The mods may not like this but the best LICs thread is on propertychat.Think I may progress in this direction myself but seek opinions on which LICs....
Also if you have a pool of cash that you hold, consider storing it in "rate setter loans", they pay high interest, and both principle and interest is paid back to you monthly over the life of the loan.
At my age and with time I'd rather give to other things than the market...... I am swinging to the LIC option.
However Dr Google informs me that there are huge numbers of these.
I can't see a specific recent thread on this so may start one with Joe's OK...
Rate setter is a bit different to other peer to peer lenders, you don't get to know any details of the loan you are funding ( although you can see the historical loan book), and as you mention the provisional fund is there to protect you ( so far it seems pretty good protection)Hi VC, I looked around at a few youtube clips on Rate Setter and one fellow suggested to break the loans down into much smaller bite sized pieces to diversify and reduce risk. Did you consider or do this and what are your views on the loan guarantee facility, also I see there are some borrower details in recent loans created, such as use of funds and income, how did you go about deciding who got what, if you don't mind me asking?
Cheers Wyatt
I have had a look at a few of these peer to peer lender and even started one application form [as a lender] but was missing a sophisticated investor document and end up half way and forgot about it, so far VC you have had a positive experience?Rate setter is a bit different to other peer to peer lenders, you don't get to know any details of the loan you are funding ( although you can see the historical loan book), and as you mention the provisional fund is there to protect you ( so far it seems pretty good protection)
You can break up you loans into as many small loans as you like, I generally put my money into 5 year loans, and have it set up so principle and interest payments reinvest monthly into 3 year loans, so the principle is constantly drip feeding into new loans, spreading risk.
The principle and interest of the 3 year loans then flows to my spending money account via automatic payment.
so far VC you have had a positive experience?
At the risk of stating the obvious, to be comfortable with some certainty of a (continued) dividend payout, shouldn't we have to look very closely into the underlying business/es?
I mean if a company's financial position and performance is poor, or become poor in the future, its dividends will be reduced or cut.
VH: The only resource stock I hold directly is S32. I've been spending some time looking at LICs but without coming to a conclusion yet.
Thought I'd pop over from Property chat. Forgot I was a member here. Muschu will know who I am.The only LIC I own is Berkshire Hathaway, it's the only one I would recommend, other wise just by indexes.
Pick any random non-investment forum and have a look at their "off topic" section for anything about investing. You'll find one consistent recommendation - index funds.other wise just by indexes.
Yep as discussed on the blog linked below. Everything happens in cycles. Index funds / ETFs can potentially make for a useful core but I haven't given up on actives. A contrarian approach has typically worked well for me over a few decades of investing now as a retiree:Pick any random non-investment forum and have a look at their "off topic" section for anything about investing. You'll find one consistent recommendation - index funds.
It seems that everyone from mechanics to hairdressers is, to the extent they're investing in anything at all, piling into this one. Take a look at your superannuation and where it's really invested - you'll find a pretty big chunk is simply tracking various stock market indexes.
Sounds awfully like a bubble to me particularly in the context of overseas markets (USA especially). Easy money - just buy the index and never sell. What could go wrong?
Oh wait, central banks are in the process of taking away the punch bowl.....
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