Was having a thought today, with a little bit of extra dosh floating about what's the best thing to do with it?
A guy at work sell his own goalkeeping gloves makes a little on the side but it keeps a extra income coming in.
Ideally property would properly be the best money spinner.
Ideas? Experiences? Suggestions?
All welcome.
Thanks in advance.
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Try ISA's............both Cash & Shares. You can invest a maximum of £10,680pa so you have scope to save £450pm into each.
forget property.............unless it is going to be your main residence.
I hear the Vinnie V beer fund is always a good investment.
Only on the way up.
Buy real gold, something to hold on to.
Gold will soon run out of steam - gone up too much over the past year or so.
As I said previously...............ISA's (Cash & Shares - the shares part bought via a unit trust fund )
I can't say anymore as it will constitute advice...........and that will cost you !!!
The rise in gold over the past couple of years will look like peanuts compared to the rise coming in the next five years. Fiat currency is so hopelessly broken that we're now into a massive spiral from which there is no real escape. At some point there will be a truly global conflict that will cause everything to crash - until then, buy gold. Just wait until you see what happens to the price when the yanks start printing mountains of cash again (QE3 is only months away)
If you don't want to buy physical gold, look at decent gold mining companies - especially those that are already in production rather than explorers, and specifically those producing at low cost with large reserves.
In the past three years I have made close to 200% gains in three different gold/silver miners. I am not even close to selling out of any of them (one I topped on just this morning)
I would have thought it was time to take some of your gain................but then, what do I know !!
Also, the man in the street cant generally buy gold - the nearest he can get are ETF's or , as you say, gold mining companies.
Gold can be part of a portfoliuo............but just that.........part. 10% tops.
The storage cost of $4 pm (minimum) could prove to be a bit pricey of you only buy a few hundred dollars worth.
Then you're (slightly) more qualified than me!
I just don't see any way out of the debt spiral other than printing reams of cash then, eventually, initiating some kind of ideological war where millions of people get wiped out (not much chance of 500 million dead people trying to call in debts!)
Gold has and always will be a safe haven - I'd argue that the top-heavier a portfolio is towards gold/silver in this climate the better. I've also kept a hand in various other commodities, along with the odd stock I like the look of and a couple of long punts on potential ten-baggers so I'm not completely invested in precious metals, but I'm far more comfortable looking at the gains I've made in them over the past few months (let alone years) than the losses I've taken due to market corrections in other sectors since March.
Offie, those places are for suckers. Chump you out of a lot of money they will, after fees and markdowns. If you want to invest in gold properly, choose junior miners, with the odd punt on an exploration company and the rest in a gold fund or ETC
They are the crowd behind the farmville games, they're becoming a public company, can see their shares being fairly valuable as what their involved in is massive.
They'll try and flog you cheap shares in gold mining with promises of quick profits - and then run off with your money.
At least that's what happened to a mate of mine.
Firstly you have to fund the purchase, unless our said "poster" has £250,000 sitting in his back pocket - this would usually mean a buy-to-let mortgage and would need at least a 20% deposit (£50 k)...............
shame that the income is taxed & any gain you make when you sell the property is also taxed...........
Buy a stock called Matra Resources you can buy them at 2.7p per share.
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I said I'm no expert, so I will come to you when I decide to sell the house I am currently renting out and you can show me how I can improve on the return I have been getting. If I sell within the next couple of years I very much doubt there will be any gain to pay tax on.