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Investing in uncertain times.

Investing in uncertain times: Why investors aren’t waiting for the ‘right’ moment

Story by Sam Shaw

Investors are navigating uncertain times with confidence

Investors are navigating uncertain times with confidence© Getty Images

There’s an age-old investment adage that promotes the value of spending time in the market as opposed to trying to time the market.

Unless you’ve got a crystal ball that tells you exactly when certain markets or asset classes are going to rise or fall, you’re probably better off investing smaller amounts on a regular basis, referred to as pound cost averaging. This smooths out any highs and lows, allows you to pay less for your investments on average and can make the journey less volatile, if indeed that’s your desired experience – some investors may enjoy the thrill of trying to time market highs and lows with a lump sum.

Behavioural finance experts often suggest that as humans, we’re predisposed to certain biases, including selling our investments when performance starts to drop off, despite all the expert evidence telling us not to do that; it just crystallises any losses instead of giving your investments a chance to recover.

That said, investor confidence is at its highest in seven years despite a year defined by geopolitical instability, global trade tensions and market uncertainty.

An annual study of investor behaviour and sentiment from research and communications businesses AML Group and The Nursery Research & Planning, The Investor Index 2026, showed investor confidence reaching a new high.

“What’s particularly interesting is how normalised uncertainty appears to have become for investors,” said Nicola Wright, insights director at The Nursery Research & Planning.

“Confidence is no longer closely tied to calm market conditions. Investors seem increasingly comfortable making decisions in a world where disruption and volatility are seen as part of the backdrop rather than temporary events.”

Several reasons are likely feeding that confidence, according to Jason Hollands, managing director at investment platform Bestinvest.

These include overplayed concerns that the US was facing a recession (which has not materialised) and markets (being forward-looking) appearing to discount the risk of the Middle East conflict as temporary, despite it lasting longer than many had first expected. He believes the over-riding reason behind many investors’ optimism is around AI and the exceptional levels of capital expenditure being ploughed into the sector

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Investing during uncertain times

Confidence is informed by several factors, including attitude to risk, life stage and level of experience and the amount of money you have.

The survey found 84% of investors (defined as having £10,000 or more invested) near or in retirement feel confident their savings and investments will be sufficient. Confidence is also higher among those already retired, as opposed to those in planning stages, and among those with more than £250,000 invested.

While the index showed UK investors were putting their money where their mouths were – 50% increased their investment amounts compared with last year while 40% maintained the same levels despite an uncertain backdrop.

That faith in the market is supported by a willingness to pay a premium for more likelihood of returns, a priority alongside decent track records and user-friendly products.

The choices UK investors are making also indicate optimism, favouring equity funds on the whole, with a rising demand for exchange-traded funds (ETFs). In keeping with regular savings strategies, considering a diversified, long-term approach – such as looking at reliable large caps, high-quality fixed income and some uncorrelated real asset exposure – should help many investors, whatever their time horizon, weather any storms.

Hollands said the danger of buoyant markets is the risk of overconfidence or being swayed by casual conversations with people ‘down the pub’.

“A lot of DIY investors start off enthusiastically but over time their interest wanes and they tend to forget about their portfolio,” he said.

Asset allocation – checking if any position sizes need rebalancing to bring the overall investments in line with your intended risk profile and preferences – is something many self-directed investors tend to overlook. Many get excited about fund or stock ideas rather than looking at the bigger picture, he added.

“Try not to over-react to the last thing someone told you but also make sure you’re reviewing your portfolio at least a couple of times a year, at the same cadence. Having a well thought-through asset allocation is really important, which can then anchor you to making better decisions.”

Are you thinking about investing but not convinced yet?

Intenders, perhaps unsurprisingly, are more cautious. The Nursery and AML define this cohort as those with over £10,000 in savings or over £2,000 in savings and an income over £40,000 but also likely to invest in the next two years. These people are keen to invest but still waiting for a ‘trigger’ event.

Tending to listen to banks, family and friends rather than professional advisers, they are more anxious across the board compared to investors. They see property and savings as safer bets than stocks and shares, with fear of loss and risk aversion their main barriers to getting started.

Of this group, 41% worry they will lose money and 37% say it feels too risky. Yet 44% say low-risk options or better knowledge would get them over the line.

“One of the main reasons that a lot of people who’d like to invest don’t do it is they’re nervous about putting their money in at the wrong time, and then suddenly seeing a significant drawdown in the value of their investment. That can stop them investing full stop,” explained Hollands.

He said the way to overcome that was to take the pound cost averaging approach.

“By just investing a little often regularly, it takes the emotion out of it and also means that across a year, you can expect to smooth out some of the ups and downs that you see in the short term.”

He also urges even experienced investors to consider the benefits of this approach – it’s not just for beginners.

