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A serious portfolio question
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: A serious portfolio question
Thanks for your comments TJH, though I think if I were in Minerjoes situation I would be making use of Occam's razor.
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- Lemon Pip
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Re: A serious portfolio question
I have a 3 and 1 year old. Both lifestrategy 100 acc for me. Fire and forget monthly contributions into jisas
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: A serious portfolio question
tjh290633 wrote:colin wrote:On that point I am thinking of setting aside £4k to start the pot off.
work out how much it will cost you to reinvest dividends , it's not really worth buying individual shares unless you have a portfolio value of 100K or more,the transaction costs as a percentage of the portfolio is just too high. So go for some kind of fund that accumulates dividends.
If you are adding to your pot from time to time, then just add the accumulated dividends to the sum available to buy new shares. If you are in a platform which charges a percentage to reinvest dividends, then you can choose that route, otherwise let them build up until you have enough to make an economic purchase.
Funds suffer from the level of ongoing charges, or from initial charges if applied.
TJH
and brokers charge you an inactivity fee.
Anyone holding your shares for you incurs custodian costs and you have to pay that one way or another.
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: A serious portfolio question
and brokers charge you an inactivity fee.
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Not my broker, Hargreaves Lansdowne. Pretty low annual charge for holding shares as well. I wouldn’t bother with a broker that charged inactivity fees unless dealing cost was very low.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: A serious portfolio question
OhNoNotimAgain wrote:and brokers charge you an inactivity fee. Anyone holding your shares for you incurs custodian costs and you have to pay that one way or another.
Not sure which brokers you're talking about, but thought I should highlight that most brokers are earning income from stock-lending your long positions.
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: A serious portfolio question
DiamondEcho wrote:OhNoNotimAgain wrote:and brokers charge you an inactivity fee. Anyone holding your shares for you incurs custodian costs and you have to pay that one way or another.
Not sure which brokers you're talking about, but thought I should highlight that most brokers are earning income from stock-lending your long positions.
Brokers do not lend stock, or at least they shouldn't, fund managers might.
Everyone involved in holding other people's assets has to pay custodian fees and probably Trustee fees as well. In addition they have to fund Tier 1 capital that just sits there doing nothing. But costs a lot to build up.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: A serious portfolio question
OhNoNotimAgain wrote:Brokers do not lend stock, or at least they shouldn't, fund managers might.
Interactive Brokers do, and I get paid part of the income they earn from lending my positions.
'Stock Yield Enhancement Program FAQs https://ibkr.info/node/1838/
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: A serious portfolio question
DiamondEcho wrote:OhNoNotimAgain wrote:Brokers do not lend stock, or at least they shouldn't, fund managers might.
Interactive Brokers do, and I get paid part of the income they earn from lending my positions.
'Stock Yield Enhancement Program FAQs https://ibkr.info/node/1838/
Oh OK, you learn something new every day. I assume it is a US broker, does it lend out UK stocks and what is the income?
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: A serious portfolio question
I can't currently say as I'm enrolled but have been ineligible for a few years while I've been on margin. But by July I'll be margin free so will focus on it again. What I can say though is that for UK shares it's [or was] only worthwhile enrolling if you hold some of the more 'mega-cap' shares in the FTSE-100, that's where their stock-lend business seemed focused for the LSE.
I'm sure you cld google on say FTSE-100 stock-lend fees and get a rough idea, then that linked IB-FAQ breaks down how they split the income with clients.
ps. It is a US parent company, but that's effectively transparent to me. As I've moved around for work they've flipped my entity from London to Hong Kong, and currently another subsidiary of theirs. I only notice if I need to call them, I have to re-check the contact number for the applicable regional office.
I'm sure you cld google on say FTSE-100 stock-lend fees and get a rough idea, then that linked IB-FAQ breaks down how they split the income with clients.
ps. It is a US parent company, but that's effectively transparent to me. As I've moved around for work they've flipped my entity from London to Hong Kong, and currently another subsidiary of theirs. I only notice if I need to call them, I have to re-check the contact number for the applicable regional office.
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