logo
3 mistakes to avoid when investing a SIPP

3 mistakes to avoid when investing a SIPP

Yahoo5 hours ago

A pension is a very important thing, but for much of our working lives (let alone before) we may not give it nearly as much thought as it deserves. Take a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP), for example. Given its long-term nature, it can be tempting when times are busy to put off thinking about it or investing the money in it. But that can be a costly mistake once retirement rolls around.
Here are three mistakes I aim to avoid when investing my own SIPP.
We know from past experience that the economy will keep evolving. Some shares that are barely known and perhaps even trade for pennies today could turn out to be worth a fortune a decade or two from now.
Sometimes, that fear of missing out leads people to rush into shares they do not understand in case they shoot up in value before they have seized the opportunity.
That is not the sort of prudent, considered investment I want for my SIPP; it is speculation. I try to avoid the mistake of investing in the 'next big thing' unless I understand it.
Of course, one's circle of competence is not static – it is possible to learn about an emerging industry that may sound promising, like renewable energy or biotech.
Does this sound like a problem to you? Warren Buffett invested tens of billions of dollars in Apple stock. It did so well that not only did the stock soar in value by tens of billions of dollars, it came to represent by far the largest part of Buffett's company Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio of listed shares.
It may not sound like a problem. As billionaire Buffett is still working at 94, his pension may not be a big concern to him.
But Buffett knows what every SIPP investor ought to remember: you can have too much of a good thing.
The tech giant remains Berkshire's largest shareholding, but share sales mean it no longer dominates the portfolio to the same extent.
Many investors like the idea of buying dividend shares that can tick over quietly in their SIPP, compounding income for decades. I am one of them.
But it is always important not just to look at the current dividend yield of a share. One must consider the prospective future yield, based on potential future free cash flows.
Take Imperial Brands (LSE: IMB) as an example. Like many tobacco companies, it is a free cash flow machine. In the first half of this year alone, it generated operating cash flows of £1.5bn.
Now, it saw £0.2bn of investing-related cash outflows. It also saw £0.3bn of finance-related cash outflows. But it paid over £1bn of dividends, most of it to shareholders.
If it had not chosen to spend £0.6bn on buying back its own shares, Imperial's cash flows would comfortably have covered dividends and left money to spare. So far, so good.
Longer term, though, cigarette use is declining. Tobacco volumes fell 3% year on year. The firm has pricing power but in the long term I fear free cash flows could fall and lead to a dividend cut.
I once owned Imperial Brands shares in my SIPP – but no more.
The post 3 mistakes to avoid when investing a SIPP appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
More reading
5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50
One Top Growth Stock from the Motley Fool
C Ruane has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Apple and Imperial Brands Plc. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.
Motley Fool UK 2025

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple Releases Its Most Comfortable Products Ahead of WWDC 2025: New Merch!
Apple Releases Its Most Comfortable Products Ahead of WWDC 2025: New Merch!

CNET

timean hour ago

  • CNET

Apple Releases Its Most Comfortable Products Ahead of WWDC 2025: New Merch!

WWDC 2025, Apple's annual developer conference, kicks off in just a matter of hours with a keynote at 10 a.m. PT on Monday, June 9. But before Apple CEO, Tim Cook, takes his first step onstage at Apple Park, the company has dropped a bunch of new limited edition merchandise as documented by a number of people on social media. One of the quieter yearly rituals for WWDC is the release of Apple branded clothing and souvenirs. The Apple Park visitor center has an Apple Store that usually has a number of limited edition shirts, hoodies and more that WWDC attendees can buy. This year's offerings feature riffs on Apple's original rainbow logo on a black or white hoodie that truly makes it pop. There's another version of the logo with the word Apple written in the Apple Garamond font which you don't need to be a font nerd to appreciate. Seeing the company embrace its past for Apple enthusiasts and developers is exciting, especially ahead of one of the more significant WWDC keynotes. There is a lot at stake for the iPhone maker. Analysts question Apple's progress with Apple Intelligence. The US Department of Justice and 16 state and district attorneys general have a suit against Apple alleging that the company locked iPhone owners into its ecosystem through monopolistic practices. And President Donald Trump has threatened a 25% tariff on the iPhone if Apple doesn't move iPhone manufacturing to the US. Aside from WWDC 2025 merch, we expect to see previews of the next generation of iPhone, Mac and Apple Watch software (and more). Rumors point to Apple changing how it names the software. Instead of iOS 19 and WatchOS 12, we'll likely get year-centric names like iOS 26 and WatchOS 26. Also the company is expected to bring an unifying visual overhaul to all of its OSes that is inspired in part from VisionOS, as reported by Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. CNET has editors and writers attending WWDC 2025 in-person to report on developments as they break.

