8 Rules for Investing in Your 20s & 30s | What I've learned as a Financial Adviser

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 2 чер 2024
  • 8 rules that I wish followed when I first started investing. Everything I’ve learned from 10 years of investing for myself and other people.
    Investing for beginners, when you’ve just started investing in the stock market, can be a daunting task, with so many decisions to make. There are many investment apps to choose from, like Moneybox, Trading 212 and Freetrade which you need to decide on before you even get started choosing what to invest in!
    This is a sort of letter to my younger self, of all the things I’ve learnt since I started investing. And I haven’t had a typical journey because I’ve actually spent most of my life managing money for other people. But before all this, when I first started investing for myself, I was making all the same mistakes that you are.
    Financial Planning
    I am a Chartered Wealth Manager and Partner in a financial planning practice based in the UK. If you would like to find out more about our services, please follow this link: go.novawm.com/getintouch
    0:00 - Intro
    0:47 - Take ownership of your own financial education
    3:18 - Talk About Money
    6:06 - Don’t listen to your parents
    9:02 - Pensions, LISA and ISA
    9:38 - Pension Contribution Matching
    11:40 - Find an app that works for you
    14:59 - Take risk
    16:01 - Just start
    Pensions
    Kilick & co - • Pension basics (2019) ...
    ISA
    Hargreaves Lansdown - • Stocks and Shares ISA
    LISA
    Martin Lewis - • Martin Lewis - are Lif...
    Email template for HR:
    Hi,
    Please can you let me know, or put me in touch with some who does know, what pension benefits I’m entitled to.
    Specifically, I would like to know:
    - What benefits I am entitled to
    - Am I enrolled
    - How much am I contributing
    - How much are you, as my employer, contributing
    - Do you offer pension contribution matching
    - Who is the provider of my pensions and how can I get access to check it
    - Is this a salary sacrifice scheme
    If I am enrolled in a salary sacrifice scheme and I decide to make additional voluntary contributions, the company will save National Insurance tax on the amount I choose to contribute. Please can this tax-saving be paid into my pension? There is no cost to the company in doing this.
    Kind regards,
    [Insert Your Name]
    DISCLAIMER:
    This channel is for education purposes only and does not constitute financial advice - James is not responsible for investment actions taken by viewers. Please seek out a regulated advisor if you require assistance (whilst James is a financial adviser, he does not provide advice through this UA-cam Channel, which is not affiliated with his employer).
    James Shack™ property of James Shackell
    Copyright © James Shackell 2020. All rights reserved.
    The author asserts their moral right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this channel and any video published on it.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 281

  • @JamesShack
    @JamesShack  3 роки тому +15

    I've left the best ones till last, so you'll have to watch the whole thing 😉 ... or just skip to the end. And remember, please let me know if you've been given any good/bad advice by your parents? Maybe you're not sure if it's good or not? Let me know below and I'll try and set you straight.

    • @nankumanyi
      @nankumanyi 2 роки тому

      Best advise my folks gave e was to get the maximum student loan back in 1997, as the interest was super cheap and payment terms better than my parent could ever get from bank loans. Got me though Uni and allowed me to get my career in biotech. With the Ben and Alice example, I would imagine Ben would need to start with a lump sum of £50k (plus 10 years average 7% gains), in order to match Alice's pot by 65. Just thinking of us oldies who start investing later in the game :-)

    • @bigdawg1353
      @bigdawg1353 2 роки тому

      James, what would you choose to invest your pension in - DCS Global Equity fund or the Purisima fund ? 😅

    • @cleric7788
      @cleric7788 2 роки тому +1

      Do up another button. This is not a night club.

    • @amerasinghamkarunananthan711
      @amerasinghamkarunananthan711 2 роки тому

      I just started to follow you on UA-cam! Impressed !! I’m 70 & invested in vanguard funds via Aviva pension pot. To date, my financial advisor charge was grater than my return reinvested beside Aviva charge. I have cancelled my financial advisor yesterday as no longer needed. Hope, you can advise me to manage my pension portfolio! I wish to receive some dividends remitted in my bank a/c! 👍🏿. Thanks 🙏🏽

    • @NekonataVirino
      @NekonataVirino Рік тому

      Mine told me to buy a house if you can instead of paying rent or your life like they did, they told me to get qualified and Go into the professions if I could, they told me not to risk more money than you can afford to lose.

  • @paulwilson1726
    @paulwilson1726 Рік тому +12

    2 years ago you had 144 subscribers, and now you have 72.7k. That's return of over 50,000% ~ a reasonable investment. Thanks for the great content!

