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Obviously not every poster reads every other thread and the issue of fees is quite pertinent to queries such as this. If you don't like my posts then see my signature.Clubman, you're like a broken record with regards to Rabo and their fees. Everytime someone asks a question in anyway related to Rabo, you tell them that that their fees are too high.
Obviously not every poster reads every other thread and the issue of fees is quite pertinent to queries such as this. If you don't like my posts then see my signature.
Obviously not every poster reads every other thread and the issue of fees is quite pertinent to queries such as this. If you don't like my posts then see my signature.
It is.Eh
Without wanting to take the entire thread off topic, your signature ain't working mate
I have addressed part of the question - the original poster might want to look at the funds provided by a lower charging fund provider. I don't really have an answer to the question about what mix to go for because it really depends on many details (e.g. attitude to risk/volatility, other debts/savings/investments, how fixed the 2/3 year timeframe is likely to be etc.) that are not clarified by the original poster.So have you any intention of responding to the specific question the OP asked or did you just come to this thread with the sole intention of bashing Rabo?
Funny how The Dude is keen to criticise my broken record but not this one (to which I have no objection by the way).To continue the broken record theme...
It is.
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Fees (and their transparency) are obviously a very important point for the potential investor. But when assessing a provider one should also consider the total offering, ie, fund range, diversification opportunities, online access, reporting, ratings, whether or not financial advice is offered (we don't) etc etc.
Hi RaboDirect,
Reflecting on your experience of charging 0% entry & 0.75% exit fees this month, is it possible that you could afford to make this permanent? Your website suggests that you can in some circumstances take a cut of the yearly management fee and thus potentially recoup some of the "loss" of not charging an entry fee. This would certainly enhance the attractiveness of RaboDirect going forward.
It is a shame that you can't deduct tax at source, but your calculator is eagerly awaited!
We do take a small trailer fee from the annual management fee but it's pretty small. The annual management fees are set by the fund manager so our trail fee doesn't result in a higher price than if you bought the fund directly from the fund manager.
By eliminating the entry fees completely we would be foregoing 50% of the transaction costs which is a very large drop. The rationale for dropping the entry fees for May was of course to encourage people to purchase funds in the post SSIA environment and this coupled with the minimum €100 investment amount lowers the barriers to entry for investors. Naturally we keep our pricing under continual review and the question arises - if we dropped our entry fees completely would this lead to a substantial increase in volume that would justify the revenue foregone. Our crystal ball hasn't come up with an answer just yet on that one!
So what? Doesn't make them reasonable per se.the fees are reasonable by many other banks' products
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