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Shares / Re: ALSI TRADING
« on: July 17, 2018, 04:54:09 pm »
Why heikin ashis on the one but not the other if you do not mind me asking?
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Hi,
Have you guys heard this pod cast on offshore investing...
https://justonelap.com/podcast-offshore-investing-candice-paine/QuoteBy far the scariest part of this conversation has to do with estate duties. As two of our listeners pointed out, should you die when your money is offshore, you will pay estate duties in the country where you are invested. In the USA and the UK, that is 40%. Think about that for a second. Almost half of your investment gets destroyed simply because you died – as if you had a choice!
Bloody hell! 40%?!
Industry Guy - a question - in one of your paragraphs under the heading "do you think ETF are the answer" you advocate for older people the movement away from these instruments into "bonds and the like". My question is why would you advocate moving to bonds and presumably cash also falls into this category for people around 70 and older. It seems that financial planners also suffer under this apprehension. Surely the most appropriate approach would be to understand the clients income streams and then determine needs over x years of a normal lifespan. Once that is determined then a savvy advisor would then get a picture of income and needs and expenditure and create a model for the client. Have you ever done an example of this type of advise to a 70 year old person and then determined the difference in income by remaining in shares and or even ETF versus switching to "bonds and the like".
I always work on the principle "would this be what I would advise my own father to do if I was managing his investment portfolio". Another consideration is even if you client whom you advised to switch to bonds and the like still has a spouse how is she going to survive once the husband has departed as she undoubtedly will get 50% or less of the customers pension and will have to transfer the bonds and the like into her name and probably have to incur costs for this transfer (ETF would also incur costs).
Be interested to hear your views
Hi new broker,
My two Rands worth:
Taking Steinhof as an example was this a recommended share by you or your brokerage.
What strategy would you recommend to beat the Top40/ALSI over 5 years.
What companies are overvalued?
What companies are undervalued?
Do you think ETFs are the answer considering the cost charged for running a fund?
Do you think mining/resources stocks are a good fit for an individual long term portfolio?
I hope the list works
Welcome, I think it's great having views from people on the other end of the chain. I'll start, but be warned there's not much I would hand over cash for!
4. What services would you like to see offered by brokers which you are currently struggling to find?
Assistance with the setup of USD/EUR/GBP based bank and investment accounts.
5. Anything else I should know about?
I'm on the extreme end of the DIY investment scale. If I can avoid a fee I do my best to make it happen. At the moment my least favourite investment cost is the +-0.8% fee I need to pay to move cash to the USA.
Hallo IndustryGuy
You’re not going to like this.
...
If I were you, I would concentrate on people who just started to work who don’t have time to learn investing/trading – hammer them with compound interest/dividends, new parents and parents of kids 6-12 jr – link investment to kid's education/future and people who are about to retire/opted for retrenchment who have no interest in doing it themselves.
On the positive side, I’m really jealous of you, just started working at a brokerage firm – would have loved to do that. I hope you realize you are in the belly of the beast, learn all you can and use it for your own investments/trading one day. {Edit: Oh ja, and don't forget to share some inside industry secrets with us. }
Good Luck.
4. What services would you like to see offered by brokers which you are currently struggling to find?
Hugs and a Red bull when your shares fall more that 10% on a particular week . . .
5. Anything else I should know about?
Yes, stop crying about NPN being such a big % of the JSE and crap on the other companies for not being so big. If I hear another Broker saying NPN is too large I will throw my piece of Bitcoin at him. And another broker comment, BTC is a fraud and will crash, I do not know anything about it, I need to read about it this weekend.
Chances are that your managed portfolios have NPN in them. NPN is too big so I do my own investing.