How to start investing during uncertain times

Bestinvest is seeing novice investors increasingly choose readymade portfolios rather than trying to build their own from scratch, selecting funds themselves.

Readymade portfolios are essentially multi-asset funds designed to cater to a range of risk profiles, which have become common across most DIY investment platforms, which have evolved their offerings to serve customers of all levels of experience.

“Readymade portfolios provide inexperienced investors with effectively a ‘one-stop shop’ managed investment solution, through a diversified selection of underlying funds selected by a portfolio manager and an asset allocation approach that is periodically rebalanced to stay in line with the risk profile,” said Hollands.

He also said that passive funds had become more popular, with novice investors increasingly putting relatively small amounts via regular savings into global tracker funds.

One way to invest, is to re-invest your dividends based solely on the yield available in the market at the time.

Another is to add new capital to your SNOWBALL into short term gilts held to maturity or money market accounts, then invest those funds into your Snowball after markets have fallen. You can only get into any share at it’s low by luck or your have a De-Lorean in your garage.

You are interested to pair trade BRAI as you know the dividend is going to be reset to 6% of NAV.

I obviously have copied a good example but the rules remain the same.

Be hopeful if the price is above the cloud.

Be fearful when the price is below the cloud.

You add capital when the price moves above the cloud, whilst keeping everything crossed it’s not a market slam dunk and the hardest part do nothing.

If you are sitting on a large gain you could take out some ‘profit’ and re-invest in a higher yielder.

Today’s Quest: RECI

gullfossiceland
gullfossiceland.comx
iid8kumn@outlook.com
45.196.221.68
Interesting concept, though I’ve always been a bit skeptical about passive income claims until I see real numbers. Have you personally been using this RECI system for a while, and if so, how long did it take to see consistent returns? I’m curious about the risk level compared to something like dividend stocks.

TR chart, where anyone who bought when the Trust started trading are below the water line.

The covid crash, where it was assumed that companies would stop paying the interest on their loans, even though the loans were secured against property.

As always.

The SNOWBALL has traded the trust with a profit of £843 and £829.

The SNOWBALL owns RECI for the regular dividend to re-invest back into the portfolio. Current position a loss of £95.00 including the earned dividend but not received.

Reliable dividend that isn’t keeping up with inflation, so buying the yield is important.

Unlikely to be a capital gain until interest rates and bond yields fall.

For the SNOWBALL it’s a hold and re-invest the dividends back into the portfolio but it’s unlikely to be at RECI’s current yield.

Navel gazing

7th July 2026 09:41

by Douglas Chadwick from ii contributor

This content is provided by Saltydog Investor. It is a third-party supplier and not part of interactive investor. It is provided for information only and does not constitute a personal recommendation.

After a strong equity rally during April and May, June was more mixed. Only half of the major global stock market indices that we track each week made gains.

The star performer was the Japanese Nikkei 225, which went up by 5.6%, adding to the 11.9% that it had made in May and the 15.3% in April. At the opposite end of the spectrum, the Hong Kong Hang Seng fell by 8.9%.

Closer to home, the FTSE 100 ended the month up 0.8%, while the more domestically focused FTSE 250 fell by 1.8%. Across the Atlantic, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 2.5%, while the S&P 500 fell by 1.1% and the Nasdaq dropped 2.8%.

However, the performance of the UK-domiciled funds was more encouraging, with around three-quarters making headway over the month. Most of the Investment Association (IA) sectors also made positive returns in June. Of the 33 that we regularly monitor, 28 posted one-month gains.

Leading the way was the new Healthcare & Biotechnology sector, up 8.2%. 

IA sector returns June 2026 Saltydog

Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

Across the pond

2 Big Dividends on Sale as Warsh Goes “Dirty Harry” on Inflation (Yields Up to 11.9%)

Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist
Updated: July 7, 2026

The crowd is still way too worried about interest rates—and their fear is handing us a shot at two stout monthly dividends (yielding up to 11.9%) on the cheap.

We can thank new Fed chair Kevin Warsh for ginning up the panic here. Because he was appointed by President Trump, the suits expected Warsh to push for lower rates right off the hop. Instead, the new Fed chief has gone full Dirty Harry on inflation.

Investors are buying it. But they’re already on the wrong side of the story.

Oil has plunged to around $68 a barrel. And the job numbers for June, out last week, were soft, with the number of new gigs around half of what it was expected to be. That could be a sign of things to come as AI spreads across the economy, providing a sweeping level of automation to white-collar work. Very deflationary.

In the 1990s, the Internet acted as a similar “deflator” on prices. The move from snail mail to email and from fax machines to web browsers made businesses wildly more efficient, which kept a lid on consumer prices.

The bottom line here is that rates will fall. Which brings us back to Warsh.

Even though the president has given him a long leash for now, I expect it to shorten fast when rates and inflation start to ease. When push comes to shove, Warsh will choose self-preservation.

