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Cash total returns: a long run index for DIY investors

If there’s one asset we all definitely hold, it’s cash. So it’s odd that there isn’t a long-run cash index available – one that we can use to compare other investments against.

Academics approximate returns to cash by resorting to treasury bill or money market rates. But what might a savvy UK investor have achieved with money in the bank?

Monevator is devoted to DIY investing after all, and so an everyday cash savings index would better reflect the experience of individual investors. It would also form a useful reference point for future expectations.

And so without further ado (I’ve always wanted to say that!) I present the Monevator cash total returns index.

A UK cash savings index

Our new cash index tracks the total return of UK savings accounts based on monthly interest rate figures going back to 1900.

I’ve relied upon three sources:

My profuse thanks and additional hat-tips go to Monevator readers Alan Stocker, who suggested using the BSA and MSE sources, and Snowman, whose ongoing comments provided the motivational juice to plough through scads of dusty old interest rate records.

I’ll explain the decisions I’ve made in constructing the index at the end of the article. But first it’s high time I presented the facts on cash savings in the UK.

Spoiler: they’re not pretty.

The money illusion

The green cash uplands shown in the graph below represent the comforting sight of interest piling on interest. But the wavy red line that goes more or less nowhere is the return on cash after inflation:

Data from Millennium of Macroeconomic Data for the UK, 1Building Societies Association (BSA) Yearbook, Money Saving Expert, and ONS. April 2026.

The annualised real return on UK cash savings is 0.1% for the period 1900-2025. Miserable!

It’s a performance that stacks up poorly against other mainstream asset classes:

  • The money market annualised return is 0.4% (0.3% after fees)
  • All stocks gilts is 0.8% (0.7% after fees)
  • World equities is 5.6% (5.5% after fees)

In a nutshell, those returns and the chart above explain why we urge readers not to put everything into cash. The green stuff barely scrapes past against inflation over time.

Of course cash is not the worst place to be over some shorter periods, as we saw in 2022. And there are good reasons to always keep some readies in reserve.

However holding a large wedge will likely cost you as the years turn into decades.

The silent hissing of a slow puncture, or the quiet boiling of that unlucky frog come to mind.

Hard times

The next chart highlights cash’s longest losing streaks in real terms – including a 72-year whopper:

We’ve shared some godawful charts over the years on Monevator. But this one is right up there.

The red zones show you the length and depth of cash drawdowns, as viewed through inflation-adjusted googles. They demonstrate that cash can be a perilous place to store your wealth if you overly rely on it.

The same is true of all asset classes, admittedly. But cash is deceptive because it looks so stable in nominal terms.

However as the chart shows, cash can periodically inflict huge losses – and the culprit isn’t hard to find:

Inflation protection is costly

As we’ve all experienced lately, the cash-gobbling monster of inflation isn’t a blight that’s faded into history like smallpox, or grit in your codpiece.

Cast your eyes back to the cyan growth line in our chart above. Cash has only performed well in real terms over a few short periods: namely 1921 to 1933 and 1982 to 2008.

On both occasions you could have done better in bonds.

The not-so-flash crash

Here’s the full drawdown chart for cash’s nastiest ever bear market.

The record shows:

  • Cash spent over 72 years in negative territory
  • It took 48 years to sink to the bottom
  • Losses peaked at -58% in April 1981
  • The recovery took another 24 years until December 2005

Money markets experienced similarly severe losses. UK government bonds suffered an even deeper, if shorter, drawdown. (See our previous retelling of the tale of the UK’s worst ever bond market crash. Prepare a stiff drink.)

Essentially, successive UK governments failed to control inflation. That wrecked the real returns from fixed income assets.

The red gouge above partly explains why my grandparents – born around 1910 – were so hard up. All they had were savings with the Post Office. But whatever they put away was murdered by inflation. Especially in the early 1940s, the early 1950s and, most savagely, in the 1970s.

Yet go back to the first chart in this article and cash’s nominal return curve betrays no hint of these losses that lasted a lifetime.

