Yo, Terry. I'm up 340+ ytd. I may just buy me a trailer yet and fook off to the great white north. Just kidding but I am saving up cause I'm gonna need a bigger boat.
fish.
Yo, Terry. I'm up 340+ ytd. I may just buy me a trailer yet and fook off to the great white north. Just kidding but I am saving up cause I'm gonna need a bigger boat.
fish.
Your dad is 98?
All the best to him fish.
I thought you were a tiddler.
No I'm a fishlocker. We got it like that. He doesn't know where the hell he is but he is still alive. I figure I'm about half dead then. I was the youngest of the family. A bit of a black sheep too as I don't think he was too happy with my choice of partner.
He did teach me how to work at a young age and I'll credit him with not only why I'm a workaholic but a part time alcoholic. When I'm not working that is. Hell by the time I was fouteen I figured I could do about anything. ..and I have. Well, still haven't jumped out of an airplane but it's on the list.
You posh cnut, we got thrashed with the belt for farting.
Bought a bit of gold and a few mining stocks. With all the nonsense going on with many of the EU nations central banks figure gold and mining stocks going to take off.
The only downside to gold is in a liquidity crunch - when folks need cash they sell stuff. Including gold.
You need to factor in th cost, and inconvenience of your visa, if you are planning to retire in Thailand. Fuckers seem intent on increasing the inconvenience factor for long stay visas.
...^I've thought about using an agent, but I don't want my passport in the hands of folks I don't know and barely trust: all it takes is one oops! and passport missing...so sorry...we pay B500 for you...
I played around with picking stocks for a while with some success.
Meanwhile, I also subscribed to an investment adviser rivkin.com.au
Comparing my own profits to those following Rivkin's advice, I decided that its worth the cost of membership (AUD2,000 for 3 years) as the average profit far outweighed that when I followed their advice.
I follow 3 of their strategies. 3 times per month, I'll get emails and sms messages reminding me to check the latest buy/sells.
They also produce a daily email and a weekly video answering any questions that members send to them.
Last year wasn't so great, down 20.5% for the full year, but this year as of today I'm up 63.5% so far.
Risk versus reward -
Reward: (for a fee) someone else deals with the frustration of Thai Immigration.
Risk: You pay the price of recovering from someone else's "oops"
Did anyone on this forum get screwed, or no of someone getting screwed by n "agent"?
What happened, and what was the resolution?
Swings like that - not for the faint of heart, "mad money" only.
When I played, many, many moon ago, long before the days of "discount" brokers, you had to sign up with a full service broker, pay anywhere from about $50 to $300 per trade, and go through a verification/validation process, which required a declarations page with each and every order (trade).
Now, I got a couple of "good" tips from her on stock trades, never made much though due to taxes and trade fees. Irritating in that she was constantly fishing, asking me about my business, businesses customers and their businesses customers. Granted, that was her job and that's where the "good" tips came from, but, irritating none the less.
https://www.rivkin.com.au/solutions/managed-accounts/
This is only a fairly new offering, I've been thinking about joining.
In a world of disappearing income, these stable (US) stocks pay a high dividend yield
Key Points
- These stocks give investors a higher yield than the overall market and the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury, thanks to their high and growing dividends and low credit risk.
- CNBC used S&P Capital IQ to screen the stocks with a dividend yield above 2%, a Standard & Poor’s credit rating of “A” or higher and 10% or more annual dividend growth over the past five years.
CNBC article ... https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/04/in-a...end-yield.html
Aussie stock market tends to pay much higher dividends than US.
Its due to the franking credits offered by ASX stocks.
Example dividend yields from large cap Aussies:
Company Stock Ticker Dividend Yield (%)
National Australia Bank (NAB) 8.10%
Stockland (SGP) 7.00%
Wesfarmers (WES) 6.40%
Westpac (WBC) 7.30%
Vicinity Centres (VCX) 6.40%
AGL Energy (AGL) 5.40%
Aurizon Holdings (AZJ) 5.40%
Scentre Group (SCG) 5.70%
Suncorp (SUN) 5.00%
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) 6.10%
If you are an Aussie tax payer, its even better because you get a tax reduction from the franking credits.
As an Aussie expat, I miss out on the franking credits, but also I don't have to pay any tax on the dividends paid to me.
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