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Savings and Investments thread
Comments
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RedPanda said:Huskaris said:I'm currently shorting silver after the latest WallStreetBets initiative.
I don't think you can get away with stuff like that on something as big as silver.
Unfortunately I couldn't find anywhere on Monday where I could short Gamestop...
Wall Street Bets has been advising everyone not to buy silver. It's been interesting seeing it spread as fake news, because there's obviously an agenda/money behind it.0 -
mendonca said:Who/what do you use as your strategy to Short @Huskaris? I thought this would be more than tricky for the retail investor.
I'd only recommend it if you want to do it for a short period though.1 -
Not for me but thanks. Just find it interesting to see/hear different people's investment interests.0
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As a mere novice all I've used for my SIPP have been absolute return funds. They are a kind of "hedge" as they both go short & long on their investments. For example, Argonaut Absolute Return fund is a UK equity fund that has about a 30% short position. Worked well for me last year when the markets fell as it bucked the trend & went up. At the time I was primarily using it as a hedge against any Brexit problems......not knowing obviously that Covid would have a much bigger impact.
Going forward I'm hearing that absolute return Bond funds are the best thing for your fixed interest investments - same premise that the fund managers try to "hedge" the market on Government & Corporate bonds.
Best thing I can come up with I'm afraid.1 -
https://amp.ft.com/content/3b5d1e23-d857-46cb-ba46-6028ebebad76?__twitter_impression=true
This is getting a bit silly now, although it did put me in mind of a certain lifer. Probably worth a short?1 -
mendonca said:Not for me but thanks. Just find it interesting to see/hear different people's investment interests.
I actually haven't "shorted" anything before. Everything else I have investment wise is in Vanguard funds.
I just think that when you can see something that is priced incorrectly, and will be corrected in the short term, you can fix make a quick profit quite easily.
Silver is down 7.2%, today.
https://www.ft.com/content/77e6fef6-37ff-4f8e-abd6-4c2d65ac120c
Very interesting on the silver goings on in the past couple of days. Not behind a paywall.1 -
Huskaris said:mendonca said:Not for me but thanks. Just find it interesting to see/hear different people's investment interests.
I actually haven't "shorted" anything before. Everything else I have investment wise is in Vanguard funds.
I just think that when you can see something that is priced incorrectly, and will be corrected in the short term, you can fix make a quick profit quite easily.
Silver is down 7.2%, today.
https://www.ft.com/content/77e6fef6-37ff-4f8e-abd6-4c2d65ac120c
Very interesting on the silver goings on in the past couple of days. Not behind a paywall.
1. spread betting, as @Huskaris says, is probably the easiest and, as it's classed as betting, no capital gains tax;
2. CFDs, which are similar but gains are taxable
3. options (in this case puts, put spreads and ratio spreads) - need a specialist broker, like Interactive Brokers; taxable
4. ETFs, like those from Wisdom Tree - you can trade these as normal listed securities inside an ISA or SIPP, so can shield any gains from tax.
3. are the safest but take quite a bit of knowledge to understand them, so not for the causal investor, which is a shame really as they are very safe effective tools when used correctly.
I would steer clear of the others - I've only ever lost money on all of them. Significant money.
Some of the ETFs can be OK but wouldn't recommend the leveraged ones. The shorts, in particular, have a 'drag' - you only have to look at the long term price graphs to see where they end up.1 -
Anyone on here do BTL?
I'm a Trustee of a Friendly society, we have now 52 properties and are about to buy another 3 or 4. I have to say if you look at the return over the years both with income and capital growth it's phenomenal.0 -
£25 this month. Better than a poke in the eye. Better news, I’ve taken my pension early (56) from a dreadful place I worked for 9 months. £41 a month! That will pay for the valley pass I guess!4
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Seems like the Reddit stuff is over and a lot of retail investors are gonna lose a lot of money. Has been interesting to watch but i do feel bad for some of the people there still putting thousands into this stock...0
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£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.0
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Bangkokaddick said:£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.0
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LonelyNorthernAddick said:Bangkokaddick said:£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.2
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kentaddick said:LonelyNorthernAddick said:Bangkokaddick said:£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.2
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kentaddick said:LonelyNorthernAddick said:Bangkokaddick said:£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.0
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LonelyNorthernAddick said:Bangkokaddick said:£25 on the premium bonds. Zynex up 7% (though I sold half my investment after the last big jump) and my cannabis stock ETF up 9% and all my GBP holdings up as well. Good day (not football-wise of course!)Decided to buck the trend and buy silver! Let's see.
