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Financial resolutions for peace of mind (and eating that toad)

Financial resolutions for peace of mind - financial advice

IN my last two columns I covered New Year’s resolutions on debt, and the psychology of that debt. Today I’ll cover the broader areas of financial advice, keeping your money safe and serving you. Avoid procrastination. There is a great book called “The Best Time to Eat a Toad”. Have a read. Simply put, if […]

25 per cent or 1.49 per cent interest on your debt

Are you struggling to pay inheritance tax in the six-month deadline? Borrowing may be an option to consider. It requires careful planning.

LAST week we covered some of the psychology behind debt, and I’ll just turn that into some practical ideas. For sure, the best outcome for us all is that we are feeling in control of our lives rather than reacting. That gravitational pull of the ‘new’ fangled shopping ‘thingy’ cedes control to the advert man. Its […]

New Year’s debt resolutions 2020

HAPPY New Year to you all and it's time to make those New Year financial resolutions.

THERE is perhaps nothing more sobering as January’s credit card bill, especially now we can ‘tap’ our way through bars at Christmas. I’ll dedicate this column to debt and managing it with further resolutions for next week. As I explain to my daughters, you can spend your life in ‘control time’ or ‘reaction time’. Which is […]

Sterling bubbles and your post-election finances

"With the expected interest rate rises to 1.5 per cent, there is a potential for loss of growth in the economy". Read this week's column.

WITH an election out of the way, what is the potential change for sterling and how will that affect your finances? Much razzmatazz in the press greeted UK readers after the Conservative victory in the election. Headlines of ‘sterling sky rockets against the euro’ were pretty mainstream. Currencies, and in particular sterling, map political uncertainty and […]

Investment inequality: 33 per cent fall or 65 per cent rise?

Investment inequality

FOR whatever money we have left after the multiple upfront or Ninja taxation, we all want to make the rest work as much as possible to give us as many options in retirement/ later life. How have stock markets performed to help your pensions/ investments? Well, it very much depends on how you look at […]

Is your pension running at 77 per cent for 514 per cent?

Are you overpaying on life insurance?

IS your pension running at 77 per cent for 514 per cent? In a world of never-ending austerity, making each pound stretch the best it can is everything. It truly baffles me how far we have come with efficiencies of computers, cars, trains and manufacturing, yet prices just seem to keep rising. It’s almost by design. […]

How will the UK election impact your money?

Just another inflation excuse

IT’S election time. How will the UK election impact your money? Gone are the days when my three available channels and a broomstick as a remote control meant there was no way to avoid a party-political broadcast. It meant as much to me as a cardboard licking competition as a child, but undoubtedly this one is […]

UK election: Salmon or damp squid?

UK election Salmon or damp squid

I SPENT a couple of weeks in Japan at the rugby world cup, and over the last year have visited a number of other countries. And without fail, the message coming through loud and clear regarding the UK is: ‘What on earth is going on’? When you are trying to watch a game with a […]

£6.6billion in overcharging closet funds

Is the FTSE100 the same as the UK economy

IF I asked most investors/pension holders what they thought was happening inside their invested money, the answers I’m sure would all correlate. You pay money to have your hard-earned cash managed to minimise risk and maximise return and you expect that. Unfortunately, that is not what happens all the time and investors are estimated to […]

How you can mitigate against paying inheritance tax

How is the mortgage market supporting house prices?

INHERITANCE Tax (IHT) is about as popular as a party-political broadcast forced into the middle of your favourite sports programme. After all, a 40 per cent tax on assets you have acquired through blood, sweat and tears seems mildly disappointing. Last year was a great one for inheritance tax collecting in the UK, with an extraordinary […]

Are we moving towards a cashless society?

Cashless society

OVER the last two weeks we covered negative interest rates and how that economic policy might be used to refuel stalling economies. The key to achieving negative interest rates is a cashless society, because without cash, below zero rates become possible. What would a cashless society look like and what are its threats and opportunities? […]

How would negative interest rates impact me?

Downsizing your home: Unlocking the door to your next chapter

I WAS going to cover a cashless society this week in relation to the negative interest rate column last week (they sort of go hand in hand), but I’ll just cover what the impact of a negative interest rate policy might be, further to a few questions I was asked. Firstly, the supposed explanation of […]