Hi all
I just relocated to London from mainland Europe. Keeping our house there didn't make sense for various reasons. Now I'm sitting on a pile of cash (Euros) and I'm not sure what to do with it. We invested in metals a few years back, but I don't see a buying opportunity right now. I also think housing in the UK is overpriced, so I'd rather wait and see before buying a house here. I think the stock market and inflationists will be in for a rude awakening when governments actually start cutting back spending and taxing more (which is inevitable? given that most gov. debt is short term debt). The Price/Dividend ratio is rather poor at the moment, so I don't think stocks provide good value anyway.
Just letting the money sit on a bank account doesn't sound so great either since I don't want to give the bank a free ride.
I really just want to retain purchasing power while earning a little interest, but this does not seem possible given real inflation rates and ultra low interest rates. I don't dare buy longer term bonds even though I'm more afraid of 'deflation' than 'inflation'.
It's not an easy question to answer. I'd be interested to hear what others are thinking.
Maybe I should pick a much more offensive strategy rather than try to be so defensive.
-Callisto
I just relocated to London from mainland Europe. Keeping our house there didn't make sense for various reasons. Now I'm sitting on a pile of cash (Euros) and I'm not sure what to do with it. We invested in metals a few years back, but I don't see a buying opportunity right now. I also think housing in the UK is overpriced, so I'd rather wait and see before buying a house here. I think the stock market and inflationists will be in for a rude awakening when governments actually start cutting back spending and taxing more (which is inevitable? given that most gov. debt is short term debt). The Price/Dividend ratio is rather poor at the moment, so I don't think stocks provide good value anyway.
Just letting the money sit on a bank account doesn't sound so great either since I don't want to give the bank a free ride.
I really just want to retain purchasing power while earning a little interest, but this does not seem possible given real inflation rates and ultra low interest rates. I don't dare buy longer term bonds even though I'm more afraid of 'deflation' than 'inflation'.
It's not an easy question to answer. I'd be interested to hear what others are thinking.
Maybe I should pick a much more offensive strategy rather than try to be so defensive.
-Callisto
