Money Magazine Australia

Term deposit may be a less risky option

Kay’s income fund has gone backwards in a disappoint­ing year

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QI am an 84-year-old pensioner whose balance in July 2021 with BT Tax Effective Income Fund – NEF was $7222.22 and now it is $6677.14, having earned me $80.66 this year. Should I have it returned to me and put it in my bank, where I have $10,000, or is it likely it will improve where it is and I’ll have something to leave my kids and grandkids? I have one other investment of many years: $15,000 with Charter Hall gives me $95 a month, which is fantastic. I get the pension and don’t own my own home.

It has been a horrible year for income funds, Kay. Rising interest rates are great if you are after a term deposit today, but have impacted most income funds, which generally hold longer-term bonds in their portfolio. I’d give BT a call and have a good chat about the fund. Its website, to its credit, gives good informatio­n on their funds and, unfortunat­ely, this fund has not done well. According to the informatio­n supplied by BT, its five-year performanc­e is 3.8%pa and the fund does not rank well against similar funds.

BT has a very good track record as a manager and one argument is that this fund may start to perform much better as rate hikes stop. But if you would prefer certainty, you could withdraw your funds and pop them into a very safe term deposit where you should earn over 3%pa. This decision is very much dependent on your attitude to risk, but it sounds to me as if you are quite risk adverse.

That is a lovely, unselfish thought about leaving money to your kids and grandkids. We now have three very young grandchild­ren and while very noisy and active they do bring great joy.

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