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Weekend reading

Todays’s blog of the week post comes from Tim of the ever erudite Psy-Fi blog.

Guest posting at Simoleon Sense, Tim (Richards, as we now discover) gives a whirlwind tour of behavioral investing and inefficient markets.

He points out that contrary to the nomenclature, the buying opportunity of a lifetime is a poorly named cliche – unless investing is to be dominated by ten-year olds.

From the Great Crash to World War 2 to the oil crisis in the 1970s to Black Monday in 1987, massive market dislocations actually seem to come around every ten years.

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Earn more money by tackling your mental beliefs

Earn more money by tackling your negative mental beliefs

A lot of people say they want to earn more money, but when you talk to them in a few years time they’re not doing any better.

Most people don’t actually want to be rich. Certainly not enough to do whatever it takes to get there.

There’s no shame in that. Being wealthy has its downsides, and there’s much more to life than money.

Some people are too lazy to earn more money. They say they want to increase their salary, but they’re not actually prepared to do the extra work or take on the responsibility required.

Or else it’s not the very real risks of starting a business that holds them back, but inertia. They sit in front of their PC night after night ‘researching’, but there’s always just one more website to read, or one more funny pet video on YouTube.

Such people may also fear making the changes in themselves that are required to earn more money.

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Cash and your portfolio

How much cash should you hold in your portfolio?

I believe cash is king of the asset classes, which might come as a surprise given that I most often talk about investing in equities (by buying shares in companies).

But equities are a necessary evil that come with big downsides:

  • There’s relatively high costs involved in buying and trading equities, even in cheap index funds.
  • If you buy individual shares you can lose all your investment (though this risk is easily avoided by using an index tracker or an ETF portfolio).

The case for investing in equities is that over long periods in the UK (and even more so in the U.S.), equities have beaten the returns from all other asset classes.

But investing isn’t just about getting the highest returns.

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Mitigating capital gains tax on your investments

Avoiding capital gains tax

Note: This guide to mitigating capital gains tax in the UK was updated in June 2011. 

Most people won’t ever need to consider trying to reduce the hit from capital gains tax, because they’ll never be liable to pay it.

Your home and car are exempt from UK capital gains tax, as are personal belongings worth less than £6,000 when you sell them, and the average person has few other assets outside of cash, pensions, and ISAs – which are all exempt, too.

You also get a personal capital gains tax allowance every tax year (from 6th April to 5th April), which is usually sufficient for avoiding capital gains tax bills.

  • The allowance is currently £10,600 in gains a year, where a gain is the increase in the value of the asset between buying and selling it. You subtract capital losses from capital gains to arrive at your total gain for the year. (Note: Gains and losses are only ‘realised’ when you sell).

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