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Stocks n Shares ISA


Obviously it does depend on what you invest in, but a 'standard' approach of a large index fund.

S&P 500 - VUAG +9%
All World - VWRP +13%

oh wow, yeah I am obviously a novice, I just use standard Isas, but rates are dropping

is S&P 500 pretty consistently above your 4% Isas then?

I quite like knowing what I am getting back from the standard Isas thats all

sorry basic questions here. as I say thinking about other options for next year.
 
oh wow, yeah I am obviously a novice, I just use standard Isas, but rates are dropping

is S&P 500 pretty consistently above your 4% Isas then?

I quite like knowing what I am getting back from the standard Isas thats all

sorry basic questions here. as I say thinking about other options for next year.
Have in mind outside of an ISA you will be taxed on any returns you make.
 
oh wow, yeah I am obviously a novice, I just use standard Isas, but rates are dropping

is S&P 500 pretty consistently above your 4% Isas then?

I quite like knowing what I am getting back from the standard Isas thats all

sorry basic questions here. as I say thinking about other options for next year.

The big difference with S&S ISAs is that you never know what you will get back. In any one year it could be a 20% gain or it could be 20% loss. That's why they are dangerous for the short term but as long as you are happy to lock your money away for the long term (absolute min 5 years, ideally 20+) then they are almost certainly going to beat cash rates (and inflation) as the good years tend to compensate for the bad ones.

If you are interested in getting started then I would begin with whatever you can afford (say £50 a month) into a global tracker. Setup a standing order then forget about it and trust in the miracle of compound growth. Checking the value every day is the path to insanity.
 
oh wow, yeah I am obviously a novice, I just use standard Isas, but rates are dropping

is S&P 500 pretty consistently above your 4% Isas then?

I quite like knowing what I am getting back from the standard Isas thats all

sorry basic questions here. as I say thinking about other options for next year.
When you say std do you mean cash isa. These usually have fixed terms and returns?
 
The big difference with S&S ISAs is that you never know what you will get back. In any one year it could be a 20% gain or it could be 20% loss. That's why they are dangerous for the short term but as long as you are happy to lock your money away for the long term (absolute min 5 years, ideally 20+) then they are almost certainly going to beat cash rates (and inflation) as the good years tend to compensate for the bad ones.

If you are interested in getting started then I would begin with whatever you can afford (say £50 a month) into a global tracker. Setup a standing order then forget about it and trust in the miracle of compound growth. Checking the value every day is the path to insanity.

This is true - but I just cant help myself!
 
The big difference with S&S ISAs is that you never know what you will get back. In any one year it could be a 20% gain or it could be 20% loss. That's why they are dangerous for the short term but as long as you are happy to lock your money away for the long term (absolute min 5 years, ideally 20+) then they are almost certainly going to beat cash rates (and inflation) as the good years tend to compensate for the bad ones.

If you are interested in getting started then I would begin with whatever you can afford (say £50 a month) into a global tracker. Setup a standing order then forget about it and trust in the miracle of compound growth. Checking the value every day is the path to insanity.

Thanks mate, will do some research
When you say std do you mean cash isa. These usually have fixed terms and returns?

Yeah didnt use fixed, might move them over to that too though.

Was 4.8% in April and now 3.8%...on a variable one
 
The big difference with S&S ISAs is that you never know what you will get back. In any one year it could be a 20% gain or it could be 20% loss. That's why they are dangerous for the short term but as long as you are happy to lock your money away for the long term (absolute min 5 years, ideally 20+) then they are almost certainly going to beat cash rates (and inflation) as the good years tend to compensate for the bad ones.

If you are interested in getting started then I would begin with whatever you can afford (say £50 a month) into a global tracker. Setup a standing order then forget about it and trust in the miracle of compound growth. Checking the value every day is the path to insanity.
I'll be 3 years in in March in my first one . Moderate risk from memory. It's pretty poor so far .
3% ish . Probably take it out in the next year
 
Per annum
20k ,it's now 22000 so say 3.5 %

No idea . Had 20k to put away . Good reviews ,xx% of customers increased their stock by x amount etc .Big company I'm 34 month in and just over 22k on pot
Did you put the lumper into some sort of bond fund? Seems low return for equities even if the 'company' has massive fees :confused:
 
Did you put the lumper into some sort of bond fund? Seems low return for equities even if the 'company' has massive fees :confused:
Relative newbie , only thing I chose specifically was a fund with businesses involved in renewable energy, save the planet ,green type credentials. Same time I had regular saving accounts giving me 5% on fixed deals
 
Pleased this popped up.....

Got a Sharesave scheme at work that ends 1st Feb. Decent little profit from investment (which was taken direct from salary after tax). I'm aware of the CGT implications if I sell them immediately, but seen that there is an option to move some or all of it straight into a S&S ISA. From what I have read, I could in theory then withdraw this without any tax obligation.

Feels too good to be true. Anyone more informed than me able to confirm if this is true or bullshit?
 
Pleased this popped up.....

Got a Sharesave scheme at work that ends 1st Feb. Decent little profit from investment (which was taken direct from salary after tax). I'm aware of the CGT implications if I sell them immediately, but seen that there is an option to move some or all of it straight into a S&S ISA. From what I have read, I could in theory then withdraw this without any tax obligation.

Feels too good to be true. Anyone more informed than me able to confirm if this is true or bullshit?

Looks like it is possible:
 
Looks like it is possible:

Yes, definitely possible. And it is a net £20k so if it is a flexible stocks and shares ISA you can do multiple transfers by withdrawing the cash each time to reset your ISA allowance.

For example:
- £45k in company shares
- £20k ISA allowance

Steps
- Transfer £15k into Flexible S&S ISA, reduces remaining ISA allowance to £5k. £30k remains in workplace scheme.
- Sell £15k of shares in S&S ISA. Remove cash from ISA. Remaining ISA allowance resets to £20k
- Transfer £15k into Flexible S&S ISA, reduces remaining ISA allowance to £5k. £15k remains in workplace scheme.
- Sell £15k of shares in S&S ISA. Remove cash from ISA. Remaining ISA allowance resets to £20k
- Transfer £15k into Flexible S&S ISA, reduces remaining ISA allowance to £5k. £0 remains in workplace scheme.
- Keep, sell or transfer £15k sitting in S&S. Whatever you prefer.

No CGT payable.

Relies on a) wanting to actually sell them b) having a flexible S&S ISA, not just a regular S&S ISA c) cycling through that as many times as you need in the allowable 90 day period
 
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