Just put some in regularly and don't look at it would be my advice.I started my Stocks ISA journey yesterday, Spare change before payday put in, minute compared to many but we have to start somewhere, lots to learn
Bought some S&P 500 Distribution
Just put some in regularly and don't look at it would be my advice.
You will (probably) make more money in stocks than a cash isa, but depends on your risk tolerence/time period.Yeah my aim would be to top up every pay day, would it be ideal to split half and half with a normal cash ISA for savings, Or all in one?
Yeah my aim would be to top up every pay day, would it be ideal to split half and half with a normal cash ISA for savings, Or all in one?
You will (probably) make more money in stocks than a cash isa, but depends on your risk tolerence/time period.
Any reason why you went for distribution rather than the accumulation fund?
If you're using a 0 fees platform, then yes, just sell and rebuy ACCI've not got any sort of time frame in mind just thought I'd start now while I'm still young, put money in and hopefully get some gains, I went for the Distribution just because of getting the quarterly payouts, now looking back I think I should have gone for accumulation, would it be silly to sell my little bit now and reinvest into ACC?
Rather than aiming for it, just do it... unless you have some debts that has interest being charged on them, pay your future self and yourself first.
Setup a DD/Standing order that takes the money out shortly after payday, That way the money is gone before you miss it.
I used to save what is left at the end of each month, and there's always something new and shiny that I had to buy, now I get all my savings, share purchases done first, then my bills... then I scrap by on what is left for the month.
Might sound harsh but the interest and div payments for last tax year alone paid for a weeks holiday in the sun and spending cash let alone the capital gains... I just don't do that too often as it sets compound interest back.
No reason not to, or you could leave it and just start an accumulation version.I've not got any sort of time frame in mind just thought I'd start now while I'm still young, put money in and hopefully get some gains, I went for the Distribution just because of getting the quarterly payouts, now looking back I think I should have gone for accumulation, would it be silly to sell my little bit now and reinvest into ACC?
No point hoarding cash if you dont need it after you have a slush for emergencies etc.Yeah my aim would be to top up every pay day, would it be ideal to split half and half with a normal cash ISA for savings, Or all in one?
No reason not to, or you could leave it and just start an accumulation version.
Been wondering about that one for a while, apparently its highly rated and certainly the share is bullish. Enterprise value might show more. But isnt TTWO Take-Two Interactive too cheap, arent they with greater potential presuming they keep making the same successAnyone holding ROBLOX? Jeez with I had jumped on when I was considering it a while ago.
Feels risky to do it now.
if you are buying individual company stocks, To do it properly requires lots of reading and research of their company reports. If you don't do that, it's basically gambling. The general press, stock broker recommendations, social media "gurus" , etc. are mostly unhelpful.
What do you mean by favourites? Individual stocks, or funds? If you just want exposure to general markets and hoping to get better returns than what you can get with cash, then low fee funds will probably do the best over the long term.So for someone who doesn't delve into it like a mad man would you say just stick to the favourites mainly?
What do you mean by favourites? Individual stocks, or funds? If you just want exposure to general markets and hoping to get better returns than what you can get with cash, then low fee funds will probably do the best over the long term.
No one can tell you what's best for you, as it depends on lots of things like your appetite for risk, period you're willing to put the money away for, how emotionally involved you'll get (what will you feel if you see your investment half, quarter, or turn to zero?). Companies do go bust and investors can be left with very little of what their initial stake, so keep that in mind if you are planning to invest in individual companies. Whilst I would avoid most of the social media/you tube 'investor experts', James Shack on you tube has done some great videos explaining why global funds generally outperform any other investment over the long term, how to start out investing and saving, and lots of other great financial advice.
Just buy a fund, not individual stocks. The S & P 500 is such a fund, with the top 500 companies in the US. Or pick a global fund.So when I go into the markets app it's shows the top so many stocks, the likes of Apple, Tesla, S&P etc, are these the ones that would be the 'safer' options? Rather than trying to find the next up and coming, if you understand what I'm trying to say![]()