  • @alexbird7355
    @alexbird7355 2 роки тому +23

    With a father as a financial advisor and working in finance myself I’ve seen a lot of rubbish on here but this is class - clear, concise, sensible and simple advise that does exactly what it says on the tin! Lovely stuff!

  • @ItsABarmcake
    @ItsABarmcake 3 роки тому +48

    Love to see a British person talking about money! looking forward to the next one!

  • @BollywoodBonanzaB
    @BollywoodBonanzaB Рік тому +3

    For me, my parents gave me advice to become financially independent, I.e. working, from a young age - so I've been lucky to have been working most of my life. Dad told me, don't buy things you have to borrow money to pay for, which is the best advice ever. Except for mortgages, degree, and maybe cars, I'll never want to be in debt. 🙏

  • @bradholway8900
    @bradholway8900 Рік тому +1

    You are an absolute hero. Just found your videos and considering starting my investment journey tonight. Thank you 👍🏻

  • @shanecostelloe4701
    @shanecostelloe4701 2 роки тому

    Enjoy your casual language and ways of explaining - making things a lot clearer for me as a new investor. Thanks 🙏

  • @andrewhill9513
    @andrewhill9513 Рік тому

    Its great watching these older videos, I’m learning so much

  • @jpturner171
    @jpturner171 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you James I pass this on to our three daughters who were in her 20s!
    Semper Fi 🇺🇸👍🏽

  • @jbarea2080
    @jbarea2080 2 роки тому

    Thank you James.You put this information in a good down to earth fashion.Excellent info which I will follow up on.

  • @vladbargaoanu3866
    @vladbargaoanu3866 Рік тому

    Look man, this is probably the best video of youtube that I have ever watched as you described exactly my parents, experiences and everything else I've known/heard of up until the age of 28. I think what y ou are doing is great and also keep doing it. I realise this is a 2020 video ( late 2020 ) however, I hope to find out even more financial education from you in the future videos on your channel. Also, the links were very useful. Cheers!

  • @Greylocks129
    @Greylocks129 2 роки тому +5

    Great video. Number 8 - just start is the main advice to follow!
    I was badgered by my late father every year about whether I was saving enough from my early 30s. Fast forward to now, and inputting my data into your spreadsheet, it appears I have achieved financial independence.

  • @NorthEasternCyclist
    @NorthEasternCyclist Рік тому

    Great content and easy to follow explanations. Thanks a lot.

  • @mvp_kryptonite
    @mvp_kryptonite Місяць тому

    Wish I knew all of this when I was young. Shared to my younger bro and working on my pension myself. It’s important to talk about this stuff!

  • @moneyedminds4973
    @moneyedminds4973 2 роки тому

    UA-cam got lucky when you decided to create a channel! You're very well on your way to reach a million subscribers very soon! And you've got a die-hard fan!

  • @garymathison8361
    @garymathison8361 2 роки тому

    Just found your channel. What a find! Your giving me so many answers and more.

  • @user-wr2dv9fy9f
    @user-wr2dv9fy9f 2 роки тому

    Great video! I've been investing for 6 months now and i am trying somehow to show the basics to a friend of mine... Your video is number 1 on my list my friend!
    Greetings from Greece🇬🇷

  • @MineshPatel
    @MineshPatel 3 роки тому +8

    Followed after seeing Reddit and well done! I've learned a lot especially from the latest video! The examples you give just make it much easier to understand Vanguard from a novice perspective

    • @MineshPatel
      @MineshPatel 3 роки тому

      I would love to see a video of a break down of what you should be saving as a percentage of your salary, and how that should be broken down to high risk to low-risk investments over 20/30 years

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the supper Minesh. Once you have an emergency fund (3month+) you should really have everything else invested at the sake risk level, basically as much risk as you can tolerate.
      As to saving amounts, really depends on you as an individual. Maybe think about it like this: what are you saving for ? Retirement? Ok well how much do you need - at 60 you be able to withdrawal c5% from your investments without much risk of running out of money. So if you have £300,000 that’s £15,000 a year + you’ll get the state pension too ( currently £9k if you pay NI for 35 years). Think about how much you’d need , just roughly, then try and work it back to how much you’d need to save each year from now on so you’ll be able to reach your goal. Assume m a 5% annual growth rate on your investments (it should be higher than this but 5% strips out inflation) and you should then be able to work out how much you need. Try doing it in a google sheet/excel.

  • @anantmehta123
    @anantmehta123 2 роки тому +1

    Your videos are great. They make me feel much less overwhelmed by it all. Thanks!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому

      Thank you! Good luck with it all!

