Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Holding single shares involves fees in and out and hassle with tax. It is also high risk. It is poor advice for someone with no interest in nor background in investments.I think it's a very good opportunity to educate people about the stockmarket.
Some of it should be invested in stocks so that he sees that it goes up and down.
The ten-year bond still pays out interest even if you cash it in early. See here. It's backloaded so there is a benefit to staying the full ten years but it is not in any meaningful sense locked away.A fixed term deposit should be avoided. Even though the OP says that the money will not be needed for 5 to 10 years, life has a habit of getting in the way, and he might need it earlier.
Reinvestment risk is symmetrical though. Deposit rates might rise too. For the rest I fully agreeWhich is subject to reinvestment risk (ie the rates on the instant access deposits might fall).
Holding single shares involves fees in and out and hassle with tax. It is also high risk. It is poor advice for someone with no interest in nor background in investments.
A portfolio of five shares is still very high risk!I am certainly not suggesting investing in a single share - a portfolio of 5 to 10 shares.
But there are much simpler ways of doing so. I don’t know why any naive investor would construct their own portfolio when they could just buy a diversified ETF.People are giving up huge amounts in returns by avoiding the stockmarket completely.
A portfolio of five shares is still very high risk!
not accurate, interest is mainly accrued from year 5 onwards, but it is a sliding scale, based on what year you withdraw, explained in full in table 1, part 2.4:
Product Terms & Conditions | Ireland State Savings
Ireland State Savings Product Terms & Conditionswww.statesavings.ie
This is why, it is better to invest in a number of seperate 10 year bonds, so one can take one, and leave the others intact, investing all in one bond means, if your circumstances change, you forego more interest, as the whole amount is subject to the early withdrawal.
What does this mean other than literally being true?It’s not 1986 anymore.
It means you can get exposure to equity returns without having to invest in individual shares!What does this mean other than literally being true?
Exchange-traded funds and cheap online brokers didn't exist in 1986. The barriers to entry to the stock market are a lot lower now than then.What does this mean other than literally being true?
It means you can get exposure to equity returns without having to invest in individual shares!
What are your thoughts on investing on AIB fusion 5 or 6 plans instead?
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