SlugBreath
Registered User
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I trade investment trusts only, so degiro transaction trades are usually minimal (couple of euro), but where it racks up in costs is on FX (25bps EUR to GBP, and also back after the investment term). I trade only low yielding trusts, so conversations on GBP dividends is not much of a concern to me.
Hope this helps.
Thanks for that -- are they all in sterling? Does the currency risk worry you?I focus on low yields primarily as I don't want the headache of reinvestment, and I'll pay circa 50% in tax. I don't need the income day to day.
I have a long time horizon, 15+ years, so I'm primarily in growth equities. Growth isn't the best suited to rising interest rates, but I'm not particularly interested in short term noise. I'm mostly invested in Scottish mortgage, Baillie Gifford European growth and HarbourVest PE. For diversification I also have exposures in BBGI (infrastructure) and Personal assets trust.
This strategy isn't for everybody, but I'm happy enough investing in a basket with a mix of the above.
There's no sterling risk as such. The trusts are quoted in sterling, but the true currency risk is with the underlying exposures ie. dollar exposure with US companies etc. The only consideration is if the trust itself hedges underlying currently exposure back to base currency (sterling in this case). Most trusts don't systematically do this, but always best to check the fund docs. Currency hedging over a long time horizon is generally not worth it in any case, so having exposures which aren't euro isn't a major concern for me.Thanks for that -- are they all in sterling? Does the currency risk worry you?
It won't make financial sense with a long time horizon and a reasonably low interest rate fixed. I run the risk of rolling onto a higher interest rate when my fixed rate expires, however I'm comfortable that after tax returns given my time horizon will be greater. I've run various Monte Carlo simulations and probability of success is significant, of course I run the chance of not beating the interest rate after tax, but my modelling suggests it's of low probability.i can maybe add something here as I'm currently going through the same process. Rather than pay off a lump sum from a mortgage it makes more financial sense to invest given interest rates have bottemed out. I'll also be investing circa 100k through degiro.
CGT_88
I respectfully suggest that you rethink your above stated strategy. Pay off at least some of your mortgage or at least Check out Dave Ramsey,s channel on youtube for some real financial advice before preceding. You will be glad you have as you wont get better advice, IMHO
Could you expand on the claim that 67% of retail investor accounts lose money.Not so sure it make sense to invest in an Irish context see here
Should I Overpay my Mortgage or Pay into a Pension? - Everlake
As with many things, the right course of action is going to be specific to your individual financial circumstances.globalwealth.ie
Also see our comments on DIY investing via de giro here
Should DIY investors have a go at investing with a Degiro or eToro account?
67% of retail investor accounts lose money, so is DIY investing through low cost platforms like Degiro or eToro really a good idea?globalwealth.ie
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