  • @calum6590
    @calum6590 3 роки тому +8

    Had a few of your videos on in background today and think this is my favourite so far. It's clear to see your genuine passion/interest. Most people get bored in seconds if start talking about investing and compound interest, really liked the genuine excitement. Ps: That pension at HSBC was insane!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +4

      Interesting! This is actually my least scripted video and I think it shines through. Need to give myself some more freedom in the future!

  • @jobhunterpodcast5066
    @jobhunterpodcast5066 2 роки тому

    Honestly the most underated Finance YT account out there, would love to have you on my Podcast all about people from the UK with interesting jobs, aimed at 18-23yr olds, would love to hear your take on what you do but also advice you could give to the listeners! Cheers Tim

  • @chris1609
    @chris1609 3 роки тому +2

    Only just watched this video James.6 months ago you had 130 subscribers! Congrats on surpassing 10k! Keep up the great work

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      Thanks Chris! It hasn’t been that long in reality but feels like it’s taken forever! I’m getting quicker at writing and editing though so it’s less and less effort each week. Thank for the continued support.

  • @ZohoExpert
    @ZohoExpert 2 роки тому +1

    just found your channel, good work. Shared with the guys in my WhatsApp group. Keep up the good work!
    My financial advice from my parents came in the following ways:
    - Mother: what not to do (e.g. showed me how bad it is when you get into debt, spend too much money, fail to invest, etc.)
    - Father: work hard and save as much as you can in your pension (never invested in properties, other than the family home, although I always tried to encourage him)

  • @chrissyt8111
    @chrissyt8111 3 роки тому +3

    Great content James! I've been finding it really difficult to find UK youtubers who can educate me about money and how our systems work over here. You and MamaFurFur are the only ones who keep me engaged and interested and not drop off out of boredom. Subscribed!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Cheers Christina, thanks for saying so!

  • @alatalos
    @alatalos 3 роки тому +4

    Really well explained. I've linked your channel to our daughters who are just graduating and are just starting the careers. Compounded interest etc.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      Epic! Hopefully you can get them started early!

  • @Loosechunks
    @Loosechunks 9 місяців тому

    Fantastic Video. Interesting how sweary you are aiming at a younger audience and looking at your videos now with so many thousands subscribers banked! Anyhow. Keep up the good work, I think you're the most engaging and intesting financial advisor doing these videos. At 49 years old and 7 years and 7 months from my planned retirement i GREATLY value your content. I salute you sir!

  • @jaydenbeddall7770
    @jaydenbeddall7770 3 роки тому

    Awesome videos man! Finding everything so helpful!

  • @MrPurle
    @MrPurle 2 роки тому

    Sweary James is the best James! Spending a couple of hours checking out your channel is one of the best ways I've ever spent a day off... subbed... your channel is a goldmine of info without the BS.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому +1

      Haha I think so too. My early videos when no one was watching - not that professional though!

  • @jamesalfei
    @jamesalfei 3 роки тому +9

    Awesome video as always! Really liking the new format too so definitely a thumbs up from me!
    Keep up the helpful and informative content! Lovely to finally see a UA-camr who is *actually* qualified and yet discusses these topics in a down-to-earth manner :)

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you James! This comment means the world to me. I can see people watching the vids but I don’t get much feedback so I really appreciate this!

    • @jamesalfei
      @jamesalfei 3 роки тому

      @@JamesShack I know what you mean. All well and good seeing the number tick up but always good to get proper opinions!
      Just a quick thought however, personally I love the videos and don’t mind the swearing whatsoever (in fact, I chuckle every time), however I do feel less inclined to want to share the videos for that reason. For example, I wouldn’t want to share the video publicly on social media due to this.
      Don’t get me wrong, don’t want you to change the format or content at all, just a thought for consideration in future content if you want to hit a wider audience :). Even just a minor bleep would do the trick :D

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      @@jamesalfei a good point well made! I will tone it down, it's not really adding much!

  • @BPGOfficial
    @BPGOfficial 3 роки тому +3

    Thanks man! I found you on Reddit, great content!

  • @kenyee
    @kenyee 3 роки тому

    Thank you for this - I'm learning so much from you!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Brilliant, that’s the aim!

  • @vinylwarmth
    @vinylwarmth 2 роки тому +5

    You've got a loyal follower now James. Thanks for the great videos!
    Can you do one of these for a 40 year old?! I started investing properly at 35 (41 now). My current strategy is increase my salary over time and invest as much as I can! Any advice for someone like me would be appreciated 🙂

  • @josephlong1336
    @josephlong1336 3 роки тому

    Spot on video, refreshing to see normal and actually qualified person talking not just someone chatting away about the same stuff as everyone with no qualifications!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Thank you! I appreciate it!

