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• #2752
You own shares in the Nutmeg business which I imagine will be no more and rolled in to JPM - it’s likely that all the small shareholders who bought in will be 100% cash out. The terms of the agreement will say and you won’t see that for a while.
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• #2753
Before I build my own, has anyone seen or got a good tool for mortgage calculation based on cost, tax reductions, repayment, initial input, offset by interest on earnings etc.
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• #2754
That sounds way too complicated. Just borrow what the bank will lend buy something for 50% of that and then spend the rest on upgrading your kitchen so everything is wifi-controlled.
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• #2755
I'm an engineer, we like to analyse the fine details to boredom.
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• #2756
So am I, but budgets are for Project Managers not Engineers :)
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• #2757
Amen.
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• #2758
Whatevs I just want to maximise my monies and not waste cash on other people.
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• #2759
sub it out.*
I'm sure there is a calculator out there.
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• #2760
I estimated that a really detailed calculator could save me ~£200 or so over the ~20 years of my mortgage, compared to the basic simple calculators out there, and so I didn't bother.
tax reductions
Thought all of those were gone now? (Or do you mean tax efficient savings like ISAs?)
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• #2761
Everyone just borrows as much as humanly possible and (should) invest the spare cash any way how. Investments should return 5% + annually, mortgage will cost significantly less than that for the foreseeable future.
tl;dr you don't need a spreadsheet
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• #2762
Investments should return 5% + annually
bold. what about risk?
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• #2763
Risk? That's what gets you the reward!
Obvs you might not get 5% per year, some years you might get a lot less, none or negative. But on a long enough timeline with some not totally awful decisions ...
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• #2764
agree in broad terms.
I just think it's worth being clear that paying off the mortgage is almost risk free whereas investments are not, and mostly do not return a nice even 5% p.a., and timing the market generally doesn't work, and economic shocks can upset even a balanced portfolio for a significant period.
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• #2765
I can get a tax break on stamp duty, but I'd have to put more cash into the place to get the tax break worth 5% of purchase price.
So I do need excel to work that out for me. -
• #2766
I can get a tax break on stamp duty, but I'd have to put more cash into the place to get the tax break worth 5% of purchase price.
So I do need excel to work that out for me.If the tax break gets you a return on that 5% of purchase price >= to what you could expect should you have invested it then it's a no brainer I would have thought.
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• #2767
Been looking into tokenisation of assets recently, looks like it will be a big thing going ahead.
Put a few quid into these guys recently - http://www.trade-strike.com - could be worth a punt if you're into the crypto thing.
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• #2768
Seems clear enough to me!
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• #2769
Ha, the wacky world of BSC tokens. To be fair it's simpler than it looks. I use Trustwallet to buy BNB Smartchain then just swap in Pancakeswap, it's pretty straightforward.
Decent guide here too - https://twitter.com/trade_strike/status/1403996637815619584?s=21
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• #2770
Still going; https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-57826826
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• #2771
I got a pay rise of exactly 2.5%, guess that's where the number came from.
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• #2772
How is all the crypto stuff going?
Recent conversation with a divorcee who was ploughing a chunk of her settlement into crypto as it would set her up for rest of life.
So it's good for widows and orphans now.
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• #2773
Depends on your timescale, last 12 months amazing, last 3 months not so much
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• #2774
Nice pay cut
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• #2775
This reality is so unreal.
pretty much, although won't be getting anything for a few months I don't think. It could be the start of a trend, so maybe you'll get bought out by a big bank too!
I'm not really sure what happens next... am I forced to sell my shares to JPM for cash? or could I be offered shares in Chase UK ?