As the wind shifts toward lower rates, I expect the discounts on the two monthly dividend CEFs we’ll discuss next to speed toward par—and possibly beyond.

Monthly Dividend Pick No. 1: A Diversified Pick With a 7.8% Dividend 

We’re going to start with a fund holding high-yield stocks and handing us a rich 7.8% dividend (yes, paid monthly).

That would be the BlackRock Enhanced Equity Dividend Trust (BDJ), which is nicely set up for pretty well any market. For starters, its portfolio is balanced among stock sectors. Tech is the biggest slice, but even so accounts for a reasonable 18% of assets, followed by financials (15%), industrials (14%) and healthcare (13%).

Then BDJ adds a dash of global exposure, with about 11% of assets outside the US, in stable countries like the UK, South Korea and Canada.

Let’s get to what we really want to know about here: the (monthly!) dividend, which is not only hefty but has risen a stout 32% in the last decade (not including special dividends—the spikes in the chart below):


Source: Income Calendar

The fund aims to hold at least 80% of its portfolio in dividend-paying stocks. Right now, its holdings include Amazon.com (AMZN), as well as companies like CVS Health (CVS) and Citigroup (C), both of which stand to gain as AI boosts their efficiency.

BDJ is also seeing gains from FedEx (FDX), as the company cuts costs and moves away from lower-margin work (like Amazon deliveries). BDJ also holds Western Digital (WDC), which has soared on booming demand for chips and storage.

The fund further bulks up its dividend by selling options on its holdings. That brings in extra income and further shores up the dividend. It’s a strategy that works particularly well in volatile markets.

Even so, investors have tossed BDJ aside. As I write this, the fund’s discount to net asset value (NAV, or the value of its underlying portfolio) sits at 6.7%—though it looks like it’s carving out a bottom here, suggesting its next move could be toward par.

BDJ Is Cheap—and Its Discount Has Momentum

That’s a great setup to move into this well-constructed fund. The bonus? Since it pays dividends monthly, a buyer today won’t have to wait long to collect their first payout.

Monthly Dividend Pick No. 2: An 11.9% Dividend for 94 Cents on the Dollar

Now let’s swing over to bonds, where another fund from BlackRock stands out: the BlackRock Multi-Sector Income Trust (BIT). (That’s par for the course, as BlackRock is one of the biggest players in the CEF space.)

A key thing to note with BIT is the long average maturity on its credit assets: around 13 years. That’s important because longer-duration bonds do better when rates decline, as they’re more attractive than new (and lower-yielding) debt.

Moreover, BIT’s effective duration is around four years. That’s enough to position it for gains on lower rates without taking on too much risk if rates rise.

Plus, any rate-rise risk is more than priced into the fund’s 6.1% discount to NAV. That’s a level we haven’t seen since 2022, and then only briefly. And back then, the rate setup was the opposite of today’s: Inflation soared to 9%, and rates shot higher in response.

BIT’s “Back to 2022” Sale

The fund’s drop in valuation looks overdone here. And if you look at the right side of that chart, it looks like that discount is carving out a bottom, similar to what’s happening with BDJ.

On the performance side, this fund has been around since 2013 and has more than doubled the return of the benchmark US high-yield bond ETF, the SPDR Bloomberg High Yield Bond ETF (JNK), since then.

BIT Laps High-Yield Bonds

Reinvested dividends drove that return, thanks to BIT’s monthly payout, which has not only held steady through the tumult of the last decade (including the aforementioned 2022 bond meltdown)—it’s grown.


Source: Income Calendar

That strong payout record is likely to continue. And in the longer run, a move toward lower rates would act like a vice on the discount, forcing it to close—and help propel the fund’s price higher as it does.

Today’s quest

Hellen Walmsley
globe-s15lol.comx
ArielMontminy54102@gmail.com
104.207.57.126
Hi would you mind stating which blog platform you’re using? I’m going to start my own blog soon but I’m having a difficult time deciding between BlogEngine/Wordpress/B2evolution and Drupal. The reason I ask is because your design seems different then most blogs and I’m looking for something unique. P.S My apologies for getting off-topic but I had to ask!

It’s WordPress thru FastHosts

XD dates this week

Thursday 9 July


BlackRock Latin American Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date
Invesco Asia Dragon Trust PLC ex-dividend date
JPMorgan China Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend date
JPMorgan Emerging Markets Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend date
JPMorgan European Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend date
Real Estate Investors PLC ex-dividend date
Schroder UK Mid Cap Fund PLC ex-dividend date
Sirius Real Estate Ltd ex-dividend date
Social Housing REIT PLC ex-dividend date

Which investment trusts have delivered riches this year ?

Which investment trusts have delivered riches this year ?

Investment trusts are often a sound investment but picking one that stands out from the crowd can really boost your returns.

So if you’re trying to decide where to invest for the second half of the year it could pay to see which trusts and sectors have outperformed the rest over the last six months.

Story by Dan McEvoy

The top funds and stocks for DIY investors have reflected a slant towards technology so far this year. Investors who followed that trend were rewarded, as technology-focused investment trusts delivered greater returns than any other sector.

According to the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), an industry body representing the UK’s investment trusts, the average investment trust performed better than the UK stock market’s flagship large cap index, returning 9.4% during the first half of the year compared to the FTSE 100’s 5.7%.

Some investment trust sectors generated average returns well above this level.

The top-performing investment trust sectors of H1 2026

Tech was the top-performing investment trust sector, returning over 50% in the first six months of the year.

“The historic boom in AI spending continued to drive returns in the first half of 2026, most obviously in the technology sector,” said Annabel Brodie-Smith, communications director at the AIC.

The ten best performing investment trust sectors in H1 202

AIC sectorShare price total return in %
H1 20261 yr3 yrs5 yrs10 yrs
Technology & Technology Innovation50.588.6211.6184.71,026.3
Asia Pacific32.858.379.547.3257.9
Global Emerging Markets31.462.2109.465.3232.9
Asia Pacific Equity Income26.053.288.172.5208.1
Global Smaller Companies23.732.764.812.4206.7
Japan18.232.062.539.6178.3
Growth Capital17.349.9115.1-40.8N/A
Global15.529.784.328.6307.3
Commodities & Natural Resources13.162.371.392.197.2
Infrastructure10.718.928.416.0186.3

Source: theaic.co.uk / Morningstar. Share price total return in % to 30/06/26.

Tech and AI might be more heavily represented in the top-performing investment trust sectors than is initially apparent: the theme is also having a significant impact “in Asia and emerging markets where some of the world’s largest AI hardware and microchip manufacturers are based”, said Brodie-Smith.

It has also been a good six months for global small caps, with the sector returning 23.7% on average to make it the fifth-best-performing investment trust sector. The average Japan-focused investment trust, meanwhile, returned 18.2%.

Which investment trusts were the top performers in H1 2026?

While technology was the top-performing investment trust sector overall, the top-performing individual investment trust came from the commodities sector.

Baker Steel Resources (LON:BSRT) returned over 65% in the first six months of the year. The trust is a diversified commodities investment trust; it holds producers of precious metals like gold and silver, but as of 31 March its portfolio has the largest weighting towards tungsten producers – making up 23% of assets.

The ten best-performing investment trusts in H1 2026

Investment trustAIC sectorShare price total return in %
H1 20261 yr3 yrs5 yrs10 yrs
Average investment trust9.421.148.228.9171.5
Baker Steel ResourcesCommodities & Natural Resources65.2104.0187.635.5433.3
Seraphim Space Investment TrustGrowth Capital56.5119.4595.6N/AN/A
Polar Capital TechnologyTechnology & Technology Innovation53.796.2223.4201.11,040.8
Pacific HorizonAsia Pacific50.092.2119.540.2538.6
JPMorgan Asia Growth & IncomeAsia Pacific Equity Income45.776.0108.556.3310.5
Manchester & LondonTechnology & Technology Innovation45.647.8185.5127.2540.6
Fidelity Emerging MarketsGlobal Emerging Markets43.599.2178.584.9238.3
Templeton Emerging Markets Investment TrustGlobal Emerging Markets42.980.9146.090.5322.3
Allianz Technology TrustTechnology & Technology Innovation42.777.4187.0155.41,112.9
Schiehallion FundGrowth Capital39.773.6213.98.8N/A

Source: theaic.co.uk / Morningstar. Share price total return in % to 30/06/26.

Technology is unsurprisingly a recurring sector in the rest of the 10 top-performing investment trusts list. Three of the trusts – Polar Capital (LON:PCT), Manchester & London (LON:MNL) and Allianz Technology (LON:ATT) – are all designated to the technology and innovation sector by the AIC, while Seraphim Space (LON:SSIT) and Schiehallion Fund (LON:MNTN) have significant overlap with technology as a theme.

Asian and emerging market trusts like Pacific Horizon (LON:PHI) also featured amid the AI boom. Pacific Horizon’s top two holdings as of 31 May were chipmakers Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor.

“The strong performance is extremely welcome, but this is only a snapshot. It is important to remember that investing is a long-term commitment and that any sector or trust should form part of a broader, diversified portfolio,” said Brodie-Smith.

Change to the SNOWBALL: Buy

I’ve bought for the SNOWBALL 798 shares in PMT, PennymMac Mortgage Investment Trust, ahead of their xd date this week. High risk as they are quoted in U$ dollars so there is a currency charge included in the trade. The costs may outrun the benefits, so the share may have to be sold sooner than later.

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