adamu wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:09 pm
If the market drops while you are drip feeding from a taxable account, more taxable funds will get put into the NISA faster, and if prices then recover, the larger amount will be tax protected.
I see what you mean. Since the sell/buy orders are based on cash value and not number of units, we'll be buying more units for the same price. But there's the risk of running out of money before the NISA is filled.
adamu wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:09 pm
I think you are dealing with the lump sum vs. DCA dilemma, it's not really a NISA question:
Yes, I suppose it is a "lump sum vs DCA" dilemma in regard to the holding account (taxable). I generally prefer DCA so maybe that's why option 2 is a little worrying to me.
I've since realised that in practice I will only be able to lump sum my taxable account and not my wife's, because I want to avoid gift tax as much as possible. This is the only tax I try to avoid because I strongly disagree with the principle of not sharing assets between husband and wife. So I'll continue to drip feed my wife's NISA with cash. If the tax office gets me then fair enough... but I don't want to make it easy for them.
Unless... (thinking aloud) I put the whole lot in my taxable account, then drip feed both NISAs from there?
sutebayashi wrote: ↑Fri Feb 21, 2025 9:53 pm
In a taxable account dump the lump sum into something like eMAXIS Developed Markets Bond fund.
Sell it off as you need to over four years to fund NISA purchases in tsumitate fashion.
...
Thanks sutebayashi, I'll give this some thought. Initial concern is the fund's value falling due to an increasingly stronger yen and weaker USD, GBP, etc.
Away from keyboard this weekend so I'll get back to this next week. Thanks all.