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The Fat Wallet Show from Just One Lap

The Fat Wallet Show is a show about questions. It’s about admitting that we don’t know everything, but that we’re willing to learn. Most of all, it’s about understanding as much as we can to make us all better investors. Phrases like, “I’m not sure” or, “Let me look that up and get back to you” or, “I don’t know” don’t exist in the financial services industry. If you ever had a financial question you were too embarrassed to ask, you know what we’re talking about. In this business, appearances matter, and nobody wants to seem like they don’t know how things work or what the outlook is for the buchu industry. It’s easy to excuse that little vanity, except that people in the investment industry are meant to service investors - people like you and me who need to figure out what to do with our money. There’s no such thing as a stupid question in this show. If you have unanswered financial questions, this is your opportunity to have them answered in a way that even I can understand. Pop them to us at ask@justonelap.com. Hosted by Kristia van Heerden and Simon Brown
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Now displaying: March, 2018
Mar 25, 2018

So many Fat Wallet listeners are diligently setting money aside for their kids. We often field questions about investments and suitable investment vehicles for children. Being able to send your child into adult life with enough money is a noble aspiration.

We don’t often encounter people who benefited from this type of financial leg-up, making it difficult to guess at the impact it has. This week, listener Pieter let us in on his experience as the beneficiary of this sort of parenting. He also tells us why he doesn’t think it helped as much as it could have.

He writes:

The biggest financial issue for my dad has always been paying off their house. He used to say that he would have done much more with us as younger kids if he didn’t have that debt. He took it upon himself to make sure my sister and myself get a good, debt-free start to adult life. We are very fortunate that he helped us buy our first house cash, and had some money left to invest. For this I am truly grateful.

BUT!  

My financial education was as follows:

At age 10 my dad gave me a little book and a pen and told me I need to write down my allowance and spending. It took all of 20 seconds and I think I wrote one line in that book. I never saw him do it and he never asked me about it again.

More than decade was wasted simply because I was not financially literate. Worst of all, it lead to the mismanagement of the assets with which we were entrusted. If I knew at 18 what I knew at 33, I would have been much closer to retirement.

To save oodles of money for your kids is a nice gesture, but teaching them about that money makes the biggest impact.

Both my kids have TFSA ETF accounts at Absa and that is all fine and well. But I am making an effort even at their young age to educate them about money. Once they’re older they will be included in budget talks and planning, know about salaries and about their investments. I want them to work with money and make mistakes while I am still there to catch them.

You also mentioned in the podcast that talking to your kids about finance means you should fix yours. I also feel that you should include them in your failures. Learning comes from failure so go at it :D

We live on a farm and pay the kids allowance for chores using poker chips. It’s a mission to have a bunch of 1 rands everywhere.

We soon realized that we we’re running out of poker chips and had to make a plan.

I built a small "bank" for them where they can deposit their poker chips. I added some budget functionality and my plan is to add some interest dynamics when they are older. I put it online for some friends to use and figured you can point other parents to if you want. (I gain nothing from people using it. I just like to share). 

Moola Bank


Shane wins second prize, for putting his money where fees aren’t.

Thanks for the great on TFSA Transfers!

I've decided to be a guinea pig, and initiate my transfer out of those super high fee people (Old Mutual), and into the safety of my EasyEquities account.

It's been fairly painless so far, all I did was call each provider, told them what I want to do, and they mailed through the forms.

Now the 10 day waiting game begins.

Kris



Richard Watson reckons the time for silver investing has come and gone.

The listener who wanted to put all his cash into silver might want to move half into vanilla!


Dirk is looking for a place to invest for his little girls.

Seems as if Sygnia has quite a reputable TFSA with lowest costs I have seen in the market thus far.

I am thinking about opening a TFSA for each of my little girls in the near future.


We’d like to commiserate with our friend Petrus for paying a rental management firm 10% commission every month for no good reason.

Been paying these fuckers 10% commission for more than a year for nothing!! Anyway, just another point for NEVER buying!! I have a good tenant (well, I hope as I'm sitting in Germany), so I will be dealing directly with him until I get to sell the piece of shit property.

He also has an excellent point regarding emergency funds.

Just a quick sanity check. Why should I not use my credit card as an emergency fund? It seems wasteful to have say three months worth of living expenses sitting in cash not earning anything. Surely with the 58 days (I think) interest free you get with your credit card this gives you enough time to draw money from your investment (of course not your TFSA) before you have to pay interest.

I guess there is a good reason you keep this in cash, but I am not sure what this is.

