Advice needed on portfolio pls
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It's small beer but I hope you're contributing £2,880 (net) to a pension for your wife. Also smallish beer, but is your wife making maximum use of current accounts and regular savers that pay 5% p.a.? Stronger beer: have you considered gold as a diversifier at 5% perhaps of portfolio value? Sovereigns are free of CGT and if you don't have a safety deposit or somewhere else safe to keep them you could always use the storage vaults of a supplier. I'm tempted by the Royal Mint. Or there are ways of keeping gold within SIPPs.
What is the CGT position if you simply gift half your company shares to your wife? If there's no CGT to pay then the pair of you can sell them down at twice the pace and still avoid CGT.
Update: the answer.
https://www.gov.uk/capital-gains-tax/giftsFree the dunston one next time too.0 -
Yes on the small beer stuff, trying to use all the advantages of wife not working.
In terms of my investments, where should i invest further money, i have 90k sitting in cash in my offset mortgage so only benefitting from 1.89% effective interest...?
I’d like to get that money working harder for me.
Thx0 -
Yes on the small beer stuff, trying to use all the advantages of wife not working.
In terms of my investments, where should i invest further money, i have 90k sitting in cash in my offset mortgage so only benefitting from 1.89% effective interest...?
I’d like to get that money working harder for me.
Thx
Then you'll have to take a risk with it. Is that something you are prepared to do?
Perhaps if i restate your point, its "I am benefiting from 1.89% risk free tax free interest free return. Should i gamble with that?0 -
At least some of it, yes.
Some potentially more cautious investments to yield somewhere in region of 5%p.a. I would consider0 -
Investment allocation is essentially guesswork. Minimising costs and taxes isn't. For example, suppose the two of you are going to use your CGT exemptions to sell off single-company shares as quickly as possible. Therefore your wife should be aiming to get interest and dividends that use her Personal Allowance, her Interest on Savings Allowance, her Dividends Allowance and her Starting Rate for Savings Allowance. In particular note that it's currently much easier to get high interest rates on cash outside Cash ISAs.
Therefore there's a case for your pension money and ISA money being entirely in equities, with any fixed interest or cash being held by your wife outside tax-shelters. There's also a case for passing lots of capital to your wife and her buying a BTL. (I think that the great days of BTL have probably passed, but if it retains any investment merit it's probably for non-taxpayers.)
Or, could she buy a property to use as a holiday let? The income from that is classed as earnings and so can be used to justify a higher pension contribution by her.Free the dunston one next time too.0 -
Yes we have a BTL for a few years and am currently in process of transferring this to her name for tax purposes etc !!!55357;!!!56842;0
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It's small beer but I hope you're contributing £2,880 (net) to a pension for your wife. Also smallish beer, but is your wife making maximum use of current accounts and regular savers that pay 5% p.a.? Stronger beer: have you considered gold as a diversifier at 5% perhaps of portfolio value? Sovereigns are free of CGT and if you don't have a safety deposit or somewhere else safe to keep them you could always use the storage vaults of a supplier. I'm tempted by the Royal Mint. Or there are ways of keeping gold within SIPPs.
What is the CGT position if you simply gift half your company shares to your wife? If there's no CGT to pay then the pair of you can sell them down at twice the pace and still avoid CGT.
Update: the answer.
https://www.gov.uk/capital-gains-tax/gifts
before tranferring everything to partner its worth considering in the event of a breakup it will be harder to recover and also you need to make sure your interested are protected e.g. keeping assets abroad/wider family etc.0 -
I've never understood why gifting your wife a lump of capital is held to be riskier than a divorce court judge handing her the same lump of capital.Free the dunston one next time too.0
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There's also a case for passing lots of capital to your wife and her buying a BTL. (I think that the great days of BTL have probably passed, but if it retains any investment merit it's probably for non-taxpayers.)
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It might not be as fruitful as in the past, but the most value from BTL come from the capital growth of the asset, not the income. so even with changes to tax treatment of mortgage interest if the property is growing in value, that's what counts.
oh and 2nd home stamp duty is pretty rubbish for getting in now..0
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