nebbie question - how to choose funds for ideco?
Posted: Sat Dec 16, 2017 8:15 am
Hi,
I'm currently looking into the ideco with my wife (she's Japanese, I'm from England but fairly fluent/literate), one obstacle we've come up against is that since neither of us know anything about this kind of finance (to be honest until a few weeks ago I thought anything involving stocks, shares etc involved active management and significant risk) we are at a loss as to how to go about choosing funds (is that the right word?) when we sign up with an ideco provider (SBI or Rakuten seem to be popular, tho I can't say I have any idea of the reasons for this...). Can anyone offer any pointers? I think we are more interested in low risk than high return. i'm partly confused because I've seen a few people on this forum seem to be spreading their investment around in a way that I really don't understand at all
One other question: does the ideco being tax deductible mean my kokuminkenkouhoken will also come down in line with the tax deduction, or is that calculated on income before tax?
Brief background on our situation: I'm 43 and work as a hijoukin lecturer for several universities, my wife does administrative work, we've paid off our house and now want to save for retirement - perhaps by 60 tho I enjoy my teaching work so will probably cheerfully continue doing at least some of it until 70.
thanks for any help anyone can offer, and thanks retirejapan for a very helpful site.
I'm currently looking into the ideco with my wife (she's Japanese, I'm from England but fairly fluent/literate), one obstacle we've come up against is that since neither of us know anything about this kind of finance (to be honest until a few weeks ago I thought anything involving stocks, shares etc involved active management and significant risk) we are at a loss as to how to go about choosing funds (is that the right word?) when we sign up with an ideco provider (SBI or Rakuten seem to be popular, tho I can't say I have any idea of the reasons for this...). Can anyone offer any pointers? I think we are more interested in low risk than high return. i'm partly confused because I've seen a few people on this forum seem to be spreading their investment around in a way that I really don't understand at all
One other question: does the ideco being tax deductible mean my kokuminkenkouhoken will also come down in line with the tax deduction, or is that calculated on income before tax?
Brief background on our situation: I'm 43 and work as a hijoukin lecturer for several universities, my wife does administrative work, we've paid off our house and now want to save for retirement - perhaps by 60 tho I enjoy my teaching work so will probably cheerfully continue doing at least some of it until 70.
thanks for any help anyone can offer, and thanks retirejapan for a very helpful site.