Haha.
I wouldn't recommend investing like this unless you have a lot of free time to watch the market and consistently be buying and selling. I think you are UK based, so you should also be aware of how capital gains taxes work there as those can take a chunk out of your profits.
I would recommend having a serious think about what it is you want your money to do for you. Do you want a steady source of income, i.e. are you chasing dividend payments? Then you probably want to look at your blue chips.
Do you want to grow your savings rather than have it sit there and do nothing? This is where I found myself. I'm not an active investor and because of my work I am quite restricted in what I can and can't trade in; I also don't have the time to be monitoring the market to be buying & selling on the regular. This is where your ETF's come in. Look for some reputable funds which have a solid 5 to 10 year history of outperforming the market (really anything that grows > 7% per annum and in particular see how they performed during the GFC) and diversify across those (I'd go one which tracks against your local index; one which tracks against global indexes; one which tracks against emerging markets). I've managed to grow my savings by ~$20k by just having it sit in ETFs rather than in my savings accounts.
Those aren't crazy gains but for someone who isn't an active investor its nothing to sneeze at.
I wouldn't recommend investing like this unless you have a lot of free time to watch the market and consistently be buying and selling. I think you are UK based, so you should also be aware of how capital gains taxes work there as those can take a chunk out of your profits.
I would recommend having a serious think about what it is you want your money to do for you. Do you want a steady source of income, i.e. are you chasing dividend payments? Then you probably want to look at your blue chips.
Do you want to grow your savings rather than have it sit there and do nothing? This is where I found myself. I'm not an active investor and because of my work I am quite restricted in what I can and can't trade in; I also don't have the time to be monitoring the market to be buying & selling on the regular. This is where your ETF's come in. Look for some reputable funds which have a solid 5 to 10 year history of outperforming the market (really anything that grows > 7% per annum and in particular see how they performed during the GFC) and diversify across those (I'd go one which tracks against your local index; one which tracks against global indexes; one which tracks against emerging markets). I've managed to grow my savings by ~$20k by just having it sit in ETFs rather than in my savings accounts.
Those aren't crazy gains but for someone who isn't an active investor its nothing to sneeze at.
Long term. I'm looking to invest in dividend shares. Looking at GSK, Coke, HSBC etc That's where I'm happy with putting my money.
Although, I'm interested in crypto to ride the waves at the right time. Take a chunk of my stake out. And then see what happens long term. XRP interests me because at the end of Feb it will either be a good investment or a shit show. I haven't invested more than I'm prepared to lose
I'm still reading up on how best to invest. I gave on it all because of the commissions 10 years ago. But these don't seem to be as relevant today. I'll look into ETFs