This is a waste of time. It will not help you to pick winners. Time and time again, the research shows that only a handful of Warren Buffetts exists.I take a look at their historical performance. I look at who and what fund managers own the shares etc.
1. How should I select such companies. Am I capable of doing this.
2. My current holdings are CRH Ryanair Smurfit Kappa. I fully understand tax situation around these shares.
3. If I start to purchase British, American, European shares with Irish broker what is the story around taxation.
The messiness is overstated in my view, particularly compared to the complexities you’ll embark on buying US/world shares and trying to regularly rebalance your home-rolled World Index ETF and do annual tax returns for it all. For the size of investment you’re talking about you can pay an accountant to deal with the ETF taxes in 8 years time, the extra growth you’ll probably see by getting exposure to the likes of the US market will cover the costs many many times over.ETFs purchase in Ireland are currently very messy around taxation and record keeping etc.
Why this?buy a single ETF in a small number of tranches over a few months
I think it just gives people some comfort that they’re not putting everything in at what might turn out to be a peak. Agreed it is not the best way to maximise returns though, if @KOW can stomach just doing a single transaction it is for the best and will make the tax situation even easier to manage.Why this?
Sounds like an attempt at euro cost averaging.
Which I thought had been debunked years ago and shown to offer no advantage?
This doesn't make sense to me.When buying shares at my stage of life I look at the dividend. My other criteria is DRIP.
This doesn't make sense to me.
This is to be expected. When you buy a fund some shares will perform better than others; but because of the variation in the correlation between the returns of the individual shares the overall volatility (i.e. risk) of the fund will be lower – so when you invest in a fund you may get a lower return than the return on certain shares and the benefit you get for this is lower risk.3. I have held funds with Zurich, New Ireland in the past over the past 15yrs. Shares I picked myself and invested at the same time have performed better than the fund managers.
The messiness is overstated in my view, particularly compared to the complexities you’ll embark on buying US/world shares and trying to regularly rebalance your home-rolled World Index ETF and do annual tax returns for it all. For the size of investment you’re talking about you can pay an accountant to deal with the ETF taxes in 8 years time, the extra growth you’ll probably see by getting exposure to the likes of the US market will cover the costs many many times over.
Open an account with say IBKR, buy a single ETF in a small number of tranches over a few months, forget about it for 8 years, at that time spend 20 minutes emailing the transaction export from IBKR to your accountant. Note the lack of stock research, portfolio rebalancing, dividend lodgements and tax filing, double taxation research and forms, worrying about bad news from a stock you chose, SCRIP/DRIP opt-ins, mountains of post about stock splits and rights issues that you don’t really understand in this plan. Still sound messier?
I hit the LIKE button but I wouldn't agree 100% with you. I get the messiness being overstated, it's not that bad really, if you buy and hold. What you lose with the ETF route is the ability to avoid CGT via the annual allowance, offsetting losses and - ultimately - bequeathing your holdings to your loved ones. These are not trivial issues. One can't help but look north of the border where our fellow Irish citizens in our occupied territories live under the oppressive yoke of the ISA regime, free from all income and capital taxes on their investments.The messiness is overstated in my view, particularly compared to the complexities you’ll embark on buying US/world shares and trying to regularly rebalance your home-rolled World Index ETF and do annual tax returns for it all. For the size of investment you’re talking about you can pay an accountant to deal with the ETF taxes in 8 years time, the extra growth you’ll probably see by getting exposure to the likes of the US market will cover the costs many many times over.
Open an account with say IBKR, buy a single ETF in a small number of tranches over a few months, forget about it for 8 years, at that time spend 20 minutes emailing the transaction export from IBKR to your accountant. Note the lack of stock research, portfolio rebalancing, dividend lodgements and tax filing, double taxation research and forms, worrying about bad news from a stock you chose, SCRIP/DRIP opt-ins, mountains of post about stock splits and rights issues that you don’t really understand in this plan. Still sound messier?
Are there any reasonably low cost passive investment options in Ireland that could get close to the cost and flexibility of just buying and forgetting an All-World ETF from an online broker and that would look after all the deemed disposal tax admin headaches? I assume that the OP also needs easy access to this money so a typical fund product is not going to be all that useful as exit charges are exorbitant I guess but maybe someone knows better?
Value v growth has been debated for a long time.This doesn't make sense to me.
Dividends are assessable for income tax etc. - let's say c. 50%.
Capital gains are assessable for CGT - 33% ignoring allowances/loss offsets.
Choosing a dividend stock and reinvesting the dividends via DRIP is less beneficial than choosing a non dividend stock and letting capital gains do the work more tax efficiently.
Even if you need income it's still more likely to be more tax efficient to just cash in shares as needed.
The latest Econtalk episode discusses ergodicity in economics/investing, worth a listen. Relevant to cost averaging and also relying on a small basket of shares that will return a fairly decent average for most people, but maybe not for you, which matters when it’s your life savings.Since cost averaging was brought up again: while I don't doubt that there are studies showing that on average lump sum investments have a better return, to me that feels like choosing between a game where you have a 1/9000 chance of €10m while everyone else gets nothing, or a game where everyone gets €1k. The expected return of the former is higher, but for many people the latter is preferable. We only live once, so "expected returns" alone are not enough. Cost averaging your life savings into an investment over several years might reduce the gain, but it also reduces the chance of investing it all at a high that is not reached again for several decades.
The story around taxation is (assuming your not dead) basically the same, in that you will pay 33% CGT to Irish revenue on any gains made when you sell.3. If I start to purchase British, American, European shares with Irish broker what is the story around taxation.
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?