  • @zakajadi2744
    @zakajadi2744 9 місяців тому

    This was a very informative video. Learnt a lot. Thank you & keep it up

  • @natashamartin5851
    @natashamartin5851 2 роки тому

    Loved this video! Got a new subscriber 👍🏼

  • @DavincisGirl66
    @DavincisGirl66 3 роки тому +1

    just found your chanel. Good info. Very smart use of light in your filming setup.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Thank you! I’ve been trying out filming in lots of different places but ended up fitting those hanging lights in my kitchen myself! You can learn to do anything on UA-cam!

  • @atul9380
    @atul9380 3 роки тому +14

    Very nice video, James. Good to see some more UK financial advisors on here as a lot of the other content is US based and their stuff is so much more complicated! I’ve been reading up on investing and maybe you could do a video on the difference between investing and speculating. That might help people understand about risk management and timeframes

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      Cheers mate! Yes thats a good idea. There's to many people that think trading is investing! It's not!

    • @swright5690
      @swright5690 7 місяців тому

      Indeed. But as a US investor, I still think his message is just as valid. Same game for all of us.

  • @alfsporturbo
    @alfsporturbo 3 роки тому

    Great video. Mega. Numbers at the end are so powerful

    • @jennyskerry344
      @jennyskerry344 2 роки тому

      *Thanks for your review feel free to contact my personal broker on WhatsApp ...+1° 3° 8° 6° 3° 6° 1° 3° 2° 0 °7 for trading guidelines*

  • @markcampos7484
    @markcampos7484 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you very much for all the info

  • @shyyou93
    @shyyou93 2 роки тому

    Rule #2 is very underrated. I have worked in the accounting and banking industries for 17 years but have learned so much more talking to 2-3 people outside the industry about managing my own finances.

  • @danieldeak6193
    @danieldeak6193 3 роки тому

    What a fantastic, informative, well produced video. New sub.

  • @MrLasty12
    @MrLasty12 3 роки тому +1

    Great content & high quality camera set up!

  • @zeinab8794
    @zeinab8794 3 роки тому +5

    16:01 is a great way to put things, in investing and in life. The earlier the better because something is always better than nothing

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      Even if it's just £50 a month. You'll learn a huge amount by doing it!

  • @Naomi-zj2yf
    @Naomi-zj2yf 3 роки тому

    I really enjoyed this video and thanks for the letter

  • @julianharvie7406
    @julianharvie7406 3 роки тому +13

    This is some high quality camera work :)

  • @stansheppard8929
    @stansheppard8929 2 роки тому

    From 100 odd subs to where you are now, great Jon James. Keep up the great work

  • @alexisdelcourt6705
    @alexisdelcourt6705 3 роки тому

    Thanks! Great video!

  • @delsonpaul6553
    @delsonpaul6553 3 роки тому

    Very useful... Thanks James

  • @nataliawalker4184
    @nataliawalker4184 Рік тому

    Thank you

  • @s.willfd
    @s.willfd 3 роки тому +2

    Mate this is awesome. Really appreciate the advise and help. Exactly what I was looking for, subbed for life. Shall also share!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Epic! Ok glad you found it helpful and thanks for sharing!

  • @Life_Literacy
    @Life_Literacy 2 роки тому

    Only just found your channel, wish I’d found it sooner. Some great advice 👌🏻

  • @seankearney7070
    @seankearney7070 3 роки тому +2

    Soft lighting on point

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Thanks! I actually made the shelves and installed those pendant lights myself, you can learn to do anything on UA-cam!

  • @kevinsmith7823
    @kevinsmith7823 Рік тому

    Hi James . Been watching you in the background . Some really good advice thinking about what your saying . Buy the way it’s not about you looking good it’s about 1, you explaining in simple terms.2, honestly good advice.3,been impartial.or at minimum letting people (know if one isn’t)
    4, good veriatiation . 5, what’s maturing is your info is good sound info . 6, what I have seen so far is you are giving that . 😊 infact I have given this info to my son … kind regards kevin . Now that’s looking 👀 ing good . Use other words to get across your point . Weakness is unsung swearing… but I forgiveness . Please keep up the excellent advice/ info

  • @mooncake8742
    @mooncake8742 3 роки тому +1

    Great video James!

  • @akhilkaura
    @akhilkaura 2 роки тому

    High quality content
    Keep it up james

  • @samhale06
    @samhale06 3 роки тому +2

    Enjoyed the video, thanks. On your template 'e-mail to HR' it might be worth including whether the scheme is salary sacrifice or not. I've found this is an area people rarely understand and the benefits (particularly >40%) of it.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Good shout Sam, I will update that. Thanks.

