1Sem.·

Gold as a nest egg?

Good or bad decision, what do you think?

I have now decided to invest part of my nest egg in gold (it was actually 80 units = 50+30)

I hope that the momentum in gold will continue and that I will get a higher return than the current 2.75% overnight interest rate. (I am of course aware that this is more risky)


$IGLN (-0,55 %)
$EWG2 (+0 %)

11.02
iShares Physical Gold ETC logo
Acheté x30 à 54,47 €
1 634,10 €
5
10 Commentaires

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I did exactly the same thing. However, only the "nest egg" for medium to slightly larger purchases or vacations. The money should definitely not be vital.
I just leave 1k in the account after fixed costs.

However, I have decided on $EWG2.
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I don't think the part is tax-free... so bad 😅
Unless of course you don't plan to keep it for more than 1 year.
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@TotallyLost in Austria there is no such thing as tax exemption after one year anyway, as far as I know. Therefore no matter and less TER
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@FireSale ah, I didn't know that, I thought it was like in Germany.
Learned something again.
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time is the key
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Can work, but doesn't have to. Definitely too risky for a nest egg
Principle of the nest egg not understood. A nest egg must generate exactly 0% return - not even inflation compensation.

One question: How large is the "nest egg position" compared to the overall portfolio? The risk is simply unnecessary.
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There are ~10k of which I have now invested 4.3 in gold. Depot is ~40k
@FireSale It's just a question of whether you want to take the risk.

You didn't define €10,000 as a nest egg for nothing. There will be a reason for that.

My nest egg will never end up in a custody account. It will remain in the current account without earning interest.
A nest egg is money that I can access immediately or within 2 days. Of course I want it to earn interest. Call money is ideal. The risk is close to zero and it is quickly deposited in my current account. My current account is always empty at the end of the month. Not because I've spent everything, but because all the leftovers go into call money or are invested. The "risk" that I need money immediately, i.e. today, is close to zero. And I would overdraw my current account for one day until the overnight money is there. I've never had to do that for several decades
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