Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - yozzi

Pages: 1 ... 3 4 [5] 6 7 ... 11
61
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: October 20, 2016, 06:28:03 pm »
Thanks guys you make some good points and think I'll wait a while to see what Sterling does

62
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: October 18, 2016, 11:30:43 am »
I'm digressing a bit here but I started with Rands and bought a fair amount of Dollars last week but now I'm looking at buying Sterling with the Dollars with the rate at the moment down to $1.23 to the pound the lowest it's been for years if not ever would you go this route or stick with the Dollars?

My aim is to buy ETF's in Dollars offshore but looking at the Sterling price at $1.23 it's attractive and would just buy the ETF's in Sterling and most of the analysts are saying Brexit is already built into the price and it should be bottoming soon but if I'm going to buy then I'd do it now as a few more cents drop in the rate won't make much difference.

Any opinions? Thanks in advance

63
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 11, 2016, 06:22:52 pm »
Guys would you be buying Dollars now?

64
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 03, 2016, 06:14:38 pm »
USD at R13.47 looking good. Let's hope it stays here or goes lower by payday next month. That'll be my last offshore batch for the year.

Where do you guys think the USD is headed? Will it reach R12.50?

65
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: September 22, 2016, 11:14:38 am »
I listened to some analysts last night talking about where the Rand is headed and they were saying a realistic level would be R12/$ but they think it will bottom around R13-13.20 in this current cycle

66
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: August 29, 2016, 10:26:19 am »
Fin24
//The rand has strengthened below key resistance at R/$13.50 and is now comfortably below the 50-, 100- and 200-day moving averages.

The rand’s momentum indicators are not confirming the rand’s new lows versus the dollar and therefore a sustained break below R/$13.20 is unlikely.

The rand must break above R/$13.60 to indicate that the bottom has been reached.//

It is now 13.80.


The Rand is way over R14/$ now so would you say the bottom has been reached and it will get weaker from here?

Also, if given the choice would you buy dollars, sterling or probably less of a choice, euros?

67
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: August 23, 2016, 06:16:06 pm »
Orca, my thinking has been that the STXIND YTD return has been very low but a few factors have contributed to that and I was looking at selling my STXIND shares to either buy sterling or buy shares on the FTSE over a short period of time allowing the Rand to weaken again which I'm sure it will given time

68
Shares / Re: The Rand
« on: August 23, 2016, 01:42:16 pm »
With the Rand at these levels firstly where do you think it will bottom?

Would you be selling your STXIND/CORONATION ETF's to buy either dollars, sterling or euros in order to capitalise on the Rand weakening by year end or is it too much of a gamble?

69
Off topic / Live chat
« on: August 17, 2016, 04:04:18 pm »
VWRD

70
Shares / Re: Offshore broke4s
« on: August 05, 2016, 03:11:38 pm »
Opened an acc with Degiro today after reading this review online:

moneygrower.co.uk/2015/06/degiro-a-review-of-uks-cheapest-investing-platform/


71
Shares / Re: Offshore broke4s
« on: August 05, 2016, 10:30:06 am »
Thanks, I'll look into the investec option. For DeGiro, I'm trying to get my head around all the costs. The commission free ETFs sound great, my favourite, VWRD is there too, just listed on a euro exchange in euros rather than $. What I can't find is if there are any monthly fees for the account, or any custody fees if you're holding those ETFs.

Have opened an offshore broker acc with TD Direct International which because of all the forms and questions they ask has taken forever and now when I transferred funds into the acc and asked to buy ETF's they sent me this reply:

If this is an ETF that is leveraged or involves short selling then you will have to complete the ‘complex products test’.

You will also have to accept the exchange agreement for investing in the US.


So doesn't look like I'm going to be using them and the DeGiro option looks much better - was it easy to open an acc with them to trade ETF's? No 'products tests' or similar?
 

72
Shares / Re: Offshore broke4s
« on: August 05, 2016, 10:14:20 am »
I haven't looked at De Giro, but I'll take a quick look. When I compared I found interactive brokers to be the cheapest.

Do you have a UK bank account? I'm looking for a cost effective offshore account option for someone in my family who doesn't have the ability to travel and open one.

Patrick, I have an acc in the UK with Nationwide and they have always been very efficient and provide good service and attend to any queries immediately not sure how you open an acc from here as I am originally from the UK and go back frequently but would recommend them

73
Shares / Re: DBXWD vs. DBXUS
« on: July 26, 2016, 08:04:12 pm »
Guys, been looking at DBX shares to invest in and just received a 'small pot' UK pension of GBP15k what would you buy? Put it all in DBX WD or diversify with say about three different shares?

Would want to buy on the FTSE to keep the funds in the UK.

74
I was in investment properties for some time and coupled with the market being slow and incurring problem tenants I decided to sell up and use the funds in the stock market where results over the last two years have been steady at best and it got me thinking a few weeks ago of precisely what is being discussed on here in that the equity tied up in your abode(where you live)  you will never see unless you sell and enjoy the proceeds and rent a property to live in. If it's your goal to leave the primary property to your kids then as has been stated previously you'll never enjoy the money!

A mate of mine sold his house a few years ago making a good profit and bought a small new build 2 bed house that he and his wife are more than happy with and now they spend their retirement travelling overseas 2 or 3 times a year and this is my plan so I'm in my early sixties now with no kids and I've decided to put my abode property up for rental it's on the Blouberg beachfront and my partner and I have decided we both want to live on a golf estate so we're going to give it a go and my rental income will cover the golf estate rental therefore my abode property is working for me and if we like the new lifestyle then I'll view the abode prop as an investment and probably sell in a few years when the time is right to fund that retirement lifestyle I dream about!     

75
Shares / Re: Investing in SA or taking/leaving money overseas
« on: February 09, 2016, 03:00:16 pm »
Yes, open a US based interactive brokers account and buy VWRD on the london exchange. That's what I've done, and have bought for the last 2 months. I also couldn't find a cheaper international broker than interactive that would accept South Africans.

Thanks Patrick have opened an account online so hope I'm up and away!

Pages: 1 ... 3 4 [5] 6 7 ... 11