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From: | "Dannie Hawkins" <dannie@es.co.nz> |
Date: | Tue, 9 Jan 2001 13:33:05 +1300 |
Dear John....
A few comments:
Long term should be at least 10 years.
Looking at your portfolio it seems that you have
been sold poor advice. Your adviser should have explained listed trusts
properly to you - they invest in other companies and charge a management fee.
Their share price is also subject to market fluctuation.
Your portfolio seems unstructured, with a large
weighting to Asia/Japan. Have you got a formal plan? with asset/country
allocations set out? Japan in inself is not a problem for some of your
portfolio, if you have a good stock picking manager like Kerr Neilson in
charge.
Just a note on "investment trusts" they have a
place in many portfolios, but are not the be all and end all.
They are understandably popular with share brokers
and can be temporarily? tax efficient, but are often subject to wide swings
about asset backing. They often trade at big discounts to "value" giving a
double whammy when markets drop. Combine this with no Kiwi dollar hedging and
blood can be all over the floor for quite small drops in the
markets.
You may be better to use OICs - similar tax
rules, higher annual fees but lower risk.
Australasian based unit trust managers also have
their uses.
It would probably pay for you to get an adviser who
is paid on a performance linked basis, rather than transaction oriented
way.
Hope this helps
Dannie
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