DublinHead54
Registered User
- Messages
- 1,090
You might find more lending to subprime and uncreditworthy people/institutions. High risk but potentially high yield. Plenty of peer to peer companies out there yielding 8-9% when all is rosy but they carry a lot of risk.
Also the stock markets have not done well since the financial crash, excluding of course U.S. technology the only outstanding performance. Iseq moribund with the banks facing a renewed shift downwards again, the ftse 100 below where it was in 1999, the only saviour of the ftse, dividends, have now been cut because of covid. So Europe, UK , emerging markets are down significantly even the US not so great once you strip out the big technology stocks, remember technology was cause of the early 2000s recession so would have been a very small part of anyone's portfolio coming into the financial crash.
What are "stocks" us stocks, European stocks, technology stocks, emerging markets ?, so maybe the msci world index which has a big weighting to us technology you would have that performance. However vast sections of the global stock markets are down since the financial crash. It would not be unreasonable to say a decade ago that you were fairly diversified if you had a ftse index fund or a European index fund,( Europe an advanced economy with 500million people yet it's stock markets have gone nowhere) but that has turned out not to be the case, if you didn't have exposure to the 5 big US technology stocks you are most likely down since 2015 , all of the performance since the corona virus pandemic has been confined to these stocks with massive stocks like Apple up 60 %. A decade ago the biggest stocks on the msci were the oil and financial stocks yet these are decimated now.The average return on stocks over the past 10 years has been 11%+, why in heavens name would you doing subprime lending for less....
The sector weighting of information technology in the MSCI World Index is 22.3%.maybe the msci world index which has a big weighting to us technology
The MSCI World Index Ex-USA Index has returned an annualised 6.15% over the last 10 years.vast sections of the global stock markets are down since the financial crash
Cliff Taylor: What permanently low interest rates mean for you as a saver or borrower
Smart Money: A new era of super-low mortage rates – and pressure on banks to charge for your savingswww.irishtimes.com
I’d really like to see us move in this direction. It would help close the gap between the yields wealthier people can access vs what your average Joe gets in a bank account, inequality.I think they should introduce something like the 'ISA' in the UK
I’d really like to see us move in this direction. It would help close the gap between the yields wealthier people can access vs what your average Joe gets in a bank account, inequality.
It could also be used to implement one of Brendan’s regular suggestions: that first time buyers should be able to access their pension (but in this case their ISA) to pay for their house deposit.
It could be implemented cost-neutral by reducing maximum pension pot sizes by whatever the ISA limits are set at.
It could be implemented cost-neutral by reducing maximum pension pot sizes by whatever the ISA limits are set at.
I came across the Irish Savers Action Group a few weeks back who are a new group advocating for an ISA type scheme and/or improvements to the deemed disposal rule to aid regular small savers, might go somewhere, know nothing about them yet and have no personal involvement to be clear - https://old.reddit.com/r/ireland/comments/gz3597/update_for_irish_savers_action_group_isag/How do we go about raising this to the government and try and get it on the agenda?
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?