 

  • Fees
  • If you use your credit card because you lost your job, how will you pay it back?

 


Perwez wants to help his wife find an index-tracking RA

My wife recently resigned from her job and now has her retirement funds available to invest.

I’ve told her the best option would be to open an RA with what she has rather than converting it to a provident or preservation fund.

I’m a firm believer in passive funds and I have been doing some research in what is available within RA wrappers. Other than the usual suspects (below), do you know of any other passive RA products/wrappers?

Thus far, Im leaning towards a 50/40 split between the Prescient balanced fund and the Nedgroup Core Accelerated funds, both of which are available on Momentum Wealth's RA LISP (the only platform I know of that has both funds available) and adding the remaining 10% to an index tracker focusing on property.

  • Prescient balanced fund
  • Nedgroup Core funds
  • Satrix balanced fund
  • Sygnia Skeleton funds
  • 10X
  • Easy Equities RA funds
  • ETFSA funds
  • ABSA core RA passive fund (although latest factsheet is from Sep 2016)

Hannes has literally sold the farm - or part of it, at least.

I‘ve sold part of the farm and must now invest the money wisely.

Everybody tells you to see a certified financial adviser - I am still to meet such a creature.

The inputs I have had creates more confusion than clarity and I get the distinct feeling that a corporate overseer is involved and that fees are not realistic.

Can you give me some pointers?   

Is there anybody that is knowledgeable about trusts since the property is in a trust?

In the podcast we recommend that Hannes get in touch with Craig Gradidge. You can contact him here

Miles compared a bunch of balanced funds and found that the NewFunds MAPPS Growth ETF outperformed the others by a huge amount.

Although it’s overweight Naspers, at a TER of 0.20% - great.

Even a medium risk TFSA blend would probably battle to beat this growth!

I seriously think, for a TFSA portfolio of ETFs, MAPPS could have  about 20% allocation.

To remind you, this ETF has:

Cash (4.56%)

Equity (75.65%)

Inflation-Linked Government Bonds (9.11%)

Nominal Government Bonds (10.68%)


Marlene has a financial responsibility vs lifestyle balance issue.

I am saving a lot for retirement and not so much for the things I want to do, which is travel. I feel like my brain is in save mode.

All of a sudden I am anxious to save for everything. From a deposit for my next car, to a deposit  for country house (when I retire) or nice-to-have item.

How can I balance the two as I grow older, seeing as I am 31? I want to retire comfortably but also travel. I feel like I cannot just focus solely on my retirement portfolio and medical expenses, but want to travel and enjoy life whilst in my 30s. I opened the ETF accounts to utilize when I retire. Hopefully they will grow as I reinvest dividends, and the market doesn't collapse like 2008.

Should I resume my investment strategy as is, or should I look at other ways of growing my portfolio? Please also advise if I am saving too much for retirement/ future medical expenses as opposed to doing things I want (travel).

Mar 18, 2018

A few weeks ago I attended a 10X event in Johannesburg. Being a low-cost retirement annuity (RA)  provider, obviously much of the discussion centred around fees. Steven Nathan, who runs 10X, did an analysis of a statement sent by an old-school retirement product provider. He used the real example to illustrate how impossible it can be to figure out what we’re actually paying for our investments.

Listener Jenny Pigeon (a nom de plume, if you will) had the same experience this month. She’s been investing with Allan Gray for 16 years but never thought to check her fees until she discovered The Fat Wallet Show.

She sent her statements on to me, hoping I could help her figure them out. Since I’m of the new school (0% platform fee, 0.25% brokerage, 0.1% TER), I couldn’t. Simon had brushed up against these sort of products and still has an Allan Gray product. He couldn’t do it either.

It took two weeks before Jenny, Simon and I got to some sort of answer, which wasn’t too bad, actually. In this episode we talk about the process, why successful investing means you’ll inevitably pay more than you contribute and how little we like the percentage of assets business model.

We also decided to include my preparation notes to try to make the topics more searchable. It’s not as great a solution as a transcription. However, it’s a free solution. And some (us, mostly) would say that’s the best solution.

Kris


Christoff Gouws sent a link about the P/E Ratio of the S&P 500. http://www.multpl.com/shiller-pe/

It is a great way to guage the “value” within the whole S&P500 (for example when planning on buying some more ETFs tracking this index).  As you know, when evaluating single stocks, any P/E ratio above 20 is considered “overvalued” or “expensive”. To this, an interesting thought is the current “overvalued price” of the whole S&P500, since the Shiller P/E Ratio currently stands at 32.38!  More market-correction (as was seen in the last few weeks) is needed I guess!

