You cannot go wrong with the Tsumitate Nisa and the Emaxis Slim All Country Fund.
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This is exactly me! Thanks!
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plan to do one each of the regular NISA 1.2million each...Kanto wrote: ↑Wed Feb 24, 2021 2:22 amAre you planning one Regular NISA, or one apiece?bryanc wrote: ↑Wed Feb 24, 2021 1:41 am
my wife and i have enough to do the lump sum asap -this is what our plan was and which you kindly suggest would be the best way forward if
funds available.
however,the one thing that gives me pause is that (as people say) im worried about it being time limited and thus vulnerable to a market dip
(not being invested for the length of time reqd for the law of averages to work)
If it is only 1 account, it might be better to do 2 Tsumitates each.
This is exactly me! Thanks!Roger Van Zant wrote: ↑Wed Feb 24, 2021 5:30 am I do not understand all of this and I am overwhelmed.
You cannot go wrong with the Tsumitate Nisa and the Emaxis Slim All Country Fund.
After the first 5 years, you have to submit an online form at the end of each year to say you want to rollover to the next year.
True, but in principle the same thing happens with Tsumitate, doesn't it? If you max out 400k a year for 20 years, after that everything additional would need to go into a taxable account.fools_gold wrote: ↑Wed Feb 24, 2021 10:27 pm The big problem with the regular NISA is what to do if you plan on continuing to invest long term.
Once you hit 5 years, you can rollover. Each rollover uses up that year's NISA allowance so any new investments must go into a taxable account.
Assuming you have 1.2 million yen to invest every year with an investment horizon of 20+ years you can either put it all into a regular NISA (until it ends) for 10 years followed by 10 years in taxable, or put 400k in a Tsumitate NISA and 800k in a taxable account.beanhead wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 12:14 am True, but in principle the same thing happens with Tsumitate, doesn't it? If you max out 400k a year for 20 years, after that everything additional would need to go into a taxable account.
So the differences are the total amounts (6M vs 8M), and the time period, 5+5 years (assuming rollover) vs 20 years for tsumitate. That somewhat nice-to-have problem of maxing out your tax-free allowance comes after 5 or 10 years with the regular NISA. I think...
Hmmm this is quite reassuring actually. This is what my wife and I are doing currentlyfools_gold wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 1:34 am For shorter time periods the regular NISA obviously wins out, but as you reach 20 years the taxable capital gains for both scenarios are pretty similar (that's assuming returns of 6-7%). The advantage of the Tsumitate + taxable combination is that you don't run into the problem of what to do in rollover years.
Until they add Rollover for Tsumitate a few years down the linefools_gold wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 1:34 am The advantage of the Tsumitate + taxable combination is that you don't run into the problem of what to do in rollover years.
Reassuring for me too. Spent the last couple of years building up the emergency fund, tsumitate and iDeco. Now the emergency fund is where we want it there's about 100k a month going in to the taxable. Nice to know I'm on the right path.Kanto wrote: ↑Thu Feb 25, 2021 1:49 am
Hmmm this is quite reassuring actually. This is what my wife and I are doing currently
- 2 x Tsumitates (Front-loaded)
- 1x Junior Nisa
- 2 X ideCo (68,000+12,000)
- Anything over the our emergency fund in our taxable.
With Tsumitate+Rakuten Credit Card you can also earn those free points. About 8man over the course of a Tsumutate, with a maximum of 12man with Tusmitate+taxable over 20 years. Which is not nothing! (Which also compounds because you can use those points to purchases trusts through Rakuten.
Which would be around 30man at 8% interest over 20 years.![]()