Cash after the Global Financial Crisis

Let’s fast forward.

The competitive savings market we enjoy today was unknown to previous generations.

British savers had few options until the cosy arrangements of our banks and building societies were broken up by deregulation from 1987 onwards.

Two decades later, the retail savings market was flourishing on the eve of the Credit Crunch, as documented by Money Saving Expert’s empowering weekly emails.

Easy-access rates topped 6% as the first rumbles of the oncoming storm rolled across the consumer landscape in 2007. 2

But within a few months, Britain experienced its first retail bank run in 140 years. Keystone institutions teetered, and the economy locked-up.

The Bank of England cut rates to historic lows, and real cash returns fell into the red:

Since January 2009, cash has been under water for all but one month up to the time of writing. That’s 17 years of drawdown and counting.

The chart shows that cash wasn’t a save haven either when interest rates were slashed to near-zero, nor when they rebounded post-Covid.

Indeed, the jagged plunge to the latest cash trough (-15% in May 2023) was a direct consequence of the 2021-23 inflationary surge. The only good thing about cash during the recent cost-of-living crisis was its drawdown wasn’t as bad as bonds.

Frankly, neither cash nor bonds are the place to be when inflation breaks loose.

Please read our previous hunt for the best inflation hedge for more.

Conflict of interest

Before I embarked on this project, I had thought a fleet-footed saver may have beaten money market rates. But the data says otherwise.

The next chart shows how British savers have mostly lagged the official Bank of England rate since 1900. (Money market returns usually track the central bank rate like a lovelorn teenager):

There’s a lot of economic history packed into this chart, but the takeaway is that savers have only outperformed the going rate during two eras.

One was upon the outbreak of World War 2 up until Churchill’s re-election as Prime Minister in October 1951.

The other shows up in the MSE era of consumer choice from 2004. Up until the Global Financial Crisis, the green cash rate tracks ahead of the red Bank Rate as savers were offered very generous terms – the likes of which haven’t been seen since.

The Bank Rate is then slashed from 5% in September 2008 to just half-a-percent by March 2009, as the scale of the crisis became clear.

Still, if you kept your job, a chunky rate tart’s premium emerged as different banks and building societies needed to suck in cash periodically to balance their books.

Switching to whichever institution was most in distress at the time was perhaps not my soberest ever financial move (reader, I was a rate tart) but hey, the British Government was playing backstop so it seemed okay.

In my view though, the savvy saver’s edge has hardly been worth the effort since 2022, though the premium perked up a little in 2025 – as you can see at the tail end of the chart.

Inside the cash total return index

There were a surprising number of decisions to make in assembling the index – specifically in the MSE-powered ‘best buy’ era.

The most important thing to say is that the index is composed of the compound interest rates for short-notice savings deposit accounts.

Up to October 1939 – We use the ‘Interest rate on sight deposit accounts’. The Bank of England defines a sight deposit account as:

…where the depositor has access to the entire balance of the deposit, without incurring any penalty, either on demand or by close of business the day following that on which the deposit was made.

November 1939 to March 2004 – Interest figures come from the rates on ordinary shares accounts provided by the Building Societies Association. An ordinary shares account was just a standard savings account accessible using a passbook. (Ask your grandparents. Or me! I had a Post Office passbook account from childhood until I looted it as a desperate 21-year-old trying to make rent.)

April 2004 to present day – The best interest rate collated by Money Saving Expert at the end of each month, provided the account fulfils the following criteria:

FSCS protected (or European equivalent schemes prior to Brexit).

95 days or less notice required. This provision bears comparison with historical treasury bill rates which are typically for 3-month bills.

Introductory rates are included so long as they last at least six months.

Exclusions:

Cash ISA accounts due to historically severe caps on balances.

Fixed term rates – these accounts are subject to interest rate risk.

Accounts that limit withdrawals to fewer than 12 per year or impose interest rate penalties for withdrawals.