  • @prashphoto
    @prashphoto 3 роки тому

    Excellent content James!

    • @jennyskerry344
      @jennyskerry344 2 роки тому

      *Thanks for your review feel free to contact my personal broker on WhatsApp ...+1° 3° 8° 6° 3° 6° 1° 3° 2° 0 °7 for trading guidelines*

  • @daniellaw20
    @daniellaw20 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the very informative content James! I'm looking into investing in sustainable/ethical funds at the moment which would be interesting to get your perspective on :)

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      Hey Daniella! Happy new year! Yep, ESG is very popular among clients right now but it's actually quite hard to define what's actually a good company and what's bad. For example, HSBC, Shell and BP often rank highly for certain ESG ratings, because they invest so much back into communities and new technology. On the other hand, companies like boohoo were darlings of ESG funds... until the sweatshop scandal. However, more and more big shareholders are becoming social "Activists" and forcing company boards to be more accountable. If you want to learn more check out this video here: ua-cam.com/video/weVAN2HxXjk/v-deo.html

    • @daniellaw20
      @daniellaw20 3 роки тому

      @@JamesShack Sweet, thanks very much!!

  • @stemoore
    @stemoore 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for these great videos, I’m a new subscriber and new to investing so I’m learning a lot. I’ve just watched your recent video on the Vanguard Lifestrategy fund and wondered if your example of compound interest would apply to a fund like the Lifestrategy 100%?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Yep, it will. Compound interest or compound growth, the terms mean the same thing. The stock market has on average growing at 8% per year. Some years up some down. But the growth compounds year after year. It’s exponential!

  • @lisapagin6228
    @lisapagin6228 3 роки тому +2

    Love this...... as a parent I keep telling my kids this ..... some parents advice is ok 😂😂

  • @RichardPCUK
    @RichardPCUK Рік тому

    Brilliant, as always :-)

  • @creators1000
    @creators1000 11 місяців тому

    My dad actually gave me great advice. He gave me the simple path to wealth book and I learned about Jack Bogle and index funds. I invest in singular stocks and says I should adopt a more hands off approach.

  • @cathy2708
    @cathy2708 3 роки тому +1

    Appreciate every bit of advice from this channel. I suppose the worst bit of financial advice from my parents was the lack thereof... or too much reliance on sketchy people, not doing their own research when it comes to money, not reading contracts properly before signing...

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Yer we do have an advantage with the internet, being able and confident enough to research things ourselves. Do you think they didn’t talk to you about it because money was a taboo subject? Hopefully we can change it into being a fundamental conversation that needs to be had!

  • @comebackyesterday8996
    @comebackyesterday8996 3 роки тому

    Thanks for this, subscribed :)

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      You're welcome and thanks for the support!

  • @ylissa5855
    @ylissa5855 2 роки тому +2

    James I love your channel so much, you are absolutely hilarious and thank you for destigmatising and demystfying finance for the younger generation. Pensions are fucking epic!

  • @lewis4777
    @lewis4777 Рік тому

    This is amazing James, I’ve binge watched your videos today - thanks for knowledge sharing!
    A question on the template email in the description: what counts as the additional voluntary contribution? E.g., my employer has an 8% match pension contribution scheme. So if I contribute 8% is there an NI saving I can ask for? Or would there only be a saving for them if I was to contribute 10%, which is 2% more than they match?

  • @grc9808
    @grc9808 2 роки тому +2

    Hi James, great videos. Thanks for explaining everything so clearly. I am in mid 40’s and been living pay check to pay check since I started work in my 20’s. I save bits for family hols etc but have nothing left at end of year. Suited us fine but now thinking of putting some aside for future. I have full teacher pension from 21 and am looking to retire around 55 but not necessarily take money out early. Just look at doing something else. Any financial support to enable this goal and indeed support myself and family after this date is my goal. Have I left it too late? I am able to invest and gain enough to make enough of a difference in 10 yrs time?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому +3

      It’s never too late. 10 years can make a huge difference. But remember your investment horizon is more like 40 years as you need this money to be growing and producing a sustainable income until you die. And perhaps even longer if it’s for the benefit of your family.

  • @guywalsh8175
    @guywalsh8175 3 роки тому +1

    Great video James. I was shocked by Alice and Ben!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      I know right! Compound growth is such an abstract concept that it's hard for humans to understand. Einstein called it "The 8th Wonder of the world".

