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ISA question

10 replies

Kai1977 · 17/03/2017 17:24

I've got a few thousand sitting in the bank that I need to put in an ISA before the end of the FY. I'll also have a regular lump sum (more than a thousand per month) which I want to dripfeed into the ISA from April.

Usually I would just start putting it into a FTSE 100 tracker stocks and share ISA (which I think has a chance of better returns than cash in the mid to long term) but with the stock market at a record high I'm wondering if I should put in cash for now and then move to shares when the market falls and drip feed that way?

Thanks

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themueslicamel · 17/03/2017 21:18

Pound cost averaging is a useful tool to avoid exposure in a falling market, however if you are talking about a few thousand then I wouldn't worry to much.

Do an investment risk profile questionnaire and invest in risk rated funds according to your outcome and you will be fine.

I have a Diploma in financial advice.

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Kai1977 · 17/03/2017 21:31

Ah so that's the official term for dripfeeding, sounds much better when it's described as pound cost averaging. Smile

Good to know, thanks!

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specialsubject · 18/03/2017 16:28

There are 11 working days left in which to do that dripfeed for this FY!

This dilemma is the same for everyone with money to go into an ISA - screwed both ways. But with inflation well over 2%, money in a cash ISA will definitely lose, whereas money in an S and S only might lose.

thanks, Carney.

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Kai1977 · 18/03/2017 17:07

Thank you, yep that was my instinct. Just to clarify though, the first payment would be a few thousands this FY (I've already used most of ISA allowance this year), the dripfeed would start from late April onwards.

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SvartePetter · 18/03/2017 17:11

How often are the stock markets​ on an all time high?

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specialsubject · 18/03/2017 20:03

...quite often, it seems. And of course we all want that to be the case when we cash in. Nuts, isnt it.

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Kai1977 · 18/03/2017 20:11

But this is the highest for quite a long time right? 5 years or more?

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specialsubject · 19/03/2017 15:37

Ever!

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kath6144 · 20/03/2017 14:38

Definitely put the cash lump sum in before the end of FY, then drip feed that money into fund(s) alongside your monthly payment.

You could have one or more funds for the monthly payment and separate funds to drip feed the lump sum into.

Do you have a stockbroker you use already? We use Hargreaves Lansdown, they have a long list of funds that you can choose!

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dontcallmethatyoucunt · 22/03/2017 22:15

Use a more global tracker, not just a FTSE one.

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