London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise
London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

London must ‘market its successes better' to avoid another Wise

Britain must emulate the success of Nasdaq and get better at trumpeting its business success stories if it wants to attract more companies to list in London, one of the UK's top fintech venture capital investors has said. Speaking to City AM the day that payments darling Wise revealed plans to ditch its primary listing for New York, Anthemis founder Amy Nauiokas said the London Stock Exchange (LSE) should try emulate the support promotion the US's tech-heavy bourse gives its new constituents. 'It's not brain surgery,' said Nauiokas, whose firm has been an early-stage backer of fintech success stories like Etoro, Zoopla and Tide. 'They [the LSE] need to promise UK entrepreneurs that there's a path here, and that they'll support them, build an ecosystem around them, and give the perks that the Nasdaq gives them.' London capital markets have been locked in a multi-year struggle to attract and retain some of its brightest companies. Since the start of 2024 alone, cherished listed firms like Darktrace, TUI and most DS Smith have all delisted or been taken private from the capital's stock market. And promising UK-headquartered scale-ups like Arm have opted to list in New York over London, with other darlings like Revolut and Klarna looking likely to follow suit. Departed firms have tended to cite London's stubbornly low valuations and lower liquidity relative to its US rivals, but Nauiokas argued that the lengths to which New York goes to promote and celebrate its new additions was just as important a factor. Commenting on the Nasdaq's custom of advertising its fresh listings in New York's Time Square, she said: 'Half the reason why people go there is so they get to see their their picture on 45th Street.' Her comments ring true with the rationale for ditching London given by Wise, which floated in the UK to great fanfare in 2021. Billionaire cofounder Kristo Kaarmannder said a US listing would help raise Wise's profile in the country as it joins the many London-based fintech giants looking to expand their services in the world's largest market. 'We believe the addition of a primary US listing would help us accelerate our mission and bring substantial strategic and capital market benefits to Wise and our owners,' he said in the firm's statement announcing its planned departure. Nauiokas, whose firm invests in start-ups in both the US and UK with offices in both New York and London, said she understood the Wise board's decision, adding that were she a secondary capital and pre-IPO dealmaker, she 'would probably say the best option right now was either a dual listing or a US-based IPO'. But despite the downbeat rhetoric surrounding the London Stock Exchange, she added that the ongoing political turmoil in America was something on which London – and Europe as a whole – should be poised to capitalise. 'It strikes me that all the opportunity is here [in London],' she said. 'This is a moment. A moment for investors to find great entrepreneurs and make money, but also a moment for regulatory navel gazing – government navel gazing – private partnership navel gazing – to say we could do something here. Let's do something.' Family offices and institutional money are increasingly looking to reduce the weighting of US assets in their portfolio in response to the capricious and unpredictable policy directives from the White House, Nauiokas said. Many ultra-rich families have re-weighted their portfolios from an '80/20 North America to Europe to now 50/50'. 'I'm super excited about the UK specifically. But it needs to take this moment of market geopolitical dislocation,' she said, adding: 'The LSE can do a much better job of reshaping its proposition, and the government needs to get rid of stamp duty on shares.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

AAPL Down 18% YTD as Apple's AI Delays Erode Investor Confidence
AAPL Down 18% YTD as Apple's AI Delays Erode Investor Confidence

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

AAPL Down 18% YTD as Apple's AI Delays Erode Investor Confidence

Apple Inc. (AAPL) has long been the most reliable name in tech. It offered predictable product cycles, loyal customers, and industry-defining design. Investors called it boring in the best possible way. That was before 2025. Confident Investing Starts Here: Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter This year, AAPL is down nearly 19% while the rest of the so-called 'Magnificent Seven' soar. Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA), Meta Platforms (META), Alphabet (GOOG) (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA) have all bounced back sharply. The S&P 500 (SPY) and Nasdaq have pushed higher on AI tailwinds. AAPL is the only one lagging. 'Siri, Why Are You Lagging? ' The reason sits at the core of Apple's identity. Artificial intelligence was supposed to be the company's next leap. A redesigned Siri, powered by new large language models, would act as a smart assistant across apps, emails, and calendars. It was shown off last year under the banner of 'Apple Intelligence.' Ads aired. Expectations built. Then came the delays. According to recent reports in The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, the upgrade is nowhere near ready. Internal demos fell flat. Engineers cited hundreds of bugs. Ads featuring The Last of Us star Bella Ramsey were quietly pulled. Executives have now postponed the launch indefinitely. One former Apple leader called the AI plan a stumble. Investors agree. Sentiment Is Cooling TipRanks data shows a cooling in analyst sentiment. There are fewer 'Strong Buy' ratings than a year ago. Several top-rated analysts have lowered price targets. Hedge fund activity in AAPL has also slowed. Insider confidence is muted. After years of being a consensus favorite, the stock is now drawing caution. The problems run deeper than software bugs. Regulators have delayed Apple's AI rollout in China. CEO Tim Cook has been pulled into political crossfire as former President Donald Trump returns to the White House. New tariffs on China-made electronics have added pressure to Apple's supply chain. Cook has pledged $500 billion in U.S. investments, but most iPhone production still takes place overseas. While Apple delays its AI rollout, the company's financial engine is quietly shifting. As shown below, gross profits from high-margin services have begun to rival hardware, underscoring why the stakes for Apple Intelligence are rising. AI Roadmap Remains Unclear At the same time, Apple's competitors have widened the AI gap. Microsoft is investing heavily in OpenAI and building custom data centers. Meta and Google are deploying their own foundation models across billions of users. Apple, in contrast, is now leaning on OpenAI to power parts of Siri. The company's privacy-first approach has also limited its ability to train cloud-scale models. With WWDC set to begin, expectations are low. Investors are not looking for surprises. They want evidence that Apple can deliver what it has already promised. Whether that means releasing a functional Siri upgrade or showing meaningful progress elsewhere in its AI roadmap remains unclear. In the meantime, AAPL still rests on a solid foundation. It has over 2 billion active devices and a growing services business. But the stock's premium valuation was built on the assumption of leadership. For now, the market is rethinking that assumption. Is Apple Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold? average price target for AAPL stock is $228.65, suggesting a 12.13% upside.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store