Independent Advice

W

whatthe

Guest
Hey,

I have two investments to make....
10k for the 16 day old arrival in to our house...and 15k for moi and the better half.
Whilst all the advice here is welcome a lot of it is complete jibberish to me.
Can anyone recommend a firm that would offer completely independent advice on this.
 
I am amazed that you feel alot of the information provided here is complete jibberish. I must say that I personally have gained considerable knowledge re financial matters since joining AAM, thanks to everyone involved.

I suggest you take out the yellow pages and search for an independent financial advisor yourself.
 
eileen...

apologies if i came across poorly...

I was more having a go at myself rather than the board....for being a bit of a novice and all....

The point i was making is that it is me that is the stupid one for not being able to understand it
 
What is it that you don't understand?? You say you have a sum of 25,000 euro to invest. Are you looking for deposit accounts that pays a high rate of interest or do you want to take the more risky alternative and invest it in shares.
 
i want to invest 10k for the new arrival for the long term, so i was thinking of bank of ireland shares, or something like that and holding onto them for 10-15 years.
and save the remaining 15k in high interest account or somethin whilst making a contribution of about 100 a month..
 
so i was thinking of bank of ireland shares
Please note the posting guidelines. No discussion of individual shares allowed.
or something like that and holding onto them for 10-15 years.
Why not look at a more diversified low charges unit linked equity fund? There are oodles of threads on such options.
and save the remaining 15k in high interest account
For what sort of timeframe? It doesn't make sense to keep large amounts of cash on deposit for long periods of time since inflation will eat into or exceed any net deposit interest returns in many cases.
or somethin whilst making a contribution of about 100 a month..
Check out the Financial Best Buys lists of the best unit linked funds and lump sum demand/term and regular saver deposit accounts on offer. Read up on the key posts, consumer guides on www.itsyourmoney.ie etc. etc.
 
Whatthe - why don't you down load, print off and have a good read of the askaboutmoney guide to saving and investing in the key posts section. If you're looking to invest and don't know much about the subject its an excellent primer on the subject imo.

Zug
 
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