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What to do with my Shares?
Allan_C
Posts: 4 Newbie
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Comments
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I would sell them in a tax efficient manner and invest in globally diversified funds within a pension or ISA wrapper. Holding individual shares is risky.0
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If you have not used your ISA allowance for this year yet I would be gettting £20k shifted to an ISA immediately and do the same again after April 5th.
If you have significant gains in that £200k I would also think about liquidate enough shares to use up this year’s CG allowance.0 -
Worth checking your capital gains on the holdings.
You will have an allowance of £11,300 gains you can take in this tax year and £11,700 in the next tax year you can take, to move them into an ISA.
Another consideration is if you have cash ISA holdings, which are poor value at the moment. Is to transfer these to a stocks and shares ISA, thus preserving the tax efficient wrapper status ,and then use the proceeds to purchase the shares which you are selling.
The dividend allowance is dropping to £2000 from £5,000 in the next tax year, so you will pay far more tax in the coming years if you do nothing.
Also bear in mind your dividend tax status. If you are a basic rate tax payer you will only only pay 7.5% on dividends. As a higher rate tax payer it will be 32.5% (as you are close to the threshold you need to take this into account)0 -
[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]Also look to sell those shares with the highest dividend yield, to get you non ISA dividend down as much as possible. Ie sell those with a 6% yield rather than those with a 3% yield.[/FONT]0
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Should I start selling them (within the CTG limit) each year and move them into a Stock and Share ISA (it will take a few years) or keep them? Or any other options?
Yes.
Another option is to put into your pension if you have one that will hold shares. Or open up such a pension, eg a SIPP.
I"m assuming you are happy with these shares and have no wish to move into "safer" options like funds as some of the wussies here advise anyone who ever mentions shares.
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