Minimum deposit requirements of greater than £1,000 or a maximum balance of less than £85,000.

Current accounts, because they’re typically subject to restrictive terms and conditions including tight caps on bonus interest rates.

Exclusively postal or in-branch accounts.

Cash back bonuses.

Tax rates and fees as per standard practice for indices.

The notional saver

Indices by definition are based on a set of guidelines that simplify the real world in order to produce a snapshot of a market.

The Monevator cash total return index is based on what a switched-on UK retail saver could have earned on liquid cash savings from 1900 to the present day.

My notional saver paid attention to rates and moved their money to the best available product. But they did not use exotic or highly restrictive products.

They’re not the average saver, but neither do they have unlimited time and the motivation to pursue every savings avenue either.

Crucially, the index needs to be comparable with retail investment opportunities where an investor can commit almost as little or as much as they like to any given asset class.

For that reason, I’ve only admitted accounts that allow for low minimum balances and high maximum balances.

I’ve also ruled out fixed-term savings because they contain embedded interest rate risk. 3

In the modern era, financial institutions have come up with every wheeze they can think of to top the best-buy tables for long enough to hit their targets, whilst avoiding attracting so much cash that it craters their bottom line.

So I’ve had to filter out much of that fiendishness in order to balance out the features of a genuinely desirable cash product: liquidity, accessibility, and competitive interest rate.

Finally, I’m not making a claim about what any individual could have earned. The index is beatable if, for example, you took term risk at the right time, or used interest-boosting techniques like current account stacking.

(Current account stacking enables a saver to jack-up their return – and partially circumvent balance caps – by opening multiple accounts that pay sweet rates of interest on restricted amounts of cash. Perhaps you opened ten accounts, perhaps you opened 20. It was a viable strategy for juicing your cash returns in the ZIRP era. It didn’t move the needle as much as I hoped when I ran the numbers, though. But that’s another story.)

Alright, that’s it for now. I’m very much looking forward to the thoughts, reactions, and critiques of the Monevator Massive. And I reserve the right to adjust the index in light of any bright ideas you have!

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. Thomas R, Dimsdale N. 2017. “A Millennium of Macroeconomic Data for the UK.” Bank of England.[]
  2. You could even bag yourself 8% on balances of up to £2,500 via an Abbey National current account.[]
  3. That is to say, adverse interest rate moves will leave you stuck in an uncompetitive product from time-to-time.[]
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Weekend reading: Scottish Mortgage’s bumpy ride

Our Weekend Reading logo

What caught my eye this week.

Over the past week, Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust (ticker: SMT) raised new money several times by issuing new shares into the market.

Weekend Reading – featuring the week’s best money and investing articles from around the web – can be read by any logged-in Monevator member. Alternatively please subscribe to our free email newsletter to get future editions direct to your inbox.

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Regrets, I’ve had a few

A man who looks a bit like Frank Sinatra with his head in his hands full of regret

Perhaps, like Frank, you’ve had too few regrets to mention. But unfortunately, when it comes to investing, I’ve had plenty.

About what I invested in, and what I didn’t. About when I bought, and when I sold.

Unfortunately, it seems those regrets, and my fear of future regrets, can play havoc with my investment decisions. According to Daniel Kahneman in Thinking, Fast and Slow:

Investors are prone to regret, and the anticipation of regret shapes much of their behavior.

And from Hersh Shefrin in Beyond Greed and Fear:

Regret aversion – the tendency to avoid decisions that could lead to regret – often leads investors to make poor choices.

How then am I to take reasonable decisions with my investments?

Am I just a rabbit frozen in the headlights of my future regrets? Or are there some practical steps that will help me sleep at night?

Minimise regret

It’s comforting to know that Harry Markowitz, the Nobel-prize-winning economist who developed Modern Portfolio Theory, suffers from the same challenge.

