Thank you Bubblegun - that is very useful info.
I think I will probably keep my current Saison NISA for the time being and open a new tsumitate NISA with Rakuten for my wife with a different broker. I will probably also open a JNISA and put the maximum Y800 000 in there. Then open a couple of new NISA accounts next year and put whatever funds are available into those.
As far as I understand, the maximum will be 2.4M and not 3.6M per year for a regular NISA up to 18M. Or am I wrong about that?beanhead wrote: ↑Wed Mar 29, 2023 12:07 pm
We all have different attitudes to risk and different investing experiences.
Your experience is that this fund has done well for you, whereas the S&P500 fund has not. As you said, it was all that was available, so you did what you needed to do to take care of your family.
If your S&P500 investment is fairly recent, then poor performance can be explained by the drop in value of most markets over the last couple of years. Many of us have seen the same fall in values. After around 2 years, my iDeCo is slightly negative.
Is it worth selling them? Only you can decide.
I would be inclined to initially move all new investment money to eMaxis Slim in the NISA. Once you trust that this is a good strategy for you, then maybe it makes sense to sell the other funds to add to your NISA.
*New NISA is not unlimited. You will be able to invest 3.6M yen per year, up to a maximum of 18M per person in the NISA account.
I was thinking along the same lines - from next year invest as much as possible in the something like eMaxis Slim in the new NISAs and then move other funds in there at a later date if it seems wise.
I have another question. I understand the rationale for a tsumitate NISA being the best bet if you are opening a NISA in 2023. But am I right in saying that in the new NISA in 2024, the regular type seems like the best bet if you have the money sitting around and want to maximize returns in the long-term? Also there is a wider variety of investment products available for consideration in a regular NISA compared to a tsumitate NISA, right?