August ’24: From triumph to tragedy

Looking back on the month, it was more eventful than Augusts are reputed to be.

In the UK we are getting used to our new government. And, in some cases, violently testing its boundaries with some summer rioting. We’ve seen some dreadful street behaviour, frequently of a racist / anti-Muslim nature. Thankfully it hasn’t really impacted London, where racism is mercifully rare. The street protests closest to me were jubilant Bangladeshi crowds celebrating the overthrow of Prime Minister Hasina.

Across the channel, the Olympics provided some sporting entertainment. I didn’t make it over there, though, and only watched a couple of events. It was good to see Team GB do creditably well, though beaten on several measures by the Australians and even the Netherland for Pete’s sake. On any sort measure, Europe (inc Team GB, naturellement) thrashed everybody else, though that isn’t how even the FT reported it, and India did typically dreadfully.

Towards the end of the month came the truly horrific tragedy of the sinking of British entrepreneur Mike Lynch’s yacht Bayesian. I don’t think there are any wider lessons for me in this tragedy but somehow it felt very relatable. And to pile mindblowing co-incidence on horrific tragedy, his former business partner (and co defendant in US Federal Court) died earlier that week when hit by a car. If there was a conspiracy at work, it was a particularly devious one, but it is a terrible end to an extraordinary story.

Markets in August 2024

The markets have been nervy and volatile in August. VWRL, Vanguard’s global equity index tracker, was at £102/share on 30 July. During August it dipped to £98, and rose to £104, before finishing on £103. So the signal of the monthly numbers strips out a lot of noise.

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From ISA $millionaire to £millionaire

The best tax break in the UK is the ISA tax-free savings regime. Each UK tax-resident adult can put £20k per year into an ISA account – use it for a wide range of investing activities – and not even have to report on what happens in those accounts, let alone pay tax on them.

This tax break is not exactly mass-market – not many people have £20k of spare funds every year – but for those of us who can avail of it, it is potentially enormous. Kids can have ISAs too, with an annual allowance of £9k. So a family of four, that can find £58k of liquid funds every year, can rapidly shelter a very large sum.

If you are a dual citizen, especially if you are a US citizen / green card holder, then Uncle Sam is certainly going to want to hear about these accounts and is absolutely going to tax them, but for plain UK citizens 100% resident in the UK, these tax breaks are awesome.

I’m now one of thousands of ISA millionaires

ISAs have now been around long enough that the number of investors whose ISA accounts exceed £1m is reaching many thousand. Expect to see this number skyrocket in the next few years. The top 25 largest ISAs average £11.66m of pot each – with I imagine a healthy dose of NVidia / similar holdings. If you haven’t followed the story of (Lord) John Lee, who is one of the first UK investors to amass £1m in ISA accounts, he’s worth checking out (£paywall).

My aim is to see my ISA accounts grow to well beyond £10m – which if I live another three or four decades, and the current policies don’t change, appears achievable.

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July ’24: New UK government

July has been quite a busy month.

I’ve been getting about a bit. Some South Coast action, some Mediterranean fun, a trip up to Oxford, a visit to one of England’s great Cathedrals, and more.

And July saw some fine times in London. Both outdoors and inside.

And of course we had the UK election. Not much news there, really. Labour won, the Tories were routed. Next?

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