Dan_The_Man
Registered User
- Messages
- 58
ok ..thanks for another alternative ....what would the next step be here .how do you invest in Irish bonds?Fair enough.
A higher return is available just buying irish government bonds, with the capital gain element tax free.
The people making most money on the product you linked are the product producer and the broker.
The returns are most likely subject to income tax rather than DIRT.
Ah, I missed that it'll be a listed instrument. Yes, more likely regulatory than creating an entire product for the 1 customer that would prefer income tax to DIRT.
The brochure suggests it's income tax.is there a conclusion on the tax treatment of this product?
No. It just makes it look more sophisticated than it is, and harder to understand.does the euro index create any real advantage or disadvantage?
Through a stockbroker. There's a long thread on it here:ok ..thanks for another alternative ....what would the next step be here .how do you invest in Irish bonds?
Yep, we can help you with that toook ..thanks for another alternative ....what would the next step be here .how do you invest in Irish bonds?
It would help to link to the relevant info:
.... besides opportunity risk (i'm still considering the other options given here) ...what's the overal risk on this product
you mentioned the UCITS fund in previous post ...how secure is it vs what's on offer here?You can get 4.09% gross with daily liquidity so you would have to believe that interest rates are about to plummet to think that locking away for 2 years at 2.7% makes sense
you mentioned the UCITS fund in previous post ...how secure is it vs what's on offer here?
http://www.brokersolutions.ie/2017/...r-100-Capital-Secure-Income-Bond-Brochure.pdf
Depends what you mean by secure.
Half a trillion dollar fund manager. UCITs regulated fund. Daily priced. Average credit quality A. Duration 0.57 years. Euro hedged.
So not a high risk investment by any stretch of the imagination.
Not directly comparable to a structured product but if I was getting less liquidity all things being equal I’d expect a higher interest rate
It really depends on what you are actually trying to achieve
As with most equity based investments there is no full or partial capital guarantee.as a layman in these matters ..I case it comes down to what's the worse that can happen with this type of UCITs regulated fund?
as in ...is there a scenario I don't get my capital back or what recourse do I have if there's an issue?
do i need to pay stamp duty on the way into a UCITs regulated fund (the 4.09% gross fund being mentioned here)?As with most equity based investments there is no full or partial capital guarantee.
No stamp duty or government levydo i need to pay stamp duty on the way into a UCITs regulated fund (the 4.09% gross fund being mentioned here)?
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