Markowitz once said in an interview:

“I should have computed the historical co-variances of the asset classes and drawn an efficient frontier. Instead I visualized my grief if the stock market went way up and I wasn’t in it – or if it went way down and I was completely in it. My intention was to minimise my future regret. So I split my contributions 50/50 between bonds and equities.”

Perhaps the best way to minimise future regret is simply to make fewer decisions.

Decisions, decisions

A good reason to avoid investing in active funds (aside from the fact that they will on average underperform an index tracker) is the number of decisions it requires.

Possible future regrets are manifold. Did I choose the right market? The right investment style? The right manager?

And if I start to regret any of those decisions then I’m facing a timing problem. Do I cut my losses now or do I hold on in hope of a turnaround?

According to Michael Pompian in Behavioral Finance and Wealth Management, the odds of me making the right call are not good:

The fear of regret keeps investors from buying when prices are low and from selling when prices are high.

Conversely, investing in a global tracker requires just one decision: to invest in equities. There’s a lot less to stress over. A lot less to regret.

The key is simplicity.

Keep it simple

I greatly admire the analysis by The Accumulator on the Slow and Steady and No Cat Food portfolios. I’m sure they would lead to good outcomes.

The question is, can I be trusted to manage that many separate elements?

I fear not.

My penchant for analysis means I will be tempted to revisit the asset split every time I rebalance. That temptation will inevitably lead to bad decisions.

As Oscar Wilde’s Lord Darlington observed: “I can resist everything except temptation.”

Sticking to just two or three funds – or even a single multi-asset fund – means I have fewer temptations to fiddle.

Fewer moving parts in a portfolio means fewer decisions to make.

Avoid extremes

It’s harder to think about future regrets when markets are high and rising, and too easy to get caught up in maximising my imagined future returns.

But investing 100% in equities, or bonds, or bitcoin, leaves me susceptible to regrets when, at some point, the market inevitably moves against me. A more moderate strategy allows me to remain sanguine about such moves.

As Morgan Housel suggests in The Psychology of Money:

Avoid the extreme ends of financial decisions. Everyone’s goals and desires will change over time, and the more extreme your past decisions were the more you may regret them as you evolve.

It’s not about removing all risk. Just think through the possible outcomes and how you’d feel about each.

Good enough

The bulk of my portfolio is dominated by global trackers, Vanguard LifeStrategy, short-term gilts, and cash.

It’s not perfect. I’m not sure it’s even logical. I have too much cash, my fees could be marginally lower, and I would likely have better returns with more equity.

But, for me, it’s more important to avoid regret and stick to a reasonable plan than to have a perfect portfolio.

So it may not be the best option but it’s almost certainly good enough. As Charlie Munger told us, good enough is just fine:

It’s remarkable how much long-term advantage people like us have gotten by trying to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent.

Change your mind

However much I try to simplify things, there are inevitably going to be times when I change my mind.

And that’s okay. Mistakes happen and things change. Even good decisions can produce bad outcomes. Don’t sweat it. Morgan Housel again:

Embracing the idea that financial goals made when you were a different person should be abandoned without mercy versus put on life support and dragged on can be a good strategy to minimise future regret.

Break some rules

Notwithstanding all the wise quotes above, I frequently allow myself to break all the rules.

If I want to experiment with private equity, or I have a hunch that infrastructure is going to be a winner this year, then why not have a punt? I can make some mistakes and learn some lessons.

Provided I don’t invest enough for serious regrets to kick in then no harm done. It may even help me leave the main part of my portfolio alone.

The final curtain

Maybe you’re completely logical – the T-1000 of investing. Maybe you can calculate the most efficient portfolio and mechanically rebalance every year according to your finely tuned allocation until the Grim Reaper is at your door.

But personally – and I suspect along with many people – my anxiety over future regret means I don’t always make the best investment decisions.

What’s more, I’m not actually expecting this to improve. In my early investing journey, mistakes were relatively easy to accept with a shrug. But as I begin to rely more on my investments for income, the levels of regret anxiety rise further. There’s less opportunity to put things right.