    • @mAcroFaze
      @mAcroFaze 3 роки тому +1

      Can someone please explain to me just how that worked out? How such a difference came from those two investments and how investing £125k more somehow ended up with worse returns? I've recently started investing, but I think Alice has already taken me to the cleaners and back with her method :P

  • @stevie3452
    @stevie3452 2 роки тому +1

    Could you do another version of this with some more advanced tips please?
    Not a bad vid, but this was all pretty obvious for all but absolute beginners!
    (I really enjoyed your 4% rule rent vs buy video for example!)
    Thanks!

    • @jennyskerry344
      @jennyskerry344 2 роки тому

      *Thanks for your review feel free to contact my personal broker on WhatsApp ...+1° 3° 8° 6° 3° 6° 1° 3° 2° 0 °7 for trading guidelines*

  • @iji5kpdy784
    @iji5kpdy784 2 роки тому

    The examples of Alice and Ben at the end is so eye opening, I am going to save this for my children . Hope they do listen 😊

  • @diannep514
    @diannep514 3 роки тому +1

    Stumbled from reddit. Just want to say this is great content and easy to understand. Definitely going to watch the other vids. Since you talked about pension, any ideas about how the 2015 NHS pension work? I don't think they match the contribution but more of a 1/54 pot.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Thank you! You’re correct the NHS pension is a Defined Benefit pension which means you’ll get a set annual income at retirement based on how long you work, and the 2015 pension is fraction of your average pay over your career. This is actually the type of pension that I say our ‘parents used to have’ in the video, but nowadays only government jobs offer these because they’re actually very generous!

    • @sophiethompson6799
      @sophiethompson6799 3 роки тому

      Great video! Does this mean there is no point in increasing contributions to a 2015 NHS pension?

  • @taggthis
    @taggthis 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you, I am just about to make my first index fund purchase via vanguard. I intend to invest long term and just leave the funds ‘locked away’ for at least 5 years forgetting about it. I am just getting slightly stuck on how I balance my percentage portfolio between equity vs bonds. Low risk is good for me. Any tips or related videos you can recommend?

  • @robbiegreen
    @robbiegreen 3 роки тому

    Hi, I have really been getting a lot out of your videos. Thanks so much for the content. Please could you make a video explaining the compound interest/growth of a fund such as Vanguard life strategy? I understand compound interest of something like a cash ISA but don’t fully understand it with index funds/ETF’s

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      It works in exactly the same way but the % up/down each year is not fixed. The stock markets have grown at about 7% on average each year. Start with £100 and after one year you have £107, up £7. The next year you’re up another 7% but that’s not £7 up. That’s £7.50 up. The £ growth keeps getting bigger each year but the % growth stays the same. Ofc with stocks you’re not guaranteed the same gain each year, you could even be down. But over time it’s still exponential growth.

  • @gopikashah
    @gopikashah 3 роки тому

    Needed some direction regarding the below - Any suggestions would be highly appreciated.
    I am looking to invest in a LISA (Lifetime ISA ) before the window closes for it,
    1) should i invest in cash LISA or stocks & shares? I am more inclined towards stocks & shares as i can withdraw only @ 60 which gives a good time for the investment to grow & pass off fluctuations in the market.
    2) Is it a good idea to invest right away into stocks & shares LISA (not sure how fluctuating the markets are due to covid)
    3)which platform should I use taking into account the fees, charges & other factors ( i prefer vanguard as their charges are low but i don't think they do LISA stocks & shares) ?
    I am new to investing as well, so looking for passive investments (low-cost index funds) and not active .

  • @danrickmagno8151
    @danrickmagno8151 2 роки тому +1

    Alice did it!!

  • @swright5690
    @swright5690 7 місяців тому

    Salty video. I like it. I like the cut of your jib sir. 😊❤

  • @SuperVivViv
    @SuperVivViv 2 роки тому

    Hi James, this is great! I really appreciated the example between investing earlier and later. Would you have a link to a calculator that shows what the 2nd one starting later could do to try and match the same final portfolio size.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому +1

      Try this cashflow model i'm building docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1y7PxLSu_VQTP7l5xGmaQCcGmR1fnPhFcUn7ktNQPN4w/edit?usp=sharing

  • @jonathannaylor1084
    @jonathannaylor1084 2 роки тому

    Seen this a year after you posted it….. every single thing still rings true. Glad to see you are doing well on the sub’s front at least. Really good

  • @gl2822ac
    @gl2822ac 3 роки тому +1

    Really helpful and insightful. Will you be doing another one soon on investing in low cost index funds?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Who are you, are you watching me? I’m literally sat at my computer editing “Vanguard Index Funds for Beginners | What they are and why you need them” ... spooky.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      And thanks for watching !