Win of the week:

Me, for figuring out this thing about total return ETFs.

A total return ETF reinvests dividends instead of paying them out to you. The idea is that you save on the brokerage, because there’s no charge. This only works if you want to use your dividends to buy the same ETF.

However, you do get taxed on the dividends before they’re reinvested.

What I learned:

Once you get taxed, they don’t actually buy more ETF units. They simply add the value of the dividends to the NAV of the ETF. When you sell the ETF at a profit, your CGT is calculated based on the sell price minus the buy price. But your sell price now includes dividends you already paid tax on.

We need a spreadsheet ninja to work out when your CGT becomes more than your brokerage. We also need to work out if this applies to bond ETFs.

I also wanted to send a shout-out to Warren. He says:

Today is both a happy and a sad day. Happy/ relieved that I have FINALLY finished listening to ALL the fat wallet show podcasts, including all bonus episodes, Christmas and the like and a sad day as now I have to wait for the new ones to come out (I don't even know when these are released as I would download them as I go, on free office WiFi of course).

I would just like to say thank you both for putting this together. I am a 26yr old Investment Analyst (so not as cool as your engineer or doctor friends haha) and currently also studying towards my CFA charter. Its refreshing listening to this podcast as its takes all the complicated things I deal with on a daily basis and states them in a nicer simpler way. The links to the IG and other webinars are also great.


We inspired Jenny Pigeon to confront her investment fees for the first time.

I am in my early 60’s and would like to retire fairly soon. I am self-employed and instead of taking out a retirement annuity I have "paid my self first”  and paid regularly into Allan Gray.

Since my new addiction of listening to you and Simon on The Fat Wallet Show, I have decided, for the first time ever, to read my Allan Gray Quarterly Statement.

There are about 20+ different funds on my platform. I have asked Allan Gray to send me the total fees for the quarter in rands, as I find the maths a bit complicated with so many different funds with different fees.

My fear is that my annual contribution (R240,000) could in fact be less than my annual management fees.

I would love to make significant changes to reduce costs and therefore improve my investment performance.

She does have another problem. She’s become friends with her advisor, so I want to try to help her understand and simplify her fees without burning bridges.

She sent a statement. And then some more statements with the rand amount for the period. Then there was a Twitter storm. In the end, I managed to work out:

She pays more in fees than their monthly contribution of R20,000. Based on the latest info, fee is 0.78%.

Paying more than your contribution in fees isn’t impossible. If you contributed R1500 to an ETF and ended up with R1m, at a TER of 0.15% your contribution would match your fees.

In one account she’s invested in nearly 30 different funds, including one that "reduced the minimum fee from 0.70% to 0.60%, the maximum fee from 2.10% to 2.00% and the fee at benchmark from 0.85% to 0.75%."

Only 8 have an investment management fee under 1%. 11 have investment management fees over 1.5%. Average investment management fee cost over funds, 1.5%. Excludes platform admin of 0.23%.

This fee excludes Annual Administration Fees, Annual Financial adviser fees and

Initial financial adviser fees.

She also has a second account, which includes five more Allan Gray funds - some of them feeder funds, some UTs. The investment management fee for all of those comes to 1.98%.

“Some annual administration fees are deducted within the unit trust and are included in the investment management fee.”

Some feedback that I got from Twitter.

Let’s start with, when was the investment made or moved to the AG LISP? Looks like you are trying to stir up some attention here. 😉

 

  • She set up the fund in the early 2000s.

 

Doesn't sound right...Allan Gray caps the annual fee at 1%. An initial fee can only be charged once.

 

  • All the statements she sent included an initial advisor fee as well as an annual advisor fee

 

Passive? Which index is the UT tracking?

 

  • Turns out, she has some passive like the Satrix ALSI and the MSCI World, but in the smaller account all of her funds are actively managed.

 

Two people said the advisor is the one to blame:

More of an advisor problem than AG. You can get Nedgroup Core Diversified and Core accelerated trackers for a exactly 1 percent (inclusive) on AGs platform.

This is a function of the advisor screwing the client. Important not to bad mouth the platform, active management or underlying funds.

Kris



Georgie wants to save on bond insurance.

18 months ago I took out a home loan for R1 million.

I managed to pay off R400 000 in the first year.

Now I am paying the remaining R600 000 in monthly instalments, with no adjustments to the interest.

To qualify for the home loan, I was required to take out full bond insurance.

