fistophobia
Registered User
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Any suggestions, rather than talking in riddles?There are always other options.
This is what I observed also. I emailed them but no response yet. It appears to be Brexit related according to Reddit but yes, surely that would apply to all of them. Strange!Coming back to the subject line....
I notice on Degiro I can still buy some investment Trusts e.g.
FGT, CTY, MYI and JGGI.
But I can't buy BNKR, MRC, FCIT, SMT, JEO, ATR, BGSC.
I did initially think Brexit, but shouldn't Brexit apply to all of them?
I’d like to just check something if I may.
question: are U.K. investment trusts always subject to income tax and CGT?
if you think the answer is yes, please like the post
If not please set out your reasons below.
I’ll run this for say a week.
thanks
I'm going to be honest here Marc. I'd have my doubts about asking you for any advice after your analysis of PRSA's, which you failed to come back on once you were questioned: https://www.askaboutmoney.com/threa...-any-tax-relief-possible.221628/#post-1698462happy to provide an alternative for those looking to take advice on this
I'm sorry to hear that, and I hope you've made a full recovery.I was writing that post with a fever that I later discovered was Covid and put me in intensive care
How could an investment trust domiciled in the UK be considered an EU fund when the UK is no longer a member of the EU?I think it is possible for investment trusts in the UK to be considered EU funds, at least in theory.
That's a possibility in the future but how does this impact Irish investors today?If the association of investment companies manages to negotiate an exemption from PRIIPs then its game over for Irish investors.
That's a possibility in the future but how does this impact Irish investors today?
In layman's terms? What's the story with the IT's then. Are they a valid investment vehicle or it is up in the air until after we get clarification?
IT | ETF | ||
Invested | 100,000 | 100,000 | |
Year 2 | 109,264 | 112,000 | |
Year 3 | 119,386 | 125,440 | |
Year 4 | 130,446 | 140,493 | |
Year 5 | 142,531 | 157,352 | |
Year 6 | 155,735 | 176,234 | |
Year 7 | 170,162 | 197,382 | |
Year 8 | 185,926 | 221,068 | |
tax | 28,356 | 49,638 | |
total if sold | 157,570 | 171,430 | |
Year 9 | 203,150 | 192,002 | |
Year 10 | 221,970 | 215,042 | |
Year 11 | 242,533 | 240,847 | |
Year 12 | 265,001 | 269,749 | |
Year 13 | 289,551 | 302,119 | |
Year 14 | 316,375 | 338,373 | |
Year 15 | 345,684 | 378,978 | |
Year 16 | 377,708 | 424,455 | |
tax | 91,644 | 83,389 | rebate of 49,638 from 8 years previous |
total if sold | 286,065 | 341,066 |
Thanks for the reply.Average annual return of 10% + 2% dividend seems quite optimistic to me but who knows?
There is a tax of 41% on the ETF dividends that does not seem to be taken into account
If you change your assumptions, you get a different answer. So check the assumptions.The 1.56% management fee destroys the performance of the IT.
Even at 1% management fee, IT can't compete under realistic assumptions.
Even if you think inflation is going to roar, EFT beats IT if there is an average annual return of 20%
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