HL SIPP holding cash
HL SIPP holding cash
Author
Discussion

MrOrange

Original Poster:

2,039 posts

277 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
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I pay a regular payment into my H&L SIPP. It drops onto the "cash" account until I manually decide which fund I'm going to transfer it into (yes, I know you can automate it but I want to keep my funds "balanced".

This year has been a bit grim - dropping £2k in month and seeing the total SIPP grow by quite a bit less than that. I notice that HL also pay 0.4% on cash balances so my questions are:

1. Can I simply leave the payment in "cash" in my SIPP? (I assume so) and earn a paltry 0.4%
2. Would I still get the automatic 20% tax-rebate that follows a few months later, and can I claim back my extra 20% (high tax payer) come the end of the year?
3. Is this a relatively "wise/sensible" thing to do - the theory here is that at least the cash doesn't de-value (ignoring inflation) and when the market starts to return to (old) normal I could tx the funds into my chosen fund?

Phooey

13,547 posts

193 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
quotequote all
Obviously I take it you need HL for specific funds but I read somewhere that Vanguard offer approx 2% on cash. So 0.4% is a bit crap.

FriedMarsBar

554 posts

56 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
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I would think that the answer is yes you'll get the 20% at source and can claim back higher rate tax as the money (cash or not) is in a pension, you're not free to withdraw it.

bitchstewie

64,415 posts

234 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
quotequote all
Phooey said:
Obviously I take it you need HL for specific funds but I read somewhere that Vanguard offer approx 2% on cash. So 0.4% is a bit crap.
They do offer 2% I confirmed it with them.

I assume it's tied to the BoE base rate but sadly they don't publish the rate anywhere you have to ask them.

timberman

1,404 posts

239 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
Phooey said:
Obviously I take it you need HL for specific funds but I read somewhere that Vanguard offer approx 2% on cash. So 0.4% is a bit crap.
They do offer 2% I confirmed it with them.

I assume it's tied to the BoE base rate but sadly they don't publish the rate anywhere you have to ask them.
I can confirm it too,

it's what I get paid on any cash I hold, paid into my account on the 1st of every month

oldaudi

1,566 posts

182 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
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Could you use their active savings accounts which seem to offer more interest , then move it to the SIPP when you want to buy a fund? You’ll get the 20% back when it’s moved into the sipp and the claim the rest via your tax return if higher tax bracket.

I’ve been keeping money in several active savings funds the last 6 months and, got more interest than the cash in the sipp and the put it into my sipp when I want to buy something

Edited by oldaudi on Tuesday 11th October 21:19

MrOrange

Original Poster:

2,039 posts

277 months

Tuesday 11th October 2022
quotequote all
oldaudi said:
Could you use their active savings accounts which seem to offer more interest , then move it to the SIPP when you want to buy a fund? You’ll get the 20% back when it’s moved into the sipp and the claim the rest via your tax return if higher tax bracket.

I’ve been keeping money in several active savings funds the last 6 months and, got more interest than the cash in the sipp and the put it into my sipp when I want to buy something

Edited by oldaudi on Tuesday 11th October 21:19
That’s not a bad idea. Cheers all

Phooey

13,547 posts

193 months

Friday 14th October 2022
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timberman said:
bhstewie said:
Phooey said:
Obviously I take it you need HL for specific funds but I read somewhere that Vanguard offer approx 2% on cash. So 0.4% is a bit crap.
They do offer 2% I confirmed it with them.

I assume it's tied to the BoE base rate but sadly they don't publish the rate anywhere you have to ask them.
I can confirm it too,

it's what I get paid on any cash I hold, paid into my account on the 1st of every month
I'm still not sure exactly where in your Vanguard acc it says how much (%) they pay on cash, but I suspect it won't be quite as much as 2% net of platform fees 0.15% and 0.20%?



softtop

3,167 posts

271 months

Friday 14th October 2022
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on a slight tangent, will the money ever get in vested unless you make an additional investment? Mine are automated. Will they then charge you about £12 for the privilege?