  • @pc557
    @pc557 3 роки тому

    I'd like to clarify a point you made in this video. In your example with Alice and Ben you described that their investment was a "diversified portfolio of index funds". How does this type of investment benefit from compound interest?! Great video overall, I'm looking forward to more content.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      It’s easy to assume that compound interest applies only to ‘interest’, like from a bank account. But it applies to anything that has exponential growth. E.g you have a stock valued at £100, it grows 10% in a year, you have £110, it grows 10% the next year, you then have £121, £11 more. And this just keeps going until you get to the final years where you are seeing huge gains but it’s still only 10%. Compound interest is just a economics term for exponential growth. A non finance example would be the virus R number.

  • @taggthis
    @taggthis 2 роки тому

    Great video!! Quick question? Can you open a lifetime Isa with the Hargreaves account if you have say a vanguard one open for this tax year? Also, can you add to both accounts concurrently?

  • @SC-ox4vt
    @SC-ox4vt Рік тому

    James. Great content and guidance. I've followed you for a while now. I think you've since cleaned up on the f-bombs (adds nothing - and stains your usual professional approach - just saying)! I have my kids you watching too! Trying to get them started early with the investing for the future mindset vs spending on small luxuries. :)

  • @suekay5782
    @suekay5782 2 роки тому

    OK, I'm getting educated. Saved some £ for my kids, they are now in early 20's. Gonna look at starting Investing with them (I think I'll point them at you, cause if the advice comes from 'Mum' it could get ignored). Again, perfect timing. Are you my Financial Angel ?

  • @sophiadalyrossin
    @sophiadalyrossin Рік тому

    Hi James, been watching your channel for a while. I have a question, whats your views on Investengine as a platform? Its seem new-ish, Given is low fees, I thought I should move my ETFs and "core portfolio" (inside a isa) there, and use my H&L for stocks and "fun portfolio" (inside an ISA).
    Thanks in advance
    Sophia

  • @johnristheanswer
    @johnristheanswer 2 роки тому

    Good video as usual , however the average annual salary in UK is NOT £35K . Office of National Statistics have it at around £28k - £541 / Week as of August 2021.

  • @marildamassarotto6253
    @marildamassarotto6253 3 роки тому +2

    You just got one more subscription 😊

  • @DaPoofDaPoofDaPoofDa
    @DaPoofDaPoofDaPoofDa 3 роки тому

    TY!!! 👍

  • @phillsutcliffe4400
    @phillsutcliffe4400 2 роки тому

    Gutted! I wish id seen this earlier. Very informative videos. I have watched most of these and want to invest. My confidence has been lacking in the shares department, i've always felt it was gambling. I have invested in Gold, Wine and Peer to Peer lending but these wont give me an income. What advice do you have for the over 50's?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому +1

      The same as everyone else

  • @ericuk9481
    @ericuk9481 2 роки тому

    Hello, first I love your videos (and your kitchen). I am 54 yo and I will have basically nothing when I will retire. I watched all your videos about Vanguard lifestrategy and want to choose one based on what I saw in your content. Any rule or advice for a case like mine. Any video you already did that you can advise me to watch before I start investing? Thanks for all your work. 👍👍

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому +1

      Hi Eric. No one in particular, just keep watching until you feel confident!

  • @MohamedFareedh
    @MohamedFareedh 2 роки тому

    Thanks for this video. At what point would you recommend a financial advisor? I don’t have a big portfolio but I still would love to talk to one just to make sure I am on the right page.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому

      Once you have more than £250k, getting advise starts to become more affordable. Otherwise advisers have fixed fees that start from c£2,000 which mean it's not cost effective unless you have larger pots of money.

  • @manishrana6
    @manishrana6 3 роки тому +1

    Hi gr8 video,,, I am thinking of investing with nutmeg ..do u have any views on that ..and also any views on fully managed Vs robo managed portfolios?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +1

      Nutmeg is a perfectly good platform. With a nice interface. However they are more expensive than other platforms, and they don’t offer any additional features (like round up and savings tools like Moneybox or Plumb), to warrant the higher fees.
      I will do a video on the difference between fully managed (active), robo and static (fixed allocation) portfolios. In short, the performance of active or robo has not been good enough to warrant the higher fees. When compared with a fixed.
      Check out Vanguard. You can always invest £10 in a GIA on each platform so you can test it out and get a feel for it.

