New NS&I 'green bonds' likely won't pay savers best buy rates
The Treasury's much anticipated 'green savings bonds' could be a major disappointment for rate-starved savers, according to experts.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced in the Budget that everyday Britons would be able to help fund the country's green recovery from the pandemic through bonds offered by National Savings & Investments.
Details remain thin on the ground beyond the fact the bonds will be launched this summer, but figures from the Office for Budget Responsibility forecast NS&I is set to raise just £6billion from savers in 2021-22, down from £20billion this financial year.
And even that latest forecast represents a drop on the £35billion NS&I was supposed to raise in 2020-21, after £13billion was pulled out of the Treasury-backed bank between October and January after cuts to its best buy rates.
This fundraising target covers all existing NS&I accounts, including Britain's best-loved savings product, Premium Bonds, but does not include the estimated amount that will be raised from the new green bonds due to launch in the summer.
However, with the Treasury looking to raise just £6billion from NS&I deposits and the bank cutting rates to as low as 0.01 per cent last year, it suggests it is not necessarily in the mood to raise billions of pounds from savers at market-leading rates.
And even if the bonds raised £6billion, doubling NS&I's take next year, this would represent less than half the £13billion raised by the sale of over-65 Guaranteed Growth Bonds, or Pensioner Bonds, in January 2015.
'Given these estimates, it is unlikely that these "green savings bonds" will be around for very long or be particularly competitive', Anna Bowes, co-founder of the analyst Savings Champion, told This is Money.