Jiebo

1,084 posts

120 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
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I get about 1.4% with vanguard investor. I have about £20k in cash within my ISA, not SIPP.

It’s not 2%, unless cash in the SIPP gets you more interest.

bitchstewie

64,415 posts

234 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
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They told me this week it’s 2% but not absolutely clear if that pre or post fees.

That’s in an ISA.

Main thing is it’s not a bad rate for spare cash that can instantly be deployed IMO.

Jiebo

1,084 posts

120 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
They told me this week it’s 2% but not absolutely clear if that pre or post fees.

That’s in an ISA.

Main thing is it’s not a bad rate for spare cash that can instantly be deployed IMO.
Its somewhere between 1.4% and 1.6%. This is the monthly return from around £20k.

It’s certainly not the worst considering it’s not a cash ISA account. These have got to 2.25% for easy access though so perhaps not worth leaving cash in Vanguard long term.


bitchstewie

64,415 posts

234 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
quotequote all
Hmm this is what they told me this week.

Vanguard said:
Hi xxx,

I hope you are well.

With the Bank of England rate at 2.25%, Vanguard does currently pay 2% interest on cash held, this accrues daily and is paid monthly to your Vanguard account in arrears.

You will be able to see any interest under 'Transactions' > 'Cash statement'.

Please note that all holdings in your Vanguard account are subject to our 0.15% account fee, and this includes any cash that you hold. The account fee is calculated daily and charged quarterly.

We do not currently publish the rate that we pay for cash interest, however you can always reach out to us and we will be happy to confirm this for you!

I hope this helps, have a great day.

Kind regards,

Jiebo

1,084 posts

120 months

Sunday 16th October 2022
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
Hmm this is what they told me this week.

Vanguard said:
Hi xxx,

I hope you are well.

With the Bank of England rate at 2.25%, Vanguard does currently pay 2% interest on cash held, this accrues daily and is paid monthly to your Vanguard account in arrears.

You will be able to see any interest under 'Transactions' > 'Cash statement'.

Please note that all holdings in your Vanguard account are subject to our 0.15% account fee, and this includes any cash that you hold. The account fee is calculated daily and charged quarterly.

We do not currently publish the rate that we pay for cash interest, however you can always reach out to us and we will be happy to confirm this for you!

I hope this helps, have a great day.

Kind regards,
Guessing here, but maybe it's been increased recently, the statements I have would be from last month. Only will know for sure in November what they gave in October. If its 2%, its very decent.
Quite strange they don't advertise it, if it's 2% it beats most cash ISAs right now.

Phooey

13,547 posts

193 months

Tuesday 24th January 2023
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Bit of a thread resurrection..

https://monevator.com/vanguard-cash-interest/

"Better known as a global investment giant, Vanguard is currently paying a highly competitive interest rate on cash parked in its ISA, SIPP, and general trading account products. Vanguard doesn’t publicise it but you can currently earn a Vanguard cash interest rate of 3.0935% to 3.1% on money you leave uninvested in its platform."

Crumpet

5,088 posts

204 months

Tuesday 24th January 2023
quotequote all
Phooey said:
Bit of a thread resurrection..

https://monevator.com/vanguard-cash-interest/

"Better known as a global investment giant, Vanguard is currently paying a highly competitive interest rate on cash parked in its ISA, SIPP, and general trading account products. Vanguard doesn’t publicise it but you can currently earn a Vanguard cash interest rate of 3.0935% to 3.1% on money you leave uninvested in its platform."
Interesting. My workplace pension is with HL and I’ve got a sizeable chunk held as cash but obviously not earning much. Is it possible to transfer pensions between providers or does that complicate things with my employer?

timberman

1,404 posts

239 months

Tuesday 24th January 2023
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I posted this on another thread,



sent to me recently after I made a withdrawal

WayOutWest

1,075 posts

82 months

Tuesday 24th January 2023
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Over 3% on cash is not bad when you consider 10 year gilts only yield 3.3%, and most people will be holding them in a fund that charges at least 0.3% TER anyway.