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- 28 March 2006
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I would like it changed, to make it cheaper to run as well as easier to start.
Many thanks, Boggo. I'm keen to have my say on this.
Hopefully not too many people will participate with grizzles about how hard it is.
Wouldn't like to see the system changed.
...
I work very closely with my accountant on all aspects, for which he only charges about $1600 p.a.
However only $1600 with compound interest over 30 or 40 years makes quite a dough by itself, not to mention that $1600 is 10% if total fund is $16,000 or 100% if your fund just started and has $1600 in it!
Not to mention that $1600 charge is on a low side of charges.
Thought someone would come back with this comment.
...
@ Largesse,
Why in HELL would you do that to yourself? *Smacks Largesse repeatedly with great vigour*
HOMEWORK FOR LARGESSE
Go make a spreadsheet that forward projects your return from super based upon the last 40 years.
Compare this to a) The market level of return over the same period b) Using a geared strategy of just 15% on the money.
You will hopefully realize that what you did was to...
a) Put control of your financial wellbeing into someone else's hands (until you can SMSF it) and
b) Killed any potential to COMPOUND USING GEARING FOR THE NEXT 40 YEARS
Sir O.
P.S. I don't want to see any tears on your homework when you realize how much you just cost yourself in retirement.
The costs don't increase as your balance increases, e.g. I changed accountants two years ago, and now pay less p.a. than five years ago.I would like it changed, to make it cheaper to run as well as easier to start.
As it is now you have to have Fund at least $100,000 with probably minimum being set at $200,000 and that’s a lot of Super to get rid of parasites, that all they worry about is to get their chop and possibly not be too far behind the Index!
If you use one of the online companies, e.g. E-super it's less, I think.However only $1600 with compound interest over 30 or 40 years makes quite a dough by itself, not to mention that $1600 is 10% if total fund is $16,000 or 100% if your fund just started and has $1600 in it!
Not to mention that $1600 charge is on a low side of charges.
I've never thought it was designed for someone in first job, but for older people who have reasonable asset base and retirement targets.I can say that too, as Self-Super is prohibitively expensive for your first job and first pay.
Points noted but using a 100% compounding example is a tad over the top.
That's because co-contribution is a bribe...and i don't take bribes. If you'd taken that ten grand and matched it with 10 grand of margin lending and invested where I had invested you would now have a profit of$9,000 which is slightly better than the $1,500 that Kev was kind enough to bribe you with. Then I can go away and compound on my compound and draw another $4,500 to bring my LVR back to 50% and watch that compound. In another six months I get to draw on the increase in my initial investment, and additional investment and compound on my compound on my compound and make your numbers look extra special bad. After a few more years I get to draw on the accumulated equity and have enough for a deposit on an investment property where I can leverage 90% of the investment. I then get to do this for forty years while you do not have the ability to do so until you get control (and highly unlikely to make property investments inside a SMSF thereby cutting out an asset class and the diversification implied). You've handed a padlock on that money to someone else.Also, you've failed to acknowledge the effect of the co-contribution on your highly exaggerated compounding scenario.
I put in a grand, kev gave me another 1500 on top of that. So when i salary sacrifice 10k, i get 11.5k (and thus a bigger base to compound off) and in the short term i also get a tax benefit of approx 1700 which i can also use to reinvest or spend on coke and hookers (the utility i derive from 1700 as a 23 year old is quite high as well).
And soon as i get to SMSF stage, i can do what you said and invest and leave it there to compound, in a low tax environment.
instead of copping the potential CGT changes which have been suggested by the Henry report
Points noted but using a 100% compounding example is a tad over the top.
Also, you've failed to acknowledge the effect of the co-contribution on your highly exaggerated compounding scenario.
I put in a grand, kev gave me another 1500 on top of that. So when i salary sacrifice 10k, i get 11.5k (and thus a bigger base to compound off) and in the short term i also get a tax benefit of approx 1700 which i can also use to reinvest or spend on coke and hookers (the utility i derive from 1700 as a 23 year old is quite high as well).
If you salary sacrificed $10,000 you would not have been entitled to the govt co-contribution as salary sacrifice is pre-tax. To qualify for the govt co-contribution you need to contribute to super post tax. So you probably mean you salary sacrificed $9,000 and then contributed $1,000 after tax.
Sir O, your views re super are well known and you make some good points re the disadvantages of locking money away when one is young.
But, given that Super is compulsory, I'd opt every time for a self managed fund rather than pay some Fund Manager who fails to do better than the Index.
Well, once in pension phase there's no tax at all, so it's better to have the funds within the allocated pension than outside of it where you'd be paying tax.And I 100% agree with you. Since it's mandatory go SMSF...but don't be silly enough to think it's a great investment vehicle and put more in.
Oh and when you hit Transition to Retirement Age...take out your maximums.
Cheers
Sir O
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