What “factor investing” really means, in plain language
Value, size, momentum, quality — the return drivers four decades of research point to, explained without the jargon.
The Individual Investment Account (INR) is one of the more genuinely useful things to arrive in Slovenian personal finance in years. It is also frequently mis-sold as a fit for everyone. It isn't.
The INR rewards a