Wrong city mate :D
You have grossed up your taxable income for the franking credit but have you accounted for the related tax offset? Not sure what the aim is on...
Interesting article about decoupling from Chinese supply chains not quite what it seems Supply chains may be moving out of China but not really...
Agreed while you are accumulating wealth. I wasn't clear but was referring to post retirement. For property yes I would sell one per year once I...
For higher yield lower growth index funds yeah but for higher growth funds like vgs, ivv, ndq etc what’s the point in all that growth if you never...
Yeah agree with the math. Thought franking was higher but you can look that up.
Seems very high to me. Where is this?
The annual report will have a high level profile in the liquidity section of the financial risk management note. Obvs that will be at 30 June....
It depends on your strategy, future plans and borrowing capacity. I prefer to leave the debt at IO and use the increased cashflow to continue to...
Simpsons quote? “Aw, you can come up with statistics to prove anything, Kent. Forfty percent of all people know that” :-)
If you are investing in ASX200 than with franking credits your post tax cash yield is going to me much higher
Thanks for you thoughts. I don’t doubt you are right that those volume bars are Instos. It’s just interesting how the pricing mechanics work...
This is probably a silly question but can volume like that move pricing for a market cap weighted etf? The market maker is meant to ensure its...
Non-concessional contributions? Obviously pros and cons to be considered with this Also there is the concessional carry forward cap if you...
Looked at it a month or two ago. Came across this which indicates you are right. Selling assets (below nta) to reduce debt. I figured they had...
Yes. For simplicity assume 100% franked and on mtr of 47% and the 6% and 4% quoted. Post tax interest rate would be 3.18%. Post tax yield on...
Yes and I’m referring to the post tax differential which is what matters. As @Trainee says VAS is over 80% franked. And the interest would be...
A bit misleading. Post tax (and franking credits) there’s about 15-20bps differential depending on mtr, using 6% interest and 4% yield.
For the vanilla etfs being discussed here, you are purchasing units in a fund that in turn owns shares in the underlying investments eg.CBA, BHP...
You can get that by changing credit cards once or twice a year. I wouldn’t be choosing a loan based on bonus points
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