups are irrelevant unless you can predict the future and know exactly when to get out. Which you can't.
I agree. But if this is bond funds it is (I’m sorry) bollocks. UK fund bonds have dropped 30% in the last 4 years. You could not have made a worse investment. I know, I did cos it was ‘safe’. 🙄🙄😂😂
not impressed with 4.2% on a 7 year bond to be honest
Pff..monzo offers 4.60% interes rate if you just keep your money in a savings account which you can take out at any time. So 4.2% over 7 years makes it not worth it.
@daleirving1961
2 ай бұрын
That rate will be tracked to the boe rate and will go down when interested is reduced by them, bond is fixed.
The is no difference if you hold your bond to maturity at the lower interest rate or sell it at a lower price and reinvest a higher interest rate. You will end in the same position. Holding to maturity exposes you to inflation risk. C'mon man, that is just dumb.
@cb8608
3 ай бұрын
You don't have to buy a 30 yrs bond. 1-12 month bills and 1 yr-2yr you may make more money than a regular savings account especially so if the stock market is crashing. 5% return guaranteed per year ain't bad for 10yrs. Imagine inflation moved higher again. Stocks sell off, bond yields move higher, 6-7% yield for 5-10yrs starting to look a lot more attractive especially when one considers markets like the Nikkei 225 which didn't reach new highs for 35 yrs.