Bearsandbulls
Registered User
- Messages
- 28
If you really want to be invested in equities it makes more sense of course to do it inside a pension fund and benefit from CGT-free accumulation.We currently have approximately 40k cash sitting in an account doing nothing. I had this invested in equities but withdrew back in December as I didnt like what was happening in the market.
There would be no tax relief on this addiitonal injection but it will be taxed at a lower rate than normal equity investing when the time comes.
I certainly do not have that skill! I got lucky in December. I work in energy markets and was spooked by the spiralling energy costs so just went cautious. If i was able to time the market I wouldnt need to work or be looking for financial advice!You put in €40k now.
Assuming no change in the pension rules, you will get back €10k + 25% of any growth, tax-free.
You will pay 40% tax on the €30k and on any growth.
As you have the very rare skill of being able to predict the movements of the stockmarket, you should invest the €40k directly in the stock market and not via a pension fund. You will have access to this cash. And in later years, when you might have higher expenses you can feed it into your pension fund.
Brendan
Assuming your fees are 0.25% or less?thanks everyone for the good points. I am leaning towards putting it into the pension. Appreciate what is being said about not having access to funds but would hope to continue building savings anyway
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