The behavioural psychology books may exhort me to overcome my investing weaknesses, but that’s easier said than done. In the real world, the best I can do is try to avoid them by minimising future regret.

Non, je ne regrette rien (nearly…)

I may never reach full investing Edith Piaf. But to summarise I find it helps to:

  • Take fewer decisions
  • Avoid extremes
  • Keep it simple
  • Aim for good enough, not perfection

I often return to that earlier quote from Harry Markowitz. The fact that someone so steeped in investment analysis could take such a simple and broad-brush approach speaks volumes. It gives me hope that maybe I’ll do okay after all.

Investing will always involve uncertainty. But if I can make peace with a few inevitable regrets, my finances stand a better chance of being good enough.

I guess the sign-off should be something about doing it My Way, but I can’t quite bring myself to write it.

So I’ll just say, may your decisions be few – and your regrets fewer still.

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Five reasons why you’ll love index investing

When I first looked into investing, it was like staring across the Atlantic Ocean. All I could see was a vast, churning deep, full of danger that could swallow my wealth whole.

I needed help to sail these seas. Among the competing offers I found a trusty vessel named index investing.

The animal spirit of investing

While you can complete the journey in expensive luxury liners like actively managed funds or in a one-man skiff tossed hither and thither by your own stock picking, here are five reasons why a more modest-seeming vehicle – a portfolio of index funds – makes the most sense:

1. Index investing is simple

Never invest in anything you don’t understand is a repeated mantra in personal finance. Like never crossing the road between parked cars, it’s excellent advice that’s all too easy to ignore.

Happily, index investing is easy to understand, even for those with little investment experience.

  • You make regular contributions to your funds and rebalance your portfolio as little as once a year. (Some prefer never).
  • Holiest of holies: You don’t try to time the market or pick hot stocks.

2. Index investing works

Index investors will beat the average active investor after costs and taxes, according to Nobel Prize winners like William Sharpe and legendary investors like Warren Buffett.

Study after study shows that most actively managed funds are trumped by index funds over the long-term. Why? Because index trackers are dirt cheap. Their low costs nibble away less of your pie than pricier active funds, which rarely put in the consistently stellar performance required to justify their high fees.

Index investing is not a ticket to instant riches. It doesn’t aim to beat the market, but rather to capture the returns of the market. We’re putting our money on the tortoise, not the hare.

3. Index investing is affordable

Cheap index trackers can be bought from online brokers and held there for very little if you pick the right platform. You can buy in small, regular chunks and build up your portfolio slowly over time.

With a bit of confidence and self-education you can manage it all yourself. This means you avoid paying commission or fees to a financial advisor.

4. Index investing doesn’t waste your life

Stock-picking hoovers up vast amounts of time. Index investing leaves you free to sniff the roses. There’s no need to grapple with complex methodologies, pour over company accounts, or entangle yourself in charts.

5. Index investing puts you in control

Ever hire a dodgy financial advisor only to discover later you’re paying sky-high fees for mediocre funds that didn’t suit your needs? (Or was that just me?)

Knowledge of index investing strategies can help you avoid a similar fate by revealing:

  • The risks you’re taking and how to dilute those risks to a level you’re comfortable with.
  • How much you need to invest to achieve your financial goals.
  • A DIY approach that avoids rip-off merchants and saves you a bundle in the long term.
  • How to create and run a drawdown portfolio that turns your pension into a sustainable retirement income.
  • Good questions to ask an advisor should you still want to hire one, which will help you find one of the good guys to work with.

To get you started we’ve a huge library of passive investing articles here on Monevator.

Been there, done that

Index investing isn’t just a nice theory for me. It’s exactly how I achieved financial independence and quit my day job early.

Okay, so now I write about investing in my spare time instead. But that should give you a clue as to how keen I am to bring this proven strategy to the most people possible.

(Well, that and it keeps me in spare bicycle parts and scones…)

Dive in – and happy investing!

The Accumulator

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