- Joined
- 27 August 2017
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Well your at a great place to start your journey down the road of investing/trading with a lot of smart people here that are doing it.Hi willoneau,
No i don't understand franking come tax time (or any other time for that matter). That's one thing I am yet to wrap my head around.
My overall goal is really to feel more like i am somewhat in control of my destiny, and that I am not just working the daily grind for no reason other than to pay my bills. As a low income earner who has never made more than 70k p/a, I am just trying my best to make small gains where I can.
So my goal is to learn as much as I can about investing, and hopefully to build a small passive income stream over time so that I can pull back on how much I need to work after another 10-20years in the full time grind!
Thanx HelloU, worth looking at if she is bothered.aside: an amendment is just a button press inside mygov, but if she did her own it would probably have been pre-filled by the ATO if her return was done just recently - like august (but certainly worth investigating what that is up to to get $$ back)
Welcome to ASF Tom - 10K in an ETF will bubble away at an incredibly slow rate, watching a car rust would be more exciting, as for timing - yep it's all very
strange now, uncharted waters in many ways, i'm starting to come around to thinking that there many not be a cliff to fall off with interest rates so low globally,
maybe we/the world can just stumble along for the next half decade or so.
How would you feel about putting 10k in if the value drops to 5k in fund?Hi So_Cynical,
Thanks for the warm welcome! I am already learning here so that's great!
I don't mean that I will buy 10k in ETF's and then just sit and watch.... I will be attempting to put in as close to 10k p/a as possible. This is still very 'small-fry' stuff I know, but it is the best I am able to do in my situation. Still probably as exciting as watching paint dry
I also figure that If I learn about investing now, If I ever get any sort of inheritance in future (which could happen at some point) I will have a good idea of how to make it work for me instead of squandering the opportunity.
How would you feel about putting 10k in if the value drops to 5k in fund?
I have been were you are, don't be in rush to jump in. Start reading the threads and enjoy the journey.I am 41, so I guess if that happened but I was confident that the fund I chose was reputable and that the overall market was in a slump, then I would try my best not to be too bothered by it (easy to say I know). I have 20 odd years before I need to be in a better financial position, so there is still time for some fluctuations at this point...
You could do a lot worse than picking up AFI on weakness, also they have dividend re investment, by the time you retire you could have a nice little income stream right there.Thanks so much guys. This is really all very good advice. It makes me less frantic about getting my money into the market hearing what you have said above. I will just keep hanging around on here and trying to learn what I can, happily knowing that I am doing the right thing just putting extra into my mortgage for now. I must confess that I have already made 2x investments in the market (albeit small ones). I have 2k worth of AFI (Aussie LIC I am certain you all know of), and 1.5k of SPX (speculative miner...much more risky I know).
I bought AFI on the day of the inverse yield curve news a few weeks ago (they lost about 2.5% that day I think so i bought at a small discount). I bought SPX at 11c, so not so smart there I don't think. I bought that on back of a thread at HotCopper after hearing that a Canadian firm had invested millions of dollars in it.
Anyway, I'll cool my heels for now and try to learn some more first as suggested.
Thanks all, and best of luck with your own endeavours.
Do you want to invest and achieve market returns, whatever they may be?Hi all,
There has been plenty of news lately of a looming global downturn, with Trump and China's trade war, Australia's reliance on China as our major trading partner, and Australia's long overdue 'pendulum swing' into a what could be another 'recession we had to have'.
So, as a new investor with very little money currently 'in the market' this has got me thinking. Should I jump in now with my investments, or wait for the possible downturn to occur, and then try to buy in at a discount? (Buy low, sell high)
MY POSITION:
I have a bit less than 10,000AUD available to me that I will be investing, I am 41 years old, and want to see what I can do over the next 20 years. I have about 270,000 equity in my home, and no other debt besides a 150k mortgage. I have 2x kids (8 and 11), a cat, a dog and a wife. (classic, standard dad) I am the sole breadwinner for the family. I work in retail FT, low income (47k p/a). My wife is a stay at home mum.
INVESTMENT APPROACH:
Given my position as above, (I know its pretty low powered...) I am looking at getting into ETF's as a starting point. I figure if I can plug away at investing in ETF's and slowly learn about the market more in depth I will be able to perhaps take bigger positions in individual stocks as time progresses.
Meanwhile I will have the ETF's bubbling away in the background as my main 'base' to my portfolio. I figure i will be able to invest between 5-10k per year on average, by living on about 40k p/a....
So my main point of this post is, do you guys with more experience think it is better to just jump straight in now, or wait it out, and try to buy into ETF's when the market is lower? I am looking into 'Betashares' products, like their A200, etc.
Thanks for your time.
Any input much appreciated.
Do you want to invest and achieve market returns, whatever they may be?
This is easy to implement but not necessarily easy to stick too. Efficiency is the key to get right with this approach, little expenses make a big difference.
Or do you want to trade and try to do better than the market and/or try to control depth of loss?
This option requires much higher time commitments, both to learn and to implement. Its also what is called a zero-loss game, which means on average those who try will do worse than taking the first option. The potential rewards are the lure to compete. Gaining skill is the key to get right with this approach.
This seems to me, the first question you need to answer. It will determine so much about what are the right moves for you. And it will help people make relevant suggestions.
It could be that you want to do both. Implement the first option why you learn about the second option.
You are in a pretty good position thinking about accelerating your wealth creation at 41 with a fair bit of equity in your house and what seems to be a pretty happy life on a modest income. By the time you retire you could be financially independent on similar sort of income, part pension if still available or an inheritance could be bonuses.
Don’t think what you are doing at this point as small fry, you are striking out from a good base at a good time in your life, what you learn and do at this point will make a big difference.
So, fist question
Investor or trader?
What you have to be a little carefull of is constantly losing money in the penny stocks, that is neutralising any dividend from your investment holdings.I have this idea that perhaps I could trade small amounts in penny stocks, or small caps as they are called, (say $500 or $1000 at a time), and then funnel any profits made back into things like AFI or similar.
For example if SPX jumps to 0.16c (fingers crossed), after I bought 12,500 units at 0.11.5c ($1500 cost,) I'll likely sell 9,375 units (recoup my $1500 capital) and buy more AFI, or maybe just sit cash back in Mortgage and wait... Meanwhile extra $500 profit can stay in SPX to gain even more, or it could collapse to zero... This is a perfect world scenario where I have money 'in play' that I never had to start with
Cheers
O.K lets address both, or at least give you some random opinions.Hi craft, thanks for the input. To answer your final question there I would like to think the answer could be both...trader (small time), and investor.
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