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£15,000 Investment

Hi, I'm sure this hasa been answered before, but I am due £15,000 from an insurance claim. Where is best to invest this ?

Thanks
Dom
«1

Comments

  • Eco_Miser
    Eco_Miser Posts: 4,979 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    When do you want to spend this money?
    What is your attitude to risk?
    It makes a difference.
    Eco Miser
    Saving money for well over half a century
  • jimjames
    jimjames Posts: 18,997 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Perfect amount to fit inside a S&S ISA if you're looking for investments and haven't already opened one or a cash ISA this year.

    Then need to decide what to invest in but plenty of choice to fit most risk profiles.

    Or could put in pension depending on your age and situation.
    Remember the saying: if it looks too good to be true it almost certainly is.
  • sg1000
    sg1000 Posts: 67 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10 Posts
    I would have said, copy my portfolio....but most would disagree. You need to work out when you need the money and how much you can afford to lose.
  • Vortigern
    Vortigern Posts: 3,308 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    domhurley wrote: »
    Where is best to invest?
    Do you mean invest? - or do you mean save?

    Invest - put money in stock market, perhaps get dividends, make a profit, or a loss.

    Save - put money in bank, get interest.

    Which is it?
  • badger09
    badger09 Posts: 11,742 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    Do you have any debts?

    Paying off high interest loans might be the best 'investment'.

    If you give more information about your financial situation you might get more meaningful responses ;)
  • What are your objectives ?


    How can the £15 K help you achieve these objectives ?


    It may as the above commentators involve saving/investments or it may be something completely different ! (OU degree etc.)
    Debt is a symptom, solve the problem.
  • To the OP, yes your question has been answered many times in the past - please do a quick search of this forum.

    And it may be a good idea to familiarise yourself with the guides and articles on savings in this website (e.g. http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/banking/?tab=sect7), before coming back with more specific questions on this forum.

    Finally, some background information (how old you are, how much savings you already have, your timescale and attitude to risk) may not go amiss.
  • brasso
    brasso Posts: 799 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Combo Breaker
    Presuming you have no debts, including credit card debts etc, and presuming you already have a bit of cash stashed away for a rainy day and presuming you have an average risk profile....

    then if it was me I would put it in a S&S ISA and invest in 3 or 4 low-cost trackers to give me some diversified exposure to equities. If I was feeling nervous about global stock markets I might drip feed the purchases e.g. 5 x £3K spread over a few months.

    But I'm not you, so DYOR :)

    Added: if you've no pension, and if you don't mind locking it up till you're 55 I would open a SIPP, get the 20% or 40% tax refund and proceed as above re investing it.
    "I don't mind if a chap talks rot. But I really must draw the line at utter rot." - PG Wodehouse
  • domhurley
    domhurley Posts: 16 Forumite
    Thanks for all this. I'm married with a 5yr old daughter, a mortgage of about £40,000, about £20,000 savings offset against the mortgage, so do I use it to offset or a better way ?
  • enjoyyourshoes
    enjoyyourshoes Posts: 1,093 Forumite
    Seventh Anniversary 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    If your partner is a none tax payer you could earn 3.6% interest pa from the £ (£5K Lloyds, £2K TSB & £8K Santander). Is that a higher rate than your mortgage ?
    Debt is a symptom, solve the problem.
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