If you have savings where do you put them?
1. Inflation for the past few years has been running at an average of 2% above the 2% target. This has now been loosened to 2.5% in Carnage Carney's BOE report, which suggests 4.5% inflation.
2. Interest from banks is in the 0.25-0.5% range pre-tax, so their value is going to drop by at least 4% a year. The Government through ZIPR and high inflation are stealing the value of your savings.
3. Gilts - Market rigged by the Government with QE. Once QE is withdrawn or in the US even a hint of reducing it then the price drops as the market is less rigged. When they drop you make losses, plus they currently pay between 2 and 3%, so the Government is stealing by stealth the value of your money.
4. Equities are overbought and there will be a market correction in the not too distant future, probably on the back of more bad Eurozone news. The PE ratio is currently far too high this suggests a correction in the order of about 25%. Again all that QE money has created and inflated the bubble so another rigged market.
5. Gold, this is currently dropping, but if you do have a punt make sure it is real physical gold, not a worthless piece of paper saying you are entitled to x amount of gold. Physical gold is ALWAYS more expensive than paper gold. Where Germany has asked for its gold back from the US it is going to take them 7 years to get it back. The rumour is that is has been leant out as this is a way for banks / central banks to make money from it. So will there be a shortage and the price goes up again, who knows?
6. UK Property, personally I think this is one of the better prospects at the moment. With an expected 5% per year house price inflation, buying your first house or trading up to a larger one or purchasing a BTL as part of a pension plan, may be a good move. I was going to sell my house as part of moving to the Ukraine, but I'm now looking at renting it. Where I live there is a shortage of property, so prices are going up and normally a house will rent in under 5 days from being placed on the market. The Government is relying on rising house prices and economic growth to provide a 2015 feel good election victory. Many people think house prices are about 25% too high, but I think with the norm of 2 working in a couple / family home this has changed the amount that they can borrow and supply and demand is well and truly on the demand side at the moment.
7. Pensions unless you are a higher rate tax payer then after Gordon Brown's tax raid on them and the high fees then they are IMHO probably a bad investment. In my view I made a big mistake putting a lot of money into various pensions when I was young and much richer, I did almost in the early 1990's buy 2 BTL properties which is what I should have done. They would be worth far more in capital and income terms than my pension will be. Personally, these days I would rather pay the tax and be free to invest the money where I want to rather than it being locked into a pension fund with much less flexibility. 1-1.5% may not seem like much in the way of fees per year on your pension, but over 40 years it is a considerable part of your pension pot, especially when investment funds are static or dropping, like we have had over the last 13 years in the UK.
These are just my personal thoughts, so please don't consider them any sort of investment advice, as they are not. You need to decide your own investment strategy and take appropriate professional advice.