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ISA Help

pkpk
Posts: 58 Forumite


I'm pretty bad with money and investing and looking to make positive improvements.
I'm in my 40's and have managed to save some money here and there but nothing that really adds up to a great deal and sadly no pension.
My first task is to deal with my ISA situation and was hoping to get some help. I set up an ISA with Natwest (then called a Balanced Growth fund and now called a managed Growth Fund) 10 years ago paying in £50 per month. The balance is £8k but after reading about the poor performance of bank ISA's I was considering transferring it to something like a Vanguard VLS60.
5 years of my current fund performance is 6% and 5 years of the Vanguard is 51% although I'm not sure I'm reading the charts correctly. I can afford to put more in now and wanted to check that this fund might be a good start to quickly transfer to while I learn more about investing.
Thanks
PK
I'm in my 40's and have managed to save some money here and there but nothing that really adds up to a great deal and sadly no pension.
My first task is to deal with my ISA situation and was hoping to get some help. I set up an ISA with Natwest (then called a Balanced Growth fund and now called a managed Growth Fund) 10 years ago paying in £50 per month. The balance is £8k but after reading about the poor performance of bank ISA's I was considering transferring it to something like a Vanguard VLS60.
5 years of my current fund performance is 6% and 5 years of the Vanguard is 51% although I'm not sure I'm reading the charts correctly. I can afford to put more in now and wanted to check that this fund might be a good start to quickly transfer to while I learn more about investing.
Thanks
PK
0
Comments
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Past performance doesn't signify what to expect in future, so you should evaluate also funds based on their fundamentals, i.e. volatility, structure, objectives, diversification, etc, as well as determining which platform(s) to use as a separate exercise, plus associated costs for both funds and platforms (which is where bank offerings are typically weak).
Personally I'm not familiar with NatWest's products but have to agree that 6% over the past five years falls some way short of what most would consider realistic for a growth fund during a bull market, although perhaps at least some of that shortfall is down to fund and/or platform costs?
On the face of it, VLS60, on a low-cost platform, is likely to be a better option than your NatWest product (assuming it's consistent with your risk tolerance, etc).
However, not having a pension is not a good place to be in your 40s, and apparent lack of savings (i.e. in liquid cash form, rather than investments) is far from ideal, so worth considering your finances in the round rather than focusing specifically on your S&S ISA....0 -
Unfortunately its difficult to find historical information on the fund since the new version has only been around for about 6 months whilst the old one no longer exists.
However what little data I have found suggests that the Natwest (now RBS) fund is pretty average for its type. So I suggest you are probably reading the data wrongly. However one point to note is that when you are drip feeding you cant base your performance calculations on the full time period since half your contributions have only been invested for less than half the time.
Perhaps you can say more about the data you have - can you provide a link or say where it came from. I agree with your 51% over 5 years for VLS60. It could be that the 6% is a per year average which would equate to about 34% over 5 years.0 -
Thanks Linton. I think as they merged the fund the data is missing online. I have tried to photograph my statement which is where I got the info from but I don't think you can past an image into the posts here.
Info for the fund it merged with is available though. I can't post links here either as a new user but a quick google of RBS Managed Growth Fund 1 Acc will give you the FT age with the perforce.0 -
Agree with the advice completely. I have tried a financial advisor but I fell below the savings threshold for them to talk to.
The more I look into it myself the more confusing it is and the more conflicting advice I seem to get. This just leads to avoiding decision making which is how I have ended up here really.
I was told to avoid pensions in favour of ISA's a while ago and this doesn't seem like great advice at all now.0 -
Thanks Linton. I think as they merged the fund the data is missing online. I have tried to photograph my statement which is where I got the info from but I don't think you can past an image into the posts here.
Info for the fund it merged with is available though. I can't post links here either as a new user but a quick google of RBS Managed Growth Fund 1 Acc will give you the FT age with the perforce.
Ah yes - the 6% of the RBS fund given on the FT website is for the 5-6 months the fund has been in existance. I dont think that figure can be relied on as it is based on the price when the fund started which may not have been realistic, or may have been put low in order to attract new investors. However you cant compare 6% or whatever over 6 months with a total of 51% over 5 years. Obviously the longer you invest for the greater the return. Make the comparison again in 5 years time!0 -
I was told to avoid pensions in favour of ISA's a while ago and this doesn't seem like great advice at all now.
Key point here - neither ISAs nor pensions are a specific products but simply tax wrappers for your investments/cash.
If you have the opportunity to pay into a workplace pension you should at a minimum look at paying in enough to maximise any employer contributions.0 -
I'm self employed which is another spanner in the works!0
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'm self employed which is another spanner in the works
The downside is that money in a pension is not accessible until you are at least 55.
You can invest in VLS 60 ( or something similar ) within a pension or an ISA.0 -
Thanks for that. It sounds like a good idea to set a pension up even it's late. Apologies for lack of knowledge but would you set the pension up directly with Vanguard or do pensions need to be set up somewhere else?0
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Thanks for that. It sounds like a good idea to set a pension up even it's late. Apologies for lack of knowledge but would you set the pension up directly with Vanguard or do pensions need to be set up somewhere else?
Vanguard do not currently offer a pension but they offer an ISA.
https://www.vanguardinvestor.co.uk/investing-explained/stocks-shares-isa?cmpgn=PS0617UKPABIS0002&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI9JG926ut5QIVQUTTCh0dRAJ2EAAYASAAEgKCGPD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
https://www.vanguardinvestor.co.uk/need-help/answer/do-you-offer-a-pension-or-a-sipp
The important thing is to get started on the pension- you can always transfer to Vanguard if and when.
https://www.simplybusiness.co.uk/knowledge/articles/2018/01/self-employed-pension-guide/
There is the possibility of a simple stakeholder as a start.
https://www.cavendishonline.co.uk/stakeholder-pension0
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