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The know how library

In this section...

22 July 2010
Property
22 July 2010
Regular Savings
19 July 2010
Absolute Return Funds
19 July 2010
Multi Manager funds
15 July 2010
Different types of annuities
15 July 2010
Life Assurance
15 July 2010
Inheritance Tax
15 July 2010
The Bank Of England
11 May 2009
A Guide to Structured Products
6 May 2009
Venture Capital Trust (VCT's)
1 July 2008
Asset Allocation
1 July 2008
Investing for Income
1 July 2008
Investing for growth
1 July 2008
Saving for retirement
1 July 2008
Use your ISA allowances effectively
1 July 2008
Maximise your tax allowances
1 July 2008
Inheritance Tax Planning
1 July 2008
Boom and bust
1 July 2008
Hedge funds
1 July 2008
Investing in Commodities
1 July 2008
Do not be fooled by past performance
1 July 2008
Behavioural investment
Regular saving

Regular saving

In the world of investment, timing is everything. However, no matter how much hype we hear to the contrary, it is a fact that no one can predict what the market will do or when. This makes it difficult, not only deciding when to invest but also when to pull your valuable investments out of the market.

This is where the benefits of pound cost averaging come into play – or in layman’s terms, regular savings. The theory is that by regularly putting smaller amounts of money into a fund or other investment, the risk of getting your timing wrong is reduced. Compared with punting an entire large lump sum in one go at a single price, the risk is mitigated by the fact your smaller sums will buy in at a variety of prices.

In a rising market, regular savings would underperform the growth of a single lump sum as the later investments would miss out on that rise in the early days. However, in an up-and-down or falling market, the opposite is true. Later investments would buy in at lower or alternating prices - some lower than the original price - and would therefore gain a little more when the market finally did rise.

Similarly, regular saving is a great way to build up a lump sum from zero. A lump sum of £5,000 can seem a tall order for some people. However, putting aside £100 a month from your income is less of an issue - and with investment growth or interest added you can quickly build up a reasonable amount without really noticing. The longer you leave it, the more impressive that growing amount potentially becomes.