Add WMIC using: Windows 11 – Settings (Winkey+I) – Apps – Optional Features – View Features – WMIC – Install
A Windows restart/reboot my be required after installing WMIC.
Steve's blog about RMPrepUSB, Easy2Boot, USB booting, Investing and sometimes other stuff too! Don't forget to Subscribe! PDF eBooks here
Visit www.rmprepusb.com for over 140 Tutorials on USB booting or www.easy2boot.xyz for a unique USB multiboot solution.
Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite
things[ETFs]
I do use a small part of my investment portfolio to buy individual company stocks like NVidia or Amazon or Tower Resources (big fail!), but as I am no expert in company analysis, I tend to only break even with these at the best of times! The problem is always when one stock dives significantly - I have learnt that slow and steady is better than risking any significant loss in just one stock as it takes ages to recover from that loss.
Index ETFs on the other hand will never go down to zero and usually tend to go up or at least keep pace with inflation.
The only exception is if I (stupidly) buy a very risky stock. In this case, I will buy it inside my GIA account so that if I make a loss, I can deduct that loss from my total gains and thus pay less CGT. If it makes a large gain, then I don't mind paying the CGT! On the other hand, if I held it inside my ISA and I lost 90% of it, I cannot even make use of that loss and it will take months to get that money back from my other investments. Trading outside of an ISA does sometimes have an advantage in that you can deduct that loss from your gains.
The ETFs I have listed below are my current favourites.
My ratio of holdings in these however will vary depending on the current stock market climate.
| My favourite ETFs, ordered by fund size. |
The recent news that the latest open source release on GitHub of Chinese-based DeepSeek (equiv. to ChatGPT, OpenAI, etc.) is supposedly 95% cheaper than current US solutions using high-end nVidia chips.
Others are saying it gives a x30 performance improvement, taking much less time to teach it and less power to run it.
The stock market (S&P, Tech) is panicking as there certainly does seem to be some truth to the claims.
| S&P 500 (2025-01-27) |
I have a General Investment account with Interactive Investor, but I found it very painful to calculate my UK Capital Gains Tax liability on my Stocks and Shares sales.
Then someone on the ii forum suggested I try www.cgtcalculator.com and it seems to be pretty good. It seems to understand the same day rule, Section 104 rule and the 30-day rule.
If you don't know what the 30-day rule (bed-and-breakfast rule) is, then watch this video (see example 1) and here. Note selling shares of ABC on Trading 212 for instance, but then buying ABC a few days later on Interactive Investor also counts in the 30-day rule (AFAIK)!
If you have several GIA accounts, you should combine all trades into one table (CSV, XLSX, etc.) first, before calculating gains/losses and CGT.
So here are my simple steps to calculate gains/losses for CGT purposes. I also include a Trading 212 example.
Use a PC/Notebook and the browser.
*NEW 2026: I have now written two conversion .exe/.python programs which will convert the .csv into a .txt file which can be loaded into cgtcalculator.com. One for Trading212 CSV files and one for Interactive Investor CSV files.
The latest versions can be found in my 28-Jan-2026 blog article. This saves you having to manipulate the data in Excel and the programs also do some checking of the data too.
I am often asked by family and friends what they should invest in. This is an extremely difficult question because I don't want to be disowned by them if they lose their money!
Stock and Shares investment is a long term commitment.
They can go up-diddly-up-up or down-diddly-down-down!
Be prepared - in some years your investment pot may decrease a lot in value but don't sell!
If you can't stand to see your portfolio lose 20% in a year, then you could choose a nice safe savings account instead! However, savings accounts barely keep up with inflation. If you are a high rate tax payer and put £100K into a savings account paying 5%, then in the UK each year you will pay 40% of that 5K interest to the tax man! If cashing out after 5 years, due to loss of compounding and the tax difference, you will be about £5K better off with a 5% gain ETF even if in a taxable S&S account, than in a 5% savings account.
When investing in Stocks and Shares we must consider:
ETFs like VOO (Vanguard S&P 500 ETF) and SCHD (Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF) are not available on UK broker platforms such as Trading 212, Interactive Investor, etc.
You may have seen YouTube videos which recommend these ETFs.
Here are some equivalents which are usually available to UK and non-USA citizens.
menuentry "Arch Linux with Parameters" {set iso_path="/_ISO/LINUX/archlinux-2024.12.01-x86_64.iso"search --no-floppy -f --set=root $iso_pathprobe -u $root --set=archiso_img_dev_uuidloopback loop $iso_pathlsechols (loop)/echols /echols /_ISO/LINUX/echoecho archiso_img_dev_uuid=${archiso_img_dev_uuid} iso_path=${iso_path} root=${root}readlinux (loop)/arch/boot/x86_64/vmlinuz-linux archisobasedir=arch img_dev=UUID=${archiso_img_dev_uuid} img_loop=${iso_path}initrd (loop)/arch/boot/x86_64/initramfs-linux.imgread}
The FTSE 100 index stands just 15% higher than its level of 31 December 1999, representing a compound annual gain of barely 0.5% per annum.
UK investors, insurance companies and pension companies have started to see the light and are leaving UK stocks for the shinier US market. A few UK companies are even starting to de-list from the FTSE and move over to the New York/NASDAQ stock exchanges.
However, if you discount the USA's 'Magnificent Seven', the UK has still performed quite well. Good UK companies are well diversified and pay good dividends. The UK also has some solid top performers as shown below (gains in 1 year):
Many people like to have a core+satellite approach with their portfolio.
A popular choice for a core ETF is either:
Amazon does not feature much in high-performance Tech and Comms ETFs such as IITU or IUCM and comprises only 5% within the Nasdaq EQQQ ETF.
Some Consumer Discretionary ETFs hold a large proportion of Amazon (30%) and also Tesla (15%) such as XUCD (or XSCD for GBP). If you think Amazon and Tesla will do well next year when Trump takes over, this may continue to show good gains. I think Amazon will continue to show good performance next year although import tariffs and tightening advertising regulations in the EU and UK may adversely affect the Amazon online retail business.
Note: The ETF IUCD is very similar to XUCD and is available on Trading 212.
| Consumer Discretionary (blue) has shown good gains recently, mainly due to Tesla (and Amazon). |
The VanEck Crypto and Blockchain Innovators UCITS ETF seeks to track the MVIS Global Digital Assets Equity index. The MVIS Global Digital Assets Equity index tracks companies from around the world that are active in the blockchain industry.The ETF's TER (total expense ratio) amounts to 0.65% p.a.. The VanEck Crypto and Blockchain Innovators UCITS ETF is the only ETF that tracks the MVIS Global Digital Assets Equity index. The ETF replicates the performance of the underlying index by full replication (buying all the index constituents). The dividends in the ETF are accumulated and reinvested in the ETF.The VanEck Crypto and Blockchain Innovators UCITS ETF has 233m GBP assets under management. The ETF was launched on 30 April 2021 and is domiciled in Ireland.
I have added a few ETFs below from Justetf.com. The 'Trump effect' around Nov 4th is easy to see:
Trump stocks sectors that should show good performance in next 2 years are (with example ETFs):