I'm in the ETFMG Alternative Harvest ETF. Ticker MJ. It's a USD fund on the NYSE. I invested in November at $13. It's now over $23. Totally agree an ETF is the way to go and even the ETFs can be very volatile.
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I see GameStop continues to go down, hopefully people were able to get out and take a profit rather than a loss, we know it hurt the hedge fund but must be a lot of people sitting on losses right now.0
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Rob7Lee said:I see GameStop continues to go down, hopefully people were able to get out and take a profit rather than a loss, we know it hurt the hedge fund but must be a lot of people sitting on losses right now.4
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£25 PSB win for me.1
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Rob7Lee said:Anyone on here do BTL?
I'm a Trustee of a Friendly society, we have now 52 properties and are about to buy another 3 or 4. I have to say if you look at the return over the years both with income and capital growth it's phenomenal.0 -
HardyAddick said:Rob7Lee said:Anyone on here do BTL?
I'm a Trustee of a Friendly society, we have now 52 properties and are about to buy another 3 or 4. I have to say if you look at the return over the years both with income and capital growth it's phenomenal.
if anyone knows of anyone run down houses available in Dartford let me know 👍1 -
Rob7Lee said:I see GameStop continues to go down, hopefully people were able to get out and take a profit rather than a loss, we know it hurt the hedge fund but must be a lot of people sitting on losses right now.
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So no interest rate rise/reduction from the BoE today as expected, but they have asked banks to prepare for negative interest rates in the future. I still think that is highly unlikely and even less likely to make it's way down to savers/deposits, but a loose warning to not keep too much in cash if you can help it.1
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The big banks computer software systems cannot I think cope with negative interest rates for retail customers1
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NatWest used to record interest rates in 1/8’s when I worked on their accounting system and it started from 0 so can confirm could not do negative interest rates. I think they then upgrade the system to record interest rates in 1/1000 but again wouldn’t have considered negative interest rates.
I assume that most other banks would have been similar. To cater for negative interest rates would take them 6 to 12 months development time for a team of 6 to 10 people to work on, based on my experience of their systems and development cycles/testing.3 -
SE9toDA2 said:NatWest used to record interest rates in 1/8’s when I worked on their accounting system and it started from 0 so can confirm could not do negative interest rates. I think they then upgrade the system to record interest rates in 1/1000 but again wouldn’t have considered negative interest rates.
I assume that most other banks would have been similar. To cater for negative interest rates would take them 6 to 12 months development time for a team of 6 to 10 people to work on, based on my experience of their systems and development cycles/testing.3 -
The BofE has been talking to Banks about negative interest rates for over 6 months & this is one if the reasons why - making sure that they have the systems in place to cope with it.
FWIW, I don't think negative rates will come in - certainly not for retail customers. The BofE don't want to see people pulling money out of "safe havens" and having to find somewhere else to put it. Would be like having a run on a bank & would cause unease & even panic for some people.1 -
golfaddick said:The BofE has been talking to Banks about negative interest rates for over 6 months & this is one if the reasons why - making sure that they have the systems in place to cope with it.
FWIW, I don't think negative rates will come in - certainly not for retail customers. The BofE don't want to see people pulling money out of "safe havens" and having to find somewhere else to put it. Would be like having a run on a bank & would cause unease & even panic for some people.
Too late - I've already hollowed out a mattress in anticipation!
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I was still getting over 1% at Charter Savings Bank but that's all ending. I had a pot of cash in a fixed rate 1 year bond, which is maturing. The new rate they offer is 0.55%. I keep this cash pot as a separate stash for healthcare needs (paid into this instead of paying the exorbitant premiums that expats pay to BUPA or PPP, and it has handsomely paid off so far because thankfully nothing happened to call on the cash).
But I think I will now have to put this into a low cost, low risk tracker portfolio. I'm pretty sure I can beat half a percent this year.1