I’m paying a monthly amount of just under R500 to insure the R1m bond, only 60% of which I would actually use if the situation arose that I was unable to pay.

I have asked the bank for my "principal amount" of R1m to be re-evaluated, with no joy, just a convoluted answer about having to take out another home loan, which I would then need another Offer To Purchase for, which seems ridiculous.

How can I work this situation so that I'm not overpaying for home loan interest and insurance?


Madelyne says we’re wrong about the Satrix 0.1% TER.

Currently on etfsa, it is listed at 0.31%.

That makes the Ashburton top 40 with a TER of 0.16% more attractive.


Wealth needs help making choices about their tax-free account.

I have previously invested in the tax-free Allan Gray balanced fund, and although it is a good fund the fees are far too high (TER of higher than 1%).

I am glad I can move from this year, but I am not sure what to take and what to do with the new allowance.

I like the ETF options as discussed in you one ETF to rule them all show but are looking at REITs as well.

Reason being that the dividends from REITs are taxed as normal income outside of a TFSA. This makes the TFSA a bit of a hack for a good future passive income in retirement.

I am just not sure what good options there are, I  know ABSA’s property equity fund is very good but again fees are a stumble.


Edwin wants to diversify his property portfolio.

I have three investment properties and would like to diversify my wealth.

Two of these are paid up and the last one will be in about two years’ time.

Is there a way I can use my paid up properties to get a lump sum of cash that I can use to put into ETFs without selling the properties? The rentals already go towards paying off the 3rd property. I’m trying to diversify by stealth.


Lawrence says we’ve been giving him sleepless nights following our single ETF strategy show.

He has some shorter-term objectives in his TFSA, but thinks that he can afford to be slightly more risk tolerant. He’s thinking about:

a combination of 2 ETFs - one high risk with the majority of my holding per year and one low risk for when I reach a level I feel I should sell out and trade into the more stable ETF.

An example could be something with high exposure into Emerging Market or a Resource ETF and a Top 40 ETF as a combo.

Normal ETF Account

Then on my normal ETF profile, just to keep it plain and simple with something to keep putting money into over time and not looking for any special returns.


Mbasa wants to know if RAs and provident funds can really be counted towards your net worth.

On disposal of ETFs and Unit Trusts, do you pay CGT?


Colin’s friend is being threatened with fees.

I sent a copy of this week's newsletter to a mate who seems to be stuck with a 'policy'

He replied to me that he cannot cancel the policy until he is 55 and that the broker has threatened to charge all admin fees until the end of the policy. Or words to that effect.

Is this type of stuff legal, and who is the best person to give some advice?


Shaunton wants an RA without an advisor.

Simon mentioned that he has an RA that don't have any financial adviser involved?

What is a good platform that one can use to invest in your RA without using financial advisers?

What is good DIY RA options to investigate, which products to use?


Nehal took his TFSA situation into his own hands like a boss.

It took just one secure message while on the share trading platform and they moved my portfolio from the internet banking site with a R10 monthly fee to the share trading platform at zero monthly or annual fee and just the trading fee.

However since we can now transfer or TFSAs can you please make a mini podcast just with what Simon said about ABSA being the cheapest and that we can now transfer.

Mar 11, 2018

Last week I was lucky enough to join my ETF inspiration Nerina Visser on ETF Investor on Business Day TV. We attempt to answer the ETF questions of a beginner investor who invested in an Easy Equities basket.

This week’s Fat Wallet is the audio of that programme. You can watch the videos below.


Kris


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Mar 4, 2018

We can finally move our tax-free accounts - in theory. In this week’s episode, we consider the curious case of Rama, who is getting properly shafted in their tax-free account. We use their misfortune to help you work out whether you should be moving your tax-free account. We also issue some warnings about being on the front line.

We have very unflattering things to say about Old Mutual. By sheer fluke, three listeners wrote us about three different ludicrously expensive Old Mutual products. Aside from the actual fees you pay on these products, you are also robbed of your peace of mind. Even people who made all the right choices to provide for retirement have come out behind because they were sold products that didn’t have the investor’s best interests at heart.

If you suspect you are holding a product that isn’t 100% geared to benefiting you, do something about it today. How do you know? Check your fees. There are very few financial products these days that cost more than 1% per year. Just to be clear, that’s a percentage of your total investment.

We also offer some ideas to a listener who feels out of control of his retirement savings. We explain how understanding your regional exposure, sectoral exposure, fees and asset allocation can help you plot a way forward for your investment lifetime.

Kris


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