  • @sbo3
    @sbo3 3 роки тому

    I have actually known someone who turned down work due to the higher tax bracket. She was my head of department (teaching) and she said that she turned down any additional roles that may give her a additional responsibility pay. I believe she was already in the higher tax bracket but her POV was, well if I am being told I'll get £2000 more for being safeguarding lead (which is already too little for most TLR roles we call them in teaching), then I'm taxed higher on that 2k and then it doesn't become worth my time and energy at all. She stopped exam marking for the same reason. I sort of get the rationale behind this (depends on the financial worth you put on additional work I guess) but this is very different to the misunderstanding that your pay will actively go down if you go into the higher tax bracket.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому

      Indeed! When it involves working more hours I kinda get it. As an example your take home pay would go from £10/hr as no taxpayer, £8 /hr as basic then £6/hr as a higher payer, and that’s not including national insurance. But when someone turns down more money for the same hours...

  • @JVPrice
    @JVPrice 2 роки тому

    Hi James, great advice but it would be great to see a video on things like:
    How much should be put in a pension/SIPP vs a LISA? Especially if you don't need it for a first time home purchase?
    Also you have a lot of wide words about long term investing but what if you have a sizeable lump sum, but need it in the next few years? (Eg for a renovation). I wouldn't want it sat in a savings account for a couple years losing to inflation, but also I wouldn't want to take massive risks in case the market sinks at the wrong moment?
    Any thoughts (or videos on this) would be great!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому

      Check out this video : ua-cam.com/video/jCUbBLxtzMo/v-deo.html

    • @JVPrice
      @JVPrice 2 роки тому

      Amazing thanks. Wise words like always!
      Would still love to see. LISA v SIPP video - though from what I read if you aren't planning on buying a house with it a LISA loses a lot of benefit v pension?
      And also interested to see your views and tips on investing in Startups through the likes of Seedrs and how that can fit into a portfolio for investors. And how to realise returns and over what time period.
      But I'm sure you've plenty of video ideas so I'll just stay subscribed!

  • @sgist7824
    @sgist7824 2 роки тому +1

    My grandparents said 'Never a Borrower or a Lender Be. '
    Also Money doesn't grow on trees.
    Both of these stuck with me.
    But my mum however has always been living month to month, so I guess the advice skipped a generation 😔

  • @thelukemeister87
    @thelukemeister87 3 роки тому

    I would be interested in what your thoughts would be on company share schemes. I am able to purchase £125 of shares a month and my company will match this. After 5 years the shares are tax free. My main question is what would be your view on whether after that 5 year period it is worth keeping the shares invested in my company (collecting a decent dividend) or selling the shares and putting into a stocks and shares ISA such as vanguard lifesaver plans where it is a more diversified investment?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  3 роки тому +2

      Hi Luke, it depends on whether you think your company is going to do well or not! I always advise diversity, I meet lots of people with large amounts of their net worth in their businesses. Which is from an investment perspective a bad idea. However many of these people naturally have a much higher risk tolerance than the normal person hence starting a business/working for a start up in the first place. I’m in the same situation, and choose to have a large chunk of my money invested in my business, mainly because I want to have some skin in the game and benefit from the fruits of my labour, but also because I’m heavily biased! Just as we can all be about our own companies.
      From an investment perspective, it’s best to diversify. But these decisions are rarely made simply on investment rationale, despite what people may say.
      Also, you may find that the shares grow free of CGT whilst within the scheme, they’re normally held in trust. But you’ll have to check with the scheme.
      I put it like this: if this company goes bust, you’ve lost both your income and your assets... if your gonna go all in on a company (which you shouldn’t) then go in on one that’s not linked to your income.

  • @tlowday3925
    @tlowday3925 2 місяці тому

    How can I find out more in regards to setting up match pension contributions in my company?

  • @paulthorpe766
    @paulthorpe766 2 роки тому

    Good advice By folks - namely - place money, don't spend money and compound interest is a turbocharger strapped to your money and time invested is more important than amount invested 💰

  • @Kalarandir
    @Kalarandir 2 роки тому

    Really enjoy your channel, however, since I am old enough to be your dad, could your repeat the part where companies provided pensions, because I must have missed that my whole life.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 роки тому

      Haha! Defined benefit pensions aka final salary pension used to be widely available, and very generous. So generous that companies have gone bust trying to pay them... Righty so, these are not available anymore.

  • @AndrewDCDrummond
    @AndrewDCDrummond 2 роки тому

    If/when you’re in a higher tax bracket then see if your company does salary sacrifice for pension contributions.

  • @jasonfishy
    @jasonfishy Рік тому

    In Singapore company pay a mandatory 17% of our salary to our central provision fund (CPF). Something similar to your pension. While we'll have to contribute mandatory 20% of our salary to the fund.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  Рік тому

      Which is a great thing, we need more of that in the Uk. So long as the money is invested well!