Advertisement
Anonymous
6
Discussion (6)
Learn how to style your text
Reply
Save
Elijah Lee
06 Jun 2020
Senior Financial Services Manager at Phillip Securities (Jurong East)
Hi anon,
It may be tempting to do that, but I would not. Money has a way of destroying relationships. You can't guarantee that nothing will go wrong with your investment decisions. It's probably best to keep it only at family level, and even then things can go very very wrong.
How will you account for the decision making? What are the proportion of each person's stake? Is a simply majority enough for a buy/sell or will you require unanimous decision? And most importantly: if the investment loses money, what happens next? Imagine if a stock is losing money but 1 of you has extreme conviction, while the other 2 want to exit. You may never solve the arguement if an unanimous decision has to be reached.
Legally speaking, OR/AND accounts do allow for investments to be made with more than one person, but any more than 2 and you will have to set up a company structure as mentioned by Sharon.
Reply
Save
Tan Kel Vin
06 Jun 2020
Financial YouTuber at Kelvin Learns Investing
There's very little benefit to pooling your money to invest.
The lowest commission fee in SG is ei...
Read 4 other comments with a Seedly account
You will also enjoy exclusive benefits and get access to members only features.
Sign up or login with an email here
Write your thoughts
Related Articles
Related Posts
Related Products
4.7
1296 Reviews
StashAway Simple Guaranteed 3.55% p.a. (Guaranteed rate)
Cash Management
INSTRUMENTS
None
ANNUAL MANAGEMENT FEE
None
MINIMUM INVESTMENT
3.5%
EXPECTED ANNUAL RETURN
Mobile App
PLATFORMS
4.5
961 Reviews
4.7
657 Reviews
Related Posts
Advertisement
Money & friendship does not mix well in the absence of well-defined, black and white contract which explicitly state out each individual entitlements/obligations etc