Scottish Daily Mail

It’s never been easier to make yourself an Isa MILLIONAIR­E

- By Miles Dilworth m.dilworth@dailymail.co.uk

BECOMING an Isa millionair­e will be twice as easy for the next generation of investors, new research shows.

Joining the £1 million club is an impossible dream for many, but investing in Isas might make it easier than you think.

There are 579 investors with Isas worth more than £1 million with broker Hargreaves Lansdown. Their average age is 71, with those in their late 60s and early 70s most likely to be Isa millionair­es. Two thirds are men.

But it’s easier than ever to join them. Today’s millionair­es have built up their fortunes despite being limited to a maximum £7,000 annual contributi­on for the nine years following the launch of Isas in 1999.

These investors had to achieve an average 14pc annual growth on maximum Isa contributi­ons to hit the £1million mark, according to AJ Bell.

But now that investors have a maximum allowance of £20,000, they would need just 7pc growth to hit the £1million jackpot over the same period of 21 years.

Laith Khalaf, financial analyst at AJ Bell, says: ‘That means the Isa millionair­es of the future will be more plentiful, and younger.’

An Isa is a valuable tax shelter for savings and investment­s as you don’t pay tax on interest for a cash Isa, or on the gains from any investment­s.

Any unused Isa allowance doesn’t roll over — if you don’t use it, you lose it. You have until April 5 to use this year’s £20,000 allowance.

sarah Coles, personal finance analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, says Isa millionair­es ‘hold the secret’ to making a fortune from diligent investment.

she says: ‘While some people get into investment in the hope of getting rich quick, the vast majority of Isa millionair­es have built a fortune through the far more reliable approach of getting rich slow.

‘They don’t take enormous risks: they’ve just consistent­ly invested as much as possible of their annual allowance in a diverse and balanced portfolio, every year, for decades.’

The top ten shares held by this group are dominated by blue chip companies, including Lloyds, shell and BP.

Mr Khalaf says this could be because the FTSE’s big names are popular with older investors as they are regular dividend payers, even if the pandemic saw payments cut back, or missed. And Ms Coles says other investors have shown an appetite for investing in firms ‘laid low by the pandemic’ in the hope that their share price will rebound. she adds: ‘Isa millionair­es aren’t as interested in this, because they’re less prepared to risk holding shares that don’t make it through the crisis.’

Adrian Lowcock, head of personal investing at Willis Owen, says the top ten shares don’t necessaril­y represent the companies that have performed the best in recent years. He adds: ‘It’s when they bought the shares that matters most.

‘Many of these stocks are cyclical investment­s that don’t have an existentia­l threat posed to them by the pandemic.

‘Overall, the list of shares looks to be driven by valuations with a bias towards the less risky areas of the market.’

AJ Bell’s Isa millionair­es have an average of 28 investment­s each, showing the importance of not putting all your eggs in one basket. Indeed, Mr Khalaf notes that some held the LF Woodford equity Income when trading was suspended and are still waiting for the final payout.

He says it shows one fund that performs poorly ‘needn’t derail a well-diversifie­d portfolio’.

When it comes to funds and other collective investment­s, Isa millionair­es have a broad internatio­nal mix, which Ms Coles says ‘spreads risk across worldclass companies’. she adds that the appearance of technology and health funds shows that investors have confidence in these sectors to ‘out-perform’ the market.

A total of 28 investment companies would have made investors millionair­es if they had invested the full annual Isa allowance in the same firm each year, according to new data from the Associatio­n of Investment Companies.

Investing the full Isa allowance annually from 1999 to 2020 — a total of £246,560 — and reinvestin­g the dividends into scottish Mortgage would have generated a tax-free pot of £2,541,100 by January 31, 2021 — more than ten times the original investment.

Investment trusts account for 54pc of the average portfolio of Interactiv­e Investor’s Isa millionair­es. This could be because they tend to outperform funds over the long term.

The most popular are scottish Mortgage, Alliance Trust and Witan Investment trust.

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