AJ Bell,Interactive Investor,Hargreaves Lansdown or Vanguard
AJ Bell,Interactive Investor,Hargreaves Lansdown or Vanguard
Author
Discussion

paulguitar

Original Poster:

33,644 posts

136 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Morning all.

I'm looking into putting some funds into a low-cost global tracker. I'm going to want something paying monthly dividends.

As a novice, my question is which of the above will be cheapest and best for this? I will be hands-off and just leave it there, so I don't need it to be especially easy to make changes, because I don't really plan to make any.

Thanks.




Familymad

1,858 posts

240 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
On balance AJ Bell would be my take.

paulguitar

Original Poster:

33,644 posts

136 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Familymad said:
On balance AJ Bell would be my take.
Thanks smile

Mr Pointy

12,788 posts

182 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Familymad said:
On balance AJ Bell would be my take.
Why though? Website, charges, range of offerings? Give some clue why you picked them.

Rollin

6,290 posts

268 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Depends how much you are putting in. Some have fixed charges, some a percentage charge. I moved from HL to ii and made quite a big saving.

ETA I assumed you were talking about the platform used rather than a fund. May be I'm wrong smile

Edited by Rollin on Thursday 5th March 09:21

paulguitar

Original Poster:

33,644 posts

136 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Rollin said:
Depends how much you are putting in. Some have fixed charges, some a percentage charge. I moved from HL to ii and made quite a big saving.
About 130k.

scot_aln

685 posts

222 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
If happy with the funds Vanguard offer then they are 0.15% and capped at £375. They don't charge for trades.

This is a useful link -

https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savings/stocks-s...

butchstewie

64,128 posts

233 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
paulguitar said:
About 130k.
If it were me and particularly if I was planning on adding to it I would look at II for this.

A known flat fee however large that pot grows and it won't change dependent on if you hold funds or ETFs or individual stocks.

c32dave

30 posts

186 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
For £130k in ETFs with two trades per year, AJ Bell would charge £52/yr. I’ve been with them for about 20 years and very happy with the service.

Jon39

14,442 posts

166 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all

I have ISAs split between A J Bell and Hargreave Lansdown, simply to avoid eggs in one basket.
Hargreaves are now increasing the cap for charges, so at present are more expensive than Bell.
For bigger amounts though, it does not make much difference.

What has recently annoyed me about Hargreaves is the complicated way they compile statements.
They show dividends received on one web page, interest on another web page, then they move that money to something called a capital account. A nightmare to follow.
For investment, I want to keep everything as simple as is possible.

A J Bell just have two easily understood pages. Details of holdings, then every cash transaction is clearly shown on another page in chronological order. Exactly as it should be.
They communicate by email every time dividends are received, which might be helpful, but I already know that information.

Therefore after that background, you can see that A J Bell would be my recommendation to you.


Edited by Jon39 on Thursday 5th March 19:20

Philvrs

717 posts

120 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
I have vanguard and ishares ETFs via IG.
Changed from HL a few years ago, platform fees have recently changed downwards i think (never paid too much attention to notice what it was before to compare)

YouWhatAgain

43 posts

3 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
I use InvestEngine, they don’t charge any fees for ISA, SIPPS or GIA. Great app and easy to use.

Somebody

1,659 posts

106 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
I would go with Freetrade as it has 1% cashback if opened before end of current tax year.

Macneil

1,057 posts

103 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Can anyone expand on "monthly dividends"?

paulguitar

Original Poster:

33,644 posts

136 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Macneil said:
Can anyone expand on "monthly dividends"?
I want to invest in something that returns dividends.


Actually, they don't have to be paid monthly, but I need to raise a certain amount of income from what I invest.

balise

2,189 posts

233 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Lots of platforms to choose from, some are open with lots of choice e.g. ii, HL. Some locked down e.g Vanguard. Some platforms also offer investment advice.

Many funds will pay dividends, just look at the type. Acc means divided reinvested, so no dividend hit your account directly.

If you invest regularly then often platform charges are cheap. You could add the whole £130k as cash and then drip funds in monthly, this would minimise the risk of buying high. It could also cut costs.

Once you grasp the basics you can use ChatGPT to guide you towards advice. YMMV.



Edited by balise on Thursday 5th March 21:29

Philvrs

717 posts

120 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
Somebody said:
I would go with Freetrade as it has 1% cashback if opened before end of current tax year.
Owned by IG now.
I did see a youtube advert for invest engine i think. The background music was the same as the Smith and Sniff podcast opening jingle music, I couldn’t take that as a serious companybiggrin

g4ry13

20,692 posts

278 months

Thursday 5th March
quotequote all
I use InvestEngine.

Also opened a Trading 212 ISA as I was frustrated with amount of time it took for execution on monthly investment on InvestEngine.

butchstewie

64,128 posts

233 months

paulguitar said:
I want to invest in something that returns dividends.


Actually, they don't have to be paid monthly, but I need to raise a certain amount of income from what I invest.
If you're looking to invest in funds and you're NOT using an ISA or other tax wrapper it's simpler for CGT or dividend income reporting if you buy the INC units of whatever fund you're looking at.

With accumulation units you're stuck trying to calculate what tax you owe as all the dividends are automatically re-invested into the fund units.

The tax part of that doesn't apply in an ISA or SIPP.

Blue_star

654 posts

39 months

What happens if lets say aj bell goes into administration? Do you take any loss on your holding?