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Best safe investments

Time?martin
Regards
PeterB90/UK
Comments
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Is it ever safe to invest in uncertain times? Nothing is without risk. If you want the safety of not seeing your capital reduce in £ terms stick to savings and accept the inflationary risk
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Exactly. National Savings but don't forget you may suffer devaluation of wealth from inflation.
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When I google "best safe investments" the top results all look like scammers (such as the one promising 20% returns, no matter what happens in the markets).
I agree with ColdIron, investing means taking risk. You can choose how much risk to take, but there's always some risk. If you want to play safe and don't take any risk, you keep your money in savings (not investments) but over time you will lose purchasing power due to inflation.1 -
If you're asking on a forum if now is a good time to invest then you probably don't have an appetite for risk.
How would you feel if you invested £20k+ and saw that investment go down 50% in a year? If the answer is negative then stick to savings. They're guaranteed. They're safe. 👍🏼0 -
The really odd thing is that when the market is booming, and overvalued compared to the historical norm, many people leap in and buy shed loads of stocks, no doubt encouraged by the popular press. Then when it crashes, and the market is undervalued, these same people don’t buy. In fact some of them even sell their investments. So, is it safe to buy now? Well it’s safer than it was three months ago!
Investing in the stock market has an element of risk which is reduced by spreading investments over multiple shares and markets, and by the passage of time. The markets may well go down further, but in the long term historical precedent suggests that it will be much higher than it is now in 5-10 years time. So if you can afford to leave your money invested for 5-10 years, you should do well. In my opinion now is a very good time to invest, but that doesn’t mean that the market won’t go down even more. You need a somewhat detached mentality for this lark.4 -
The safety of anything you do with your money depends on your definition of safety and your timescale. For exampleCash under your bed is "safe" except from burglars but if you had put £10K under your bed 20 years ago it would now have the buying power of £5700. Is that safe? On the other hand if you had put that £10000 in a broad range of shares it could now have the buying power of more than £15000 despite 3 major falls of 30% or more in the meantime. Which is safer?However if we look at a period of 6 months your cash under the bed would be worth about £9900 and your shares £8800.6
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Is it safe to invest at this uncertain Time?martin
Martin hasn't posted on this site since he sold it.
All times are uncertain. This is no different.
It is not as if this is an unusual event in respect of the markets. Markets do this every now and then. The reasons vary each time but it is routine. Indeed, the recent drop is only the third-largest in the last 20 years. So, if you invest, you have to expect this sort of thing.
However, that is about investment risk. There are other risks, as mentioned by others above. Your post doesn't give much indication of what type of investments you are considering. So, its difficult to comment more until you let us know.
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.1 -
Then when it crashes, and the market is undervalued, these same people don’t buy.
If the market was 'undervalued' do you not think that all those clever people in the City would be buying up shares until it was not undervalued anymore? By definition the market value is correct at any moment in time .
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Albermarle said:Then when it crashes, and the market is undervalued, these same people don’t buy.
If the market was 'undervalued' do you not think that all those clever people in the City would be buying up shares until it was not undervalued anymore? By definition the market value is correct at any moment in time .
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Thrugelmir said:Albermarle said:Then when it crashes, and the market is undervalued, these same people don’t buy.
If the market was 'undervalued' do you not think that all those clever people in the City would be buying up shares until it was not undervalued anymore? By definition the market value is correct at any moment in time .
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