You want a line of credit.
If you need to cover "emergencies" then you
shouldnt be trading--particularly on Margin.
I'm wondering if it's possible/sensible to use a margin loan facility just for emergencies?
I'm not trading on margin nor was planning on doing so.
Say an emergency dental or surgery might cost 20 or 40,000 It seems silly to have this much lieing around in a bank account just for the remote chance I might need it. Or to sell 20,000 of my portfolio
To be more specific. What I'm wondering is. If I need to raise cash for an emergency, is selling shares the best way of doing it? I see a lot of problems in that -- unbalance my portfolio, attract high brokerage, etc, etc. Seems like a loan secured against my shares would be more sensible, but was after advice if this is the case or not.
20 - 40k for non elective surgery here in Aus? What sort of procedures cost that? Even for dental i can't imagine spending 20k in an emergency. I had several teeth snapped in half a few years back and for work to get it back to normal it was about 4k, so you need to lose virtually all your teeth for it to cost 20k...
If it is an emergency medicare covers it (my wife had 20k worth of non dental treatment once), otherwise as others have said, perhaps consider insurance.
www.smilessentials.com.au/typical_fees.php
Example of how nasty the fees are these days; given extras only covers $2000 health insurance seems completely pointless.
Thought also occurs that selling to pay for a emergency would cause a capital gains event whilst borrowing would not.
Except that's cosmetic dentistry.
Here's a regular dentist...
http://www.smile.com.au/dental-dentist-fees-prices-costs
Depending on how old you are, do you need to worry about a hip-replacement?
I presently do not, no. I was just wondering how one would best manage such an event, selling capital or borrowing. And if the answer is borrow, how would one best borrow against shares as security for personal reasons.
My own opinion to the question would be to have adequate insurance, or be prepared to wait on the public system. I don't mean to sound rude, but it seems a fairly obvious answer, no different to saying if your house burnt down should you sell your shares or borrow to rebuild it, when the answer would be to have insurance in the first instance.
Yes, you can have a margin loan open and only draw against it when you need it. I can't specifically deal with Suncorp's product, but in general you only pay interest on the money borrowed. Some lenders may insist on a minimum drawdown (I think CommSec are $500).
Most lenders also allow you to withdraw cash on your margin loan, which you could then use for the medical treatment you mentioned, but remember you cannot claim the interest paid against this portion of your loan as an income tax deduction. Unless the lender provides such a facility, you will have to manually apportion the interest paid into tax deductible and non-tax deductible amounts.
One way around this, but which may have unintended negative consequences, is to sell an amount of shares equal to the amount you want for medical purposes. Withdraw the proceeds of this sale as cash. Then buy back the same amount in shares, using the margin loan. The interest on that drawdown would be fully tax deductible and you effectively have done what you wanted in a more effective tax way.
The downsides I alluded to include tax implications (eg. Capital Gains) on the share sale, market movements in the period between selling and buying, transaction costs and possible some other issues.
I have top cover with NIB, it costs me ~$168/month. It will cost me more going forward with the partial loss of the rebate, depending on how much I draw from my company as a dividend each year, but it won't be costing $5,000.
How many crowns/root canals etc are you planning to have done each year?
Touchwood, I've only been to hospital once for elective surgery. The public waiting list was 9 months for what I had done and I was being operated on 7 days after I had my first meeting with the surgeon (and that was because I had needed to postpone it). Well worth IMO.
I certainly wouldn't be putting away such a large amount of capital on the off-chance I need a hip or knee replacement. My.
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