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Managing my investments
Managing my investments

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1.2.1 UK household investments (excluding pensions)

The table below provides a breakdown of the types of savings, investments and accounts that households have in the UK. As you can see, over nine out of ten households have a current account, and over half have other (savings) accounts, with bank or building society savings accounts and ISAs dominating. Lower proportions of households have stocks and shares, and over one-fifth of households have investments in premium bonds. In 2012, two per cent of households had no kind of bank account, let alone any investments. We shall be looking at some of these products in more detail in Week 2.

Table _unit1.2.2 Table 1.2 Types of formal financial assets in UK households, 2010/2012
Type of account % of households
Current account 93
NS&I savings account 5
Basic bank account 6
Post Office Card Account (POCA) 6
Individual Savings Account (ISA) 39
Other bank/building society account 45
Stock & shares/member of a ‘share club’ 15
Unit trusts 3
Endowment policy (not linked to mortgage) 1
Premium bonds 20
Company share scheme/profit sharing 3
Credit union investments 1
Any type of investment 1
Any type of account 98
Department for Work and Pensions, 2014, Table 2.7

These figures are interesting, but do not tell us very much about exactly why some households have savings and other financial assets and others do not.

The Family Resources Survey (DWP, 2010; DWP, 2014) breaks down investments by some of the social and economic variables such as income, household composition, age and ethnicity of households, and these can help explain the differences in household investment behaviour.

The findings can be summarised as follows:

  • As might be expected, low-income households tend to have a lower value of investments and higher-income households have a higher value of investments.

  • Households where the named head, or spouse of a household head, is unemployed or disabled are much more likely to have no investments at all.

  • Pensioner couples, single male pensioner households, and couples without children tend to have higher investments, while single adults with children households have the lowest levels of investments.

  • Asian and Black ethnic groups are slightly more likely to have no investments than White households.

Some of the above points remind us that investing will not be easy for everyone. It is easier to build up investments as household income increases. For those on lower incomes, investments have to be built up through careful budgeting.