Anyone using AllInvestView ? - SLRPNK
Have a US and AUD portfolio and looking for a netter tool for metrics and
forecasting. Snowball is good but doesn’t account for things like CGT and
Franking but has excellent dividend forecasting (at least in USD, the AUD div
forecasting seems a bit flaky) AllinvestView has multi currency, similar dodgy
AUD div forecasting but handles CGT and Franking. Neither have my AUD broker but
AllInvestview does have some Aus brokers at least (for trade updates etc) It
seems like it’s nearly there, similar to Sharesite but cheaper. Looking for
feedback and thoughts from others I guess? or particular interest is the div
forecasting, being an old fuck and long retired its good for cashflow.
https://www.allinvestview.com/ [https://www.allinvestview.com/]
RBA lifts interest rates by 0.25pc for second time this year
https://aussie.zone/post/30686506

RBA lifts interest rates by 0.25pc for second time this year - Aussie Zone
Lemmy
How can we expect the RBA to control inflation with so little? (My editorialised title)
https://aussie.zone/post/30678048

How can we expect the RBA to control inflation with so little? - Aussie Zone
My commentary: By my understanding, the only tools the RBA have to control
inflation are: setting interest rates, and quantitative tightening (and
conversely easing). Surely, there must be more regulatory powers we could give
them. Understandably, many inflationary controlling functions should remain
legislative/departmental, but the bank can act decisively and quickly, so SOME
extra powers are in order, in my opinion, so they don’t constantly resort to
ONLY increasing mortgages and therefore rent as well, every single time. Just
spit-balling here: variable tax rates (income and corporate). Since taxation is
so damn unpopular (not to me, tax is necessary to have a functioning society
under capitalism), it would make some sense to give regulatory power to alter
taxation rates (within a legislated range) to the independent RBA. Let them take
the flak for increasing the top tax bracket rate by 3% or something. What are
your opinions/ideas about the RBA? (Sorry if against community rules, but there
weren’t any in the side bar)

Should you tap your super at 61? What to know about transition pensions
At 61 still working? Transition pensions let you withdraw up to 10% yearly tax-free. But understand the risks before accessing your super.
The Daily Perspective
Wall Street Elder Statesman Warns the Financial System Smells Like 2008 Again
Ex-Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein warns of hidden leverage risks in private credit markets. Australia's $225bn sector and superannuation funds face scrutiny.
The Daily Perspective
BNK Banking Books a Profitable Half by Ditching Low-Margin Mortgages
BNK Banking (ASX: BBC) posts $1.8m underlying profit in 1H26, with NIM rising 49 basis points to 1.88% as its higher-margin lending pivot pays off.
The Daily PerspectiveTax expert worried Australia on path to neo-feudal society as housing wealth drives inequality
https://slrpnk.net/post/34515939
Tax expert worried Australia on path to neo-feudal society as housing wealth drives inequality - SLRPNK
>One of the country’s leading tax experts says the explosion in housing wealth
has put Australia on the path towards a neo-feudal society where your prosperity
depends in large part whether your parents own land or property.
High-spending premiers appear immune to inflation pressure
https://aussie.zone/post/29956533

High-spending premiers appear immune to inflation pressure - Aussie Zone
Lemmy
Investment Funds for 'Green' Municipal Bonds
https://lemmy.ml/post/43279340
Investment Funds for 'Green' Municipal Bonds - Lemmy
Are there any investment funds (ETFs or mutual funds) which exclusively purchase
municipal bonds in “green” cities? Most mutual funds seem to profit from
unethical companies. Genocide (Lockheed, Google), Climate Catastrophe (BP,
ExxonMobil), Slavery (Verizon, Walmart). Murder (UnitedHealth, Dow Chemical). It
seems like municipal bonds might be one of the more ethical ways to invest
money. Specifically, I’m looking to invest in cities that are building-out
infrastructure that will lead to an elimination on their dependence on fossil
fuels. For example: 1. Closing roads and building bicycle lanes. 1. Building
electrified trains and dedicated bus lanes. 1. Passing laws to establish a
maximum number of parking spots per person. 1. Mixed Zoning (walkable cities) 1.
Banning fossil fuel power plants while building hydro/solar/wind/geothermal 1.
Passing laws to heavily tax carbon emissions 1. And, of course, cities that
invest in education usually get a great ROI. Cities that come to mind include
Paris and New York. I could try to do all the research myself, and find a bunch
of other cities that are on the right path – but that seems like a full-time
job, and it’s probably better to just have a fund manager do this research for
us. Are there already any funds that invest in municipal bonds exclusively in
“green” cities?
How 'capacity constraints' are linked to inflation and your hip pocket
https://aussie.zone/post/29546140

How 'capacity constraints' are linked to inflation and your hip pocket - Aussie Zone
Lemmy