Far easier putting money into a SIPP with someone like Intelligent Money.
You can move investments about to expand or reduce exposure to equities, but you are doing it in a safer SIPP wrapper which also attracts tax relief on the money you fire into it.
How it was best put to me is , "It's better to have time in the market rather than trying to time the market"
Good point....BUT..I just bought in as the market fell, at the bottom and as the market rose again. Example I bought Smithson investment Trust It was on a ridiculous 19% discount to NAV(roughly). It is never been on a discount before.
I bought perpetual income and growth on 26% discount (it was on an average of 16% discount for last 12 months). And 8% dividend.
Dividend bias investment trusts have a dividend reserve. They will all have enough to increase there dividend for at least one year. Emphasis on at least.
I am up 55% on Smithson (no dividend payments)
I am up 16% on perpetual with an 8% dividend
A discount means I am buying below its actual worth. In the case of perpetual I paid 74p for every £1 worth of assets (the underlying shares they own).
The latter is not possible with funds including etfs.
I bought 4 other investment trusts roughly I am up 12% with an average dividend of 7%. Just what I need for retirement.
Roughly you will pay .4% year on all investment in your ISA. On a fund and share account there are no ongoing fees.
You have a £12,500 income tax allowance
A starter £5,000 savings tax allowance which includes the income from bonds, investment trusts and funds.
A £2,000 dividend tax allowance.
A Ordinary savings tax allowance of £1,000 (bank savings)
Capital gains tax allowance of £12,300.
I have an income (prior to any dividends) of £120.
Even when I get my state pension, (3 years) there is virtually no chance of me paying tax.
ISA equals shite....for me.