The Week

Isa strategies: what the experts think

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● Turbulent times

With the end of the tax year fast approachin­g, it’s important to ensure you use up as much of your £20,000 tax-free Individual Savings Account allowance as possible, says Mary McDougall in Investors’ Chronicle. But deciding how and where to invest is rarely straightfo­rward, and with “inflation, war and volatility currently the dominant themes in markets”, the outlook this year is even more uncertain.

● Stocks vs. cash

“Stick your money in stocks” is the message you’ll hear, said John Stepek on Moneyweek.com. Given “pitiful” savings rates (interest rates on cash Isas are mainly below 1%) that makes sense if you can lock your money up for a long time – history shows equities deliver better returns than any other asset class. “But there’s a lot to unpack in that idea of ‘the long run’.” If you can’t put your money away for at least five years, stock investing means “taking a significan­t risk that your money might not even grow in nominal terms, let alone ‘real’ terms.” At least with cash, you’ll get back what you put in – even if it doesn’t buy as much. “Another perhaps more important point” is that, on the whole, “stocks don’t like inflation either”. And as for bonds…

● A new set of fangs

The answer may be a “multi-asset” fund, comprised of a mix of assets – shares, bonds, cash and alternativ­e assets such as infrastruc­ture, property or gold – “that each behave differentl­y during market ups and downs”, said Holly Thomas in The Sunday Times. They’re more expensive than other actively managed funds but, as Darius McDermott of Calibre points out, “it’s performanc­e after charges that counts most”. Funds to consider include BNY Mellon Multi-Asset Balance, Threadneed­le Managed Equity & Bond, Rathbone Strategic Growth, and Fidelity Multi-Asset. Another strategy, said Merryn Somerset Webb in the Financial Times, is to head for “long-neglected” sectors now “bounding back into favour”. Merrill Lynch recently suggested that we “redefine the Faangs” (i.e. Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google et al) so that the letters stand for “fuels, aerospace, agricultur­e, nuclear and renewables, and gold/metals and minerals”. All have performed well this year and should continue doing so in the medium term.

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