Hi, I'm looking to purchase a fund on Rakuten and was wondering what this means.
分配金コース
「受取型」と「再投資型」
What happens if I select 「再投資型」?
Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
If its a fund that gives out "dividends" the 受取型 means you receive the money. 再投資 means they take the money and reinvest by buying more units of the fund.
Do note though that 再投資 is tax inefficient since you'd be taxed on the profit you make every time the fund gives out these dividends (not really an issue on NISA since its tax free).
Do note though that 再投資 is tax inefficient since you'd be taxed on the profit you make every time the fund gives out these dividends (not really an issue on NISA since its tax free).
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
That's the case regardless of which option you select.
The real alternative for tax efficiency is to select a fund that reinvests dividends internally. Most of the index funds do this, and technically pay out a dividend of 0, making this choice mostly meaningless.
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Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
I read that tsumitate Nisa is for a one year. What happens after one year? The account gets cancelled and I have to apply again and rebuy the funds?
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
My understanding (don’t take my word for it!) is that is just rolls over. You don’t need a new account or anything. But your limit just refreshes.germanium9 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 29, 2021 6:17 am I read that tsumitate Nisa is for a one year. What happens after one year? The account gets cancelled and I have to apply again and rebuy the funds?
Please correct me if I’m wrong anyone as I’ve yet to have a full year and just took it to be the same as the U.K. ISA
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
Tsumitate Nisa is for 20 years. The limit of 400k yen is an annual limit. You might be getting the terms mixed up.germanium9 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 29, 2021 6:17 am I read that tsumitate Nisa is for a one year. What happens after one year? The account gets cancelled and I have to apply again and rebuy the funds?
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
Just to be 100% clear, by this we mean that the tax-free period is for up to 20 years.
It is not necessary to keep the investment for the full 20 years if you do not want to. It will usually be optimal to hold for the full period, but it is not required.
NISA and tsumitate NISA are more flexible than iDeCo, which in principle cannot be touched until 60 years old.
Aiming to retire at 60 and live for a while longer. 95% index funds (eMaxis Slim etc), 5% Japanese dividend stocks.
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Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
Just to check
Let’s say I invested ¥10,000 every month in Fund A for this year under Tsumitate NISA. For the next year, can I switch to another fund (Fund B)? What happens to the money invested in Fund A? I can just leave it in there to grow right?
Let’s say I invested ¥10,000 every month in Fund A for this year under Tsumitate NISA. For the next year, can I switch to another fund (Fund B)? What happens to the money invested in Fund A? I can just leave it in there to grow right?
Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
As per my understanding (I use the regular NISA not Tsumitate NISA), you can switch (It's called "switching") to whatever funds you want to invest in at any time, you don't have to wait till the new year... Example: JAN, FEB, MAR - Fund A. APR, MAY - Fund B, JUN - back to Fund A etc...germanium9 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 30, 2021 12:20 am Just to check
Let’s say I invested ¥10,000 every month in Fund A for this year under Tsumitate NISA. For the next year, can I switch to another fund (Fund B)? What happens to the money invested in Fund A? I can just leave it in there to grow right?
Yes. Those investments you made in the first year can grow tax free for the next 20yrs. You can't add any more investments to that year, but you can sell some if you wish... But again, you won't be able to top up what you took out...What happens to the money invested in Fund A? I can just leave it in there to grow right?
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Re: Tsumitate Nisa Beginner Question
It might help to rephrase this slightly.germanium9 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 30, 2021 12:20 am Just to check
Let’s say I invested ¥10,000 every month in Fund A for this year under Tsumitate NISA. For the next year, can I switch to another fund (Fund B)? What happens to the money invested in Fund A? I can just leave it in there to grow right?
The NISA account is a receptacle. You can buy things within this and then sell them if you want to.
Each month you are buying pieces of fund A. Later on you can buy pieces of fund B. You still have the pieces of fund A you bought previously.
If you sell the pieces of fund A, you get the cash but you don't get to replace them inside the NISA account. You used up your NISA allocation and don't get it back.
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