Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

Savings and Investments thread

1312313315317318377

Comments

  • hmmoore
    hmmoore Posts: 125
    £50 full holding 
  • moutuakilla
    moutuakilla Posts: 7,563
    Nothing here on half
  • Jon_CAFC_
    Jon_CAFC_ Posts: 563
    £300 on full
  • CafcWest
    CafcWest Posts: 6,163
    Just £50 on max holding.
  • IdleHans
    IdleHans Posts: 10,956
    Nothing again
  • northstandsteve
    northstandsteve Posts: 14,327
    diddly again
  • TelMc32
    TelMc32 Posts: 9,035
    Best month for me with £600 on a £45k holding (1x£100 + 1x£500).  8.67% return this year so far.

    Great timing as I’ve just paid my car insurance and about to pay my dad’s next week. It was nice while it lasted 🤷🏻‍♂️😂
  • LargeAddick
    LargeAddick Posts: 32,543
    Me £25 on 35k, missus £125 on the same, my Mum £100 on 12k.
  • gmantaxi
    gmantaxi Posts: 333
    £125-42.5k
    £100-50k 
    better than a kick in the bollocks I suppose 
  • Pedro45
    Pedro45 Posts: 5,820
    £150 on max holding
  • Sponsored links:



  • golfaddick
    golfaddick Posts: 33,599
    Nothing for me again.

    Then again I did sell out 18 months ago 😀.
  • cazo
    cazo Posts: 1,483
    TelMc32 said:
    Best month for me with £600 on a £45k holding (1x£100 + 1x£500).  8.67% return this year so far.

    Great timing as I’ve just paid my car insurance and about to pay my dad’s next week. It was nice while it lasted 🤷🏻‍♂️😂
    £600 for me also on full amount £500-£100. Good start to the day hope it continues.coyr⚽️⚽️
  • Addickinedi
    Addickinedi Posts: 149
    £250 for me and £50 wife both on max holding 
  • bobmunro
    bobmunro Posts: 20,839
    £75 for me, £100 for Mrs M - both max holdings.
    Last month it was £475 for me and £200 for the missus so not unhappy with the two months combined.
  • Solidgone
    Solidgone Posts: 10,203
    £175 max
  • Bangkokaddick
    Bangkokaddick Posts: 4,295
    £100 on 40k.
  • IdleHans
    IdleHans Posts: 10,956
    A bit late but I dumped my Google and Amazon stock yesterday. Won't be buying them back anytime soon.
  • Buglehorn
    Buglehorn Posts: 1,002
    Finally after nearly a blank year £100 on 9k
  • Arsenetatters
    Arsenetatters Posts: 5,969
    £100 on max
  • PragueAddick
    PragueAddick Posts: 22,137
    £200 for me, but got zilch in previous two draws so, meh.

    Anyway. Somewhat by luck, about 3 weeks ago I did a full review of my funds holdings with the help of my IFA, and to some extent Claude.ai helped. Basically the IFA suggested a re-balancing of portfolios by sector, and some better performing funds in each sector. So I did (by my cautious standards) quite a radical pruning, and it takes a few days for Hargreaves Lansdowne to sell off the funds and free up the cash. While this was happening the Orange Baboon and the Most Punchable Face in the World were gearing up but markets still thought they were bluffing. 

    Nevertheless I didn't like the smell of it all so I figured the smart thing would be to feed the money back in at regular intervals. This was where Claude was cool. He worked out how much of each fund I needed to buy to get to the IFA's recommended sector share, and then the amounts to pay in each month. Working that out myself would have driven me nuts. 

    Anyway I bought one tranche just before Lardy Boy put down his golf clubs and went full batshit. So fortunately most of my cash is unspent and I now need to consider an emergency re-balance. The thing is that when you are in funds, you own a lot more Nvidia, Amazon and Swasticar than you realise, so I have to take a good long look at all those funds. And then if you instead buy more European funds, you are buying more Novo Nordisk, and I already own a fair bit of their shares which have taken quite a hammering. But the UK and European funds I've bought already are already showing positive returns. 
  • Sponsored links:



  • Chaz Hill
    Chaz Hill Posts: 5,216
    edited March 4
    Only £25 on PBs for me on half max but £200 for Mrs Chaz on full holding. Nothing for junior on hid £12k or so.
  • PragueAddick
    PragueAddick Posts: 22,137
    Also been meaning to give a shout out to Hargreaves Lansdowne, since I've been moaning about them a lot on here. I've got a SIPP with them but I'm  UK tax-non resident. Once I'd clarified what options I actually have for accessing the funds, (speaking to both Pension Wise and Which mag.) I gave them a call and they were very helpful, even suggesting a way to start the process with a minimal withdrawal with the aim of obliging HMRC to send H-L the non-resident certificate so that H-L can send me later withdrawals gross. They've also quietly beefed up their portfolio analysis tool although they keep it hidden away - they say they are planning to improve it further. They are quite happy that I'm a non -resident so long as I have a UK bank account, and here too I've got lucky as it turns out that HSBC, alone among the big banks, are perfectly OK with me keeping my current account while moving to a foreign address. For ages I had really thought I'd need to shift everything to non-UK platforms and banks, and had opened an account and experienced the full UX horror of Interactive Brokers. Well H-L are a lot more expensive but when it comes to platform functionality for punters like me who are mainly in funds, I've decided its still good value and I am not going anywhere. Hats off to them and to HSBC from a grateful traitor.😉 
  • golfaddick
    golfaddick Posts: 33,599
    Good news then @PragueAddick. It seems that between AI, HL, Pension wise and your friendly IFA 😉  you've finally got it all sorted. 
  • PragueAddick
    PragueAddick Posts: 22,137
    Good news then @PragueAddick. It seems that between AI, HL, Pension wise and your friendly IFA 😉  you've finally got it all sorted. 
    Just need to resist the urge to stick it all in a money market fund ;)
  • Friend Or Defoe
    Friend Or Defoe Posts: 18,062
    I haven't been so lucky. 1.9% down today. Definitely too much across the Atlantic.
  • LargeAddick
    LargeAddick Posts: 32,543
    Also been meaning to give a shout out to Hargreaves Lansdowne, since I've been moaning about them a lot on here. I've got a SIPP with them but I'm  UK tax-non resident. Once I'd clarified what options I actually have for accessing the funds, (speaking to both Pension Wise and Which mag.) I gave them a call and they were very helpful, even suggesting a way to start the process with a minimal withdrawal with the aim of obliging HMRC to send H-L the non-resident certificate so that H-L can send me later withdrawals gross. They've also quietly beefed up their portfolio analysis tool although they keep it hidden away - they say they are planning to improve it further. They are quite happy that I'm a non -resident so long as I have a UK bank account, and here too I've got lucky as it turns out that HSBC, alone among the big banks, are perfectly OK with me keeping my current account while moving to a foreign address. For ages I had really thought I'd need to shift everything to non-UK platforms and banks, and had opened an account and experienced the full UX horror of Interactive Brokers. Well H-L are a lot more expensive but when it comes to platform functionality for punters like me who are mainly in funds, I've decided its still good value and I am not going anywhere. Hats off to them and to HSBC from a grateful traitor.😉 
    It's odd that HSBC stand alone amongst UK banks when it comes to people like yourself living abroad. My friends who live in Cyprus now suddenly had to close all their Barclays accounts after they had been there for about three years and struggled to find another UK bank with whom they could bank. Luckily an advisor in Cyprus suggested they open an account with HSBC in Jersey and apparently they couldn't have  been happier with that suggestion. If HSBC UK catch up with the other banks then a Jersey account may be an option for people.
  • IdleHans
    IdleHans Posts: 10,956
    I haven't been so lucky. 1.9% down today. Definitely too much across the Atlantic.
    I find it helps if you think of the very bad days not as % drops but as 'oh, we've gone back three weeks (or whatever)' in terms of market levels. So as of now the S&P500 has gone back to November.
  • golfaddick
    golfaddick Posts: 33,599
    IdleHans said:
    I haven't been so lucky. 1.9% down today. Definitely too much across the Atlantic.
    I find it helps if you think of the very bad days not as % drops but as 'oh, we've gone back three weeks (or whatever)' in terms of market levels. So as of now the S&P500 has gone back to November.
    For a businessman Trump is not very clever is he. 
  • Huskaris
    Huskaris Posts: 9,841
    Never known a president brag about how much the stock market has gone up under his presidency. It's now gone back to where it was when he was elected. 

    I expect a boost to come though, my concern is that his grift is in crypto rather than in making us all rich through the stock market. 
  • IdleHans
    IdleHans Posts: 10,956
    edited March 4
    Not forgetting a mooted dollar devaluation which I imagine would cane stocks again.
    I'm not an economist, so perhaps someone cleverer can explain how a currency devaluation would keep prices down in the US. Surely it just makes imports more expensive...