Originally posted by DimPrawn
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Previously on "Investing - Going for a serious thread, wish me luck"
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostIt's been shown umpteen times that actively managed funds generally do worse than tracker funds because of the greedy and excessive fees charged by the fund managers.
Can you please list some funds that have been doing great over the last 12 months after all fees?
One of their best "products" was simply a Ltd Company they started, would then pile the punters cash in to the company bank account, let it grow at the bank's rate of interest, rake off a management fee and give the punters a divvy every now and again.
The owners (couple of young richer than you type ******* who were ALWAYS down the gym) were seriously thinking they would be up for young entrepreneur of the year!
s
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Originally posted by Waldorf View PostI would avoid FTSE 100 tracker funds - these simply track and so invest in the largest 100 companies quoted on the stock market - the 100 largest companies are not necessarily the BEST 100 companies to invest in.
Better to invest in a few managed funds, preferably ones that pay a regular dividend and re-invest this income and watch your funds grow!
Can you please list some funds that have been doing great over the last 12 months after all fees?
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I would avoid FTSE 100 tracker funds - these simply track and so invest in the largest 100 companies quoted on the stock market - the 100 largest companies are not necessarily the BEST 100 companies to invest in.
Better to invest in a few managed funds, preferably ones that pay a regular dividend and re-invest this income and watch your funds grow!
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Originally posted by richy View PostWell remember you don't make that £100 per day unless you convert your investment equity back to UK pounds cash. Playing the markets doesn't work like that though, unless you want a bank account with daily interest rate.
Markets go down, and up, and down. the idea is to catch when down, and sell when up (enough)!
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post£36500 per year.
Have you ever thought of contracting?
Markets go down, and up, and down. the idea is to catch when down, and sell when up (enough)!
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Originally posted by doesNotCompute View PostYou went contracting whilst you had debt rather than a small warchest? Very brave if so. I saved up 6 months living expenses before I had the 'confidence' to jump..
Was almost out of money by the time I had to wait for VAT reg and biz account. luckily agency paid a big invoice I had submitted before VAT reg certificate came through. VAT reg date was of cause when I had applied, so that was ok (although a grey area!)
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
Says it all.
If you want to get poor very slowly, invest in the UK stock market.
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Originally posted by IR35 Avoider View Post
Shares are good, FTSE All-share Index is a good choice considering (a) you are just starting out and (b) value at the moment. If you can, buy Vanguard UK tracker fund, which with a total expense ratio of 0.15% is cheapest you can get. (Difficult to get sometimes because of 100K minimum, is available without this minimum in dealing, ISA or SIPP accounts run by Alliance Trust Savings and Sippdeal.)
Buy the shares in your SIPP funded by employer pension contributions. The most tax efficient way to do it and the contributions are immunised against IR35.
Says it all.
If you want to get poor very slowly, invest in the UK stock market.
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostWhen shorters get burnt!
Muwhahahaha.
BBC NEWS | Business | Market Data | Share Prices | London Stock Exchange LSE | Yell Group YELL
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It's very simple, wait for a downturn/crash and buy distressed assets at a huge discount, wait a few years till the top of the business or leverage cycle and sell. Rinse and Repeat.
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When shorters get burnt!
Muwhahahaha.
BBC NEWS | Business | Market Data | Share Prices | London Stock Exchange LSE | Yell Group YELL
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Originally posted by Bwana View PostAround December 1999 I read "The Motley Fool UK Investment Guide" and they were really preaching FTSE 100 or All-Share index-trackers (can't remember which but the 100 is a subset of the All-share so they're similar). Then in the year 2000 I started FTSE All-share index-tracking ISA, only to find (with a decade of hindsight) that it was the beginning of what I've since heard described as the "lost decade". The stock market has fluctuated a lot but it has ultimately gone nowhere during the last 10 years. Capital growth seems non-existant. The only benefit I see is dividend income (which I reinvest). I'm beginning to wonder whether the stockmarket is no longer a good long term investment, because it seems to be more about gambling than investing nowadays. Just my opinion!Originally posted by suityou01 View PostIt's just been this way since 2008. Lots of short-termism in the markets, and plenty of volatility.
HTH
Last ten years is completely different. Is it because of technology?
It was a given that the stock market used to return on average 11% per annum. That's no longer true. It's been a nightmare since the Dot Com crash. We had a rally up until 2008, it took 6/7 years to recover from 2001/2002. I got burnt on the first crash to the tune of £50k 'cash'. If I hadn't also bought BTL's during that period I would have been fecked.
Lost decade indeed.
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