research progresses..... questions about ideco/nisa/other investing
Posted: Tue Feb 13, 2018 10:59 pm
hi all,
so, we've been doing some reading (millionaire teacher, takegawa 確定拠出年金 and はじめての投資信託) and have the application packs for SBI and Rakuten Ideco.
Millionaire teacher says: index funds, balanced between bonds and stocks - ok, I think we understand that.
It seems hard to choose between SBI and Rakuten, SBI has more products to choose from but when looking at low-cost index funds it seems the choice is not so broad, and on a more practical level Rakuten booklets and website are more user friendly (so easier for us newbies) so I think that's the direction we'll go in. We'll both do rakuten so we'll be able to talk to each other about what we are seeing on our respective accounts - having to learn 2 websites and try to translate between them seems like adding unnecessary complications.....
According to millionaire teacher we want index funds, according to takegawa the 手数料 makes a big difference so going for the low cost index, rakuten has a vanguard 国内 and 国外 株式 funds - i read good things about vanguard and those happen to have the lowest 手数料 so that's easy.
So:
国内債権:たわらノーロード国内債券 (0.162%)
海外債権: たわらノーロード先進国債権 (0.216%) - but: QUESTION 1: do we want the 為替えヘッジ or not? I don't understand the difference, 手数料 seems to be the same either way
国内株式:楽天バンガード (0.2396%)
海外株式:楽天バンガード (0.1696%)
QUESTION 2:
wonderwife has been reading on the internet and apparently since ideco and nisa are tax free it's worth biasing for profit (ie stocks) in these (presumably we'd have more bonds in our normal investment account). Couch potato would be 50/50, our age in bonds would be about 40/60 (I'm 43, wonderwife is 40) or we could push to 20/80 in nisa and ideco and then have a more balanced normal investment account. Does this make sense, or should we go with the 40/60 for ideco as well as other accounts?
QUESTION 3:
How and where do we apply for a normal investment account? and should we get one account or 2 - one each (presumably putting equal into each, with the same stock/bond ratio)
thanks for any replies, was feeling a bit overwhelmed but having done some reading and with the application materials in front of us we think we are getting somewhere....
so, we've been doing some reading (millionaire teacher, takegawa 確定拠出年金 and はじめての投資信託) and have the application packs for SBI and Rakuten Ideco.
Millionaire teacher says: index funds, balanced between bonds and stocks - ok, I think we understand that.
It seems hard to choose between SBI and Rakuten, SBI has more products to choose from but when looking at low-cost index funds it seems the choice is not so broad, and on a more practical level Rakuten booklets and website are more user friendly (so easier for us newbies) so I think that's the direction we'll go in. We'll both do rakuten so we'll be able to talk to each other about what we are seeing on our respective accounts - having to learn 2 websites and try to translate between them seems like adding unnecessary complications.....
According to millionaire teacher we want index funds, according to takegawa the 手数料 makes a big difference so going for the low cost index, rakuten has a vanguard 国内 and 国外 株式 funds - i read good things about vanguard and those happen to have the lowest 手数料 so that's easy.
So:
国内債権:たわらノーロード国内債券 (0.162%)
海外債権: たわらノーロード先進国債権 (0.216%) - but: QUESTION 1: do we want the 為替えヘッジ or not? I don't understand the difference, 手数料 seems to be the same either way
国内株式:楽天バンガード (0.2396%)
海外株式:楽天バンガード (0.1696%)
QUESTION 2:
wonderwife has been reading on the internet and apparently since ideco and nisa are tax free it's worth biasing for profit (ie stocks) in these (presumably we'd have more bonds in our normal investment account). Couch potato would be 50/50, our age in bonds would be about 40/60 (I'm 43, wonderwife is 40) or we could push to 20/80 in nisa and ideco and then have a more balanced normal investment account. Does this make sense, or should we go with the 40/60 for ideco as well as other accounts?
QUESTION 3:
How and where do we apply for a normal investment account? and should we get one account or 2 - one each (presumably putting equal into each, with the same stock/bond ratio)
thanks for any replies, was feeling a bit overwhelmed but having done some reading and with the application materials in front of us we think we are getting somewhere....