Your situation is probably a better argument for paying down the mortgage to stop you trying it again!I was just about to post this. I'm not sure my situation is a good justification for investing while having a mortgage. I pretty much gambled 15k using my mortgage debt (savings, but could be used to repay mortgage debt), so eh...not exactly the best idea. It worked out, but it might have not done.
Your situation is probably a better argument for paying down the mortgage to stop you trying it again!
With respect, we're verging on confusing investing with gambling here.
@flyingfolly has previously posted about making 50k buying and selling Game Stop in the space of a week back in January. It was a high risk strategy, from which they came out on the right side.
I think this explains a lot. No one has their age on their avatar of course, but the most dedicated equities fans I see online tend to be in the 25-35 age group. I'm not that much older but I've seen two large stock market corrections in my adult life, including one where trusted corporate Irish names became worth actually nothing or close to it over the course of 18 months. I'm allergic to holding any specific stock in concentration and I am relaxed about equity performance only over a period of two decades or more.I'm probably biased because I've had a positive experience investing over the years and not been bit hard by 07/08 or dot com bubble. Investing in the stock market has enabled me to get to a position to be able to get a mortgage.
I think this explains a lot. No one has their age on their avatar of course, but the most dedicated equities fans I see online tend to be in the 25-35 age group. I'm not that much older but I've seen two large stock market corrections in my adult life, including one where trusted corporate Irish names became worth actually nothing or close to it over the course of 18 months. I'm allergic to holding any specific stock in concentration and I am relaxed about equity performance only over a period of two decades or more.
Personally I've made close to half a million of a paper gain in property, some of which I could sell up and walk away from. Given that this was leveraged I've increased my equity by a factor of ten in less than a decade. So I can see the upside to property but (given my age) I still have close friends still nowhere near what they paid in 2006 for their apartment.
A lot of this does indeed come down to personal risk tolerance but what I see (and this is anecdotal) is an underestimation of equity risk by posters in this 25-35 age group.
In the equation there are so many things that are much more certain than equity returns. The tax regime isn't going to change radically, interest rates can only go up a few hundred basis points, inflation will not be in double digits, and you have have a reasonable idea of your own earning prospects. Equities can and do rise and fall by 30% in a 12-month period, and have seen nominal declines over a decade-long period.
I don't want to call an equity market overpricing (I've been wrong before) but mechanically the longer you are from the last bear market the closer you are to the next one. If you have no adult memory of this you are going to get a nasty surprise.
I reckon I could borrow around €400,000 at 1.95%.
Should I do that and invest in a diversified equity portfolio?
Financial freedom.What's your financial goal?
P.s I see your trolling
The S&P500 returned an annualised 4.00% over the first 20 years of this century, with all dividends reinvested.
After all investment costs and taxes, an Irish investor would have done well to make an annualised return of much more than 2.00%.
Over the same 20-year period, Irish mortgage rates averaged 4.36%.
So, over that 20-year period the risk of investing in equities didn’t pay off - you would have been far better off paying down your mortgage.
IMO it rarely makes sense to invest in equities outside a pension while carrying a mortgage.
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication - just pay down your mortgage.
I meet those conditions. I'd be interested in seeing your thoughts on why I should possibly do an equity release to invest.Well Gordon If you are a thirtysomething in forever home with Low LTV, good reliable income, emergency cash reserves, maxed out AVC/pension, fully insured, possibly yes.
The 1980s was a period of high-ish inflation (so lower real returns) and higher interest rates (so lower equity premium).January 1979 – December 2016. The range of outcomes was 6%-18
I still don't see any valid reason from you.I said possibly, not should. Anyway I am not going to say why when there is approximately a dozen posts on this thread from me giving exact reasons.
Or have I missed something excellent advice somewhere?My mortgage is at 2.1% fixed (<50% LTV) and I feel it is very easy to beat that rate (including taxes, fees etc) especially over a longer term.
Firstly, I'm not @Gordon Gekko . He's more handsome than me.Well congratulations Gordon
I'm maxing AVC; I don't have 2m there yet (but I can see why if I had, that would strengthen your argument a teeny tiny little bit). I've c. 400k, and there's 40k being added to it annually.Have maxed out pension pot: value €2m (Current maximum permitted pension fund by Revenue)
You're not the only one who does research. You've done very well in a short time span. It's more than likely that luck played a large part of your result. If you can do it consistently over many, many years then maybe you're one of the few who can predict the future. In the mean time I, for one, think luck has played a large part in your result.Ah here now that isn't fair and quite frankly is slightly insulting. I gave my opinion of opportunity cost to the OP and after being requested to justify reasons why, I used my personal experience as an example.
For the record I continue to carry out through research and analysis on all my current investing and only commit when I am fully convinced of an upside. Making a comment like you did is not on.
With the greatest respect, your strategy is insane.Ah here now that isn't fair and quite frankly is slightly insulting. I gave my opinion of opportunity cost to the OP and after being requested to justify reasons why, I used my personal experience as an example.
For the record I continue to carry out through research and analysis on all my current investing and only commit when I am fully convinced of an upside. Making a comment like you did is not on.
Sorry Red (and Gordon)
I was in a similar situation to you in my late thirties in 2017 however had a lump sum of €300k and a mortgage of similar size. I decided to invest the lot and it has worked out extremely well. I'm not going to accept that this was luck either as I did have the conviction at the time and still hold the assets I bought over the period 2017-2018. I did have some losers (certain bank and energy/oil stocks) however I have held on to them all too and do not intend selling for a very long period. Asking me to "let you know if I need help seeing why" isn't necessary as that initial investment is now worth over €3M, further diversified and growing.
If you want a summary of those investments let me know and I will help you seeing why being mortgage free with no exposure to equities outside of pension fund at your age is an obvious opportunity cost.
And it may well be a valid opportunity cost were a 10 fold increase in equities investments over that time period the norm.I gave my opinion of opportunity cost to the OP and after being requested to justify reasons why, I used my personal experience as an example.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?