Teach your children well
In this blog:
Teach your children well
You think you know us?
The really very obvious investment (that stumbled)
Remember 1996?
Why we don’t recommend total return investing for drawdown.
Tonto good for tracking, not for income
In this blog:
Currencies will turn investment stats upside down
“If I had a million dollars….”
Why fixed income won’t work for long term retirement
What trackers are not particularly good at
Things to try out for the first time in your retirement
We recently asked all the members of our Boomers’ Money Club to share what it was they most recently did for the first time, and what’s next on the list. There were lots of great ideas on there so we thought we’d share them with you…
How to make retirement less scary
In this blog:
Debt – hitting countries not people
Monte Carlo or Bust – trouble with random stats
Does my company look big in this?
Chancery Lane in the Financial Times
When was the last time?
In this blog:
Lucky vs repeatable
Trouble at the EV offices
Ros Altmann – Baroness – and the trouble with trusts
I had an interesting conversation with my three-year-old granddaughter about a bear that is really called Winnie the Pooh (you can fill in the gaps)
Standard deviation and Sortino Ratios in portfolio comparisons
Apocalypse du jour
In this blog:
5 years annual returns of major hedge funds
Crunch data: today’s annuity vs investment trust
When should you move your DC scheme?
Starting drawdown – the tax pitfall
What’s the score with Fisher?
God bless America!
Avoiding shenanigans
In this blog:
Saying ‘No’
Shenanigans
ESG – who’s the war-monger?
Jolly hockey sticks
In the technical part of the income market
How to gift to married children and keep it in the family
Target date funds: a technical note
Don't make the 4% error
In this blog:
How was the 4% Rule calculated?
How not to get lost
Don’t drive your lifetime savings without accurate navigation
Hey Uncle Sam, slow down there a minute
Retirement – how much money do you need?
In this blog:
The new tax rates and allowances
The student loan interest rates and income thresholds
What is S&P talking about? Active v passive
Cool runnings?
Transitional certificates
Investment maths – 51.5p share price, 34.4% discount
Leave me alone Mrs Vanderbilt…
In this blog:
Is cheaper better in investments?
What are you expecting?
It’s not just you – the proof
Chapter 5 – your retirement
This is the new Key Chart
Money why women should be in charge
In this blog:
We have a huge amount of respect for Christine Lagarde
If you like a lot of chocolate on your biscuit…
Investing in reverse
Remember Harry Patch
What a discretionary portfolio looks like – and what they charge you. Or, this is what Consumer Duty is all about.
Valuations and hot air
“I need a pension of £60k per year, I’ve got £90k in my pension”
Pay rises in 2023 – what’s in your wallet?
Only living boy
In this blog:
Buy your pension at a discount
The maths is simple
Putting the jigsaw pieces together – use the data, not the crystal ball
Recycling your ISA – don’t forget it
Are you wealthy? How do you rate?
Glengarry Glen Ross
In this blog:
Inflation versus dividends: the relevant data
The Rolls Royce Pension Scheme, or, ‘Why doesn’t everyone do this?’
Fees, charges, costs and commissions
Commission or fee – what’s the difference?
Handouts to the kids
Help – she’ll just spend it
What me worry
In this blog:
Talking about racing cars and autogyros, have you done your LPA?
Open or closed? Differences between investment trusts and unit trusts
The SONG and dance
The tax man speaks – Lifetime Allowance update
Value Traps - open the escape hatch
In this blog:
Capital and income are not correlated
Boringly predictable
Inflation – what goes up must come down
And while we’re here… is this a trigger?
Solicitors look away now
Sherman Tank
In this blog:
The Magic Money Machine
£90,000 per year, net, for life, inflation adjusted. The aNewuity: when ‘pension’ means ‘income’.
“What were you thinking?”
What time is it?
In this blog:
Example: National Grid 2024 5.875%
All 747’s are planes, but not all planes are 747’s
Lifting the lid on part of our analysis
Ms Reeves and the tragedy
In this blog:
Get the size right – too big can be catastrophic
Getting the size wrong can be fatal as well
Rachel Reeves and the Lifetime Allowance Show
How to Guide: Your Essential Guide to ISAs
ISAs, or Individual Savings Accounts, have been around for over 20 years – since Google had its debut and Bill Clinton was impeached. Rewind to 1999, and the Chancellor Gordon Brown introduced the product in the hope of encouraging us to save more for the future. Since then, they’ve become an essential part of many a financial plan.
One of the key aims of the ISA was to make saving simple. However, as with many things finance-related, successive governments have tinkered with parts of ISAs, added new products and altered limits. The net result is that picking an ISA product and understanding how to make the most of your allowance is not quite as simple as it was initially meant to be!
Our free, 12-page essential guide to ISAs talks you through what an ISA is, the different types of ISAs and why should you choose one.