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Savings and Investments thread
Comments
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£25 PB for me this time.
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mendonca said:@golfaddick, what are your preferred funds for investing in, lets say the UK markets (not limited to ftse 100)?2
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£25 pb this month0
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£25 for me, £75 for the wife, £25 for the late mother in law0
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£25 each for me and the wife from PBs. Junior picked up £100 (4x25).
About time one of us CL PB investors was picking up one of the bigger prizes0 -
£50 for me
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£1,000,000 for me
Yeah right - sweet FA as per usual!6 -
LargeAddick said:£25 for me, £75 for the wife, £25 for the late mother in law0
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Chaz Hill said:£25 each for me and the wife from PBs. Junior picked up £100 (4x25).
About time one of us CL PB investors was picking up one of the bigger prizes
I'm just off to The Bahamas for a few weeks.....😉2 -
golfaddick said:LargeAddick said:£25 for me, £75 for the wife, £25 for the late mother in law0
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£750
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LargeAddick said:golfaddick said:LargeAddick said:£25 for me, £75 for the wife, £25 for the late mother in law1
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£50 PB.
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2 x £25 here0
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Interest rates up again, to 0.5%.0
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£25 for me0
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This makes me feel better, given that I am a reluctant, passive holder of shares in the sinister shitshow formerly known as Facebook
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£50.00 for me on the PB's0
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Got an offer accepted on a first house today. Have to tell someone as my gf is at work and can't answer the phone and I want to tell her first, but i'm sure you guys will keep the secret11
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Facebook stock has crashed0
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jacob_CAFC said:Got an offer accepted on a first house today. Have to tell someone as my gf is at work and can't answer the phone and I want to tell her first, but i'm sure you guys will keep the secret1
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jacob_CAFC said:Got an offer accepted on a first house today. Have to tell someone as my gf is at work and can't answer the phone and I want to tell her first, but i'm sure you guys will keep the secret1
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kentaddick said:Facebook stock has crashed
Facebook is all that is bad on social media5 -
Quick Qs for the more financially astute folk in this thread... and apologies if it's a bit basic.
Mortgage has just come up for renewal, it seems to me like it's a good time to go for a long-term fixed rate given that the base rate was a vote away from going 0.25% higher and it's trending up. Would you go for as long as 5 years fixed or is that a bit extreme? There's no real risk of downsizing etc.
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Oh_Yoni_Boy said:Quick Qs for the more financially astute folk in this thread... and apologies if it's a bit basic.
Mortgage has just come up for renewal, it seems to me like it's a good time to go for a long-term fixed rate given that the base rate was a vote away from going 0.25% higher and it's trending up. Would you go for as long as 5 years fixed or is that a bit extreme? There's no real risk of downsizing etc.
As it is the market has factored in another 3 rate rises this year (4 in the US) although one investment house said yesterday that they think this is over estimating things & that Quantitative Tightening may put the brakes on too many rate rises this year.
The long term view is that the base rate will be around 2.5% to 3% by 2030.2 -
Oh_Yoni_Boy said:Quick Qs for the more financially astute folk in this thread... and apologies if it's a bit basic.
Mortgage has just come up for renewal, it seems to me like it's a good time to go for a long-term fixed rate given that the base rate was a vote away from going 0.25% higher and it's trending up. Would you go for as long as 5 years fixed or is that a bit extreme? There's no real risk of downsizing etc.
Do the math and include fee's, I'd work on the basis that a 2 year fix in 2 years time will be 1.75-2%.0 -
Y’all gonna be gutted to read about this latest crypto-fail
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golfaddick said:Other thing to consider is do you stick with your current gender …3
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golfaddick said:Oh_Yoni_Boy said:Quick Qs for the more financially astute folk in this thread... and apologies if it's a bit basic.
Mortgage has just come up for renewal, it seems to me like it's a good time to go for a long-term fixed rate given that the base rate was a vote away from going 0.25% higher and it's trending up. Would you go for as long as 5 years fixed or is that a bit extreme? There's no real risk of downsizing etc.
As it is the market has factored in another 3 rate rises this year (4 in the US) although one investment house said yesterday that they think this is over estimating things & that Quantitative Tightening may put the brakes on too many rate rises this year.
The long term view is that the base rate will be around 2.5% to 3% by 2030.0 -
jacob_CAFC said:Got an offer accepted on a first house today. Have to tell someone as my gf is at work and can't answer the phone and I want to tell her first, but i'm sure you guys will keep the secret2