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Thoughts on these fund choices?
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*Kat*
Posts: 1,829 Forumite


Here's the funds I've selected:
SW Fidelity South-East Asia Fund
SW Baillie Gifford 60:40 Worldwide Equity Fund Global Equities
SW Henderson UK Property Fund
SW Investec American Fund
SW Baillie Gifford North American Equity Fund
Also either:
SW JPM Natural Resources Fund
or
SW BlackRock Gold & General Fund
I'm 26 and this is my 2nd pension (I have 2 jobs).
SW Fidelity South-East Asia Fund
SW Baillie Gifford 60:40 Worldwide Equity Fund Global Equities
SW Henderson UK Property Fund
SW Investec American Fund
SW Baillie Gifford North American Equity Fund
Also either:
SW JPM Natural Resources Fund
or
SW BlackRock Gold & General Fund
I'm 26 and this is my 2nd pension (I have 2 jobs).
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Comments
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no criticism from me, all good.
I think you could do with a UK Equity fund and you should consider a Fixed Interest fund too.0 -
I'm not sure on what percentage I should do each one...any ideas?
I'm going to take these two too, so a total of...8 funds
SW Newton International Bond Fund
Scottish Widows Ethical Fund
Oh another thing, on the SW form, can I just put the fund short code? Or does it have to be the entire fund name?
Thanks for your help0 -
Here's the funds I've selected:
SW Fidelity South-East Asia Fund
SW Baillie Gifford 60:40 Worldwide Equity Fund Global Equities
SW Henderson UK Property Fund
SW Investec American Fund
SW Baillie Gifford North American Equity Fund
Also either:
SW JPM Natural Resources Fund
or
SW BlackRock Gold & General Fund
I'm 26 and this is my 2nd pension (I have 2 jobs).
UK property I would never bother with as I would just buy a bigger house than I need in retirement. Any growth I get from UK property would be reflected in that property price.
Why 2 US funds?
Where are the UK equity funds? (you seem to have just picked a global, US and Asia)0 -
Oh another thing, on the SW form, can I just put the fund short code? Or does it have to be the entire fund name?
I just filled in a Scottish Equitable stakeholder application form last night; it explicitly asks for fund names.
There are fund short codes on the list of all funds which I've got from them, together with a warning that different fund codes may apply to non-standard charging structures.
For that reason, I would suggest you do exactly what the form asks for.
Warmest regards,
FAThus the old Gentleman ended his Harangue. The People heard it, and approved the Doctrine, and immediately practised the Contrary, just as if it had been a common Sermon; for the Vendue opened ...THE WAY TO WEALTH, Benjamin Franklin, 1758 AD0 -
What particular strategy are you using as its not possible to tell from that selection?
Why are you mixing mixed sector funds with single sector funds?
Why are you choosing to go heavily overweight in US?I am an Independent Financial Adviser (IFA). The comments I make are just my opinion and are for discussion purposes only. They are not financial advice and you should not treat them as such. If you feel an area discussed may be relevant to you, then please seek advice from an Independent Financial Adviser local to you.0 -
UK property I would never bother with as I would just buy a bigger house than I need in retirement.
so you'd be invested in residential property (i.e. not commercial), with no rent (or would you have lodgers?), and with big transaction costs to realize your investment. doesn't seem like a great idea to me.0 -
grey_gym_sock wrote: »so you'd be invested in residential property (i.e. not commercial), with no rent (or would you have lodgers?), and with big transaction costs to realize your investment. doesn't seem like a great idea to me.
You buy a property in your 20s, smallish usually.
In 30s you then buy a bigger property to suit your needs, family etc.
Then when you get to retirement age. Family left, you can downsize.
Any gains from UK property would be reflected in the house price when you sell and buy a small property (or in my case, move back into the one I bought in my 20s which I have kept).
I realise it's not a perfect situation and may not suit each and everyone, but that's how I see it.0 -
well, that plan makes sense. i thought you were suggesting buying an unnecessarily big property.
but, whether or not 1 goes through the family-home-then-downsize process, there's still a case for other investment sin property, especially commercial property (as that's something different).0 -
The good things about investing in your own house are that the gains are tax free, and you get some benefit from living in it."Things are never so bad they can't be made worse" - Humphrey Bogart0
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The first thing I have to say is, that at 26 to have 2 pensions 9when many your age don't have one) is pretty fantastic.
I too want to know your strategy. The 60:40 (at your age i'd go 80:20) and the property fund (I like commercial property sometimes but don't know that fund, have to look it up) plus 2 american funds.
I'd look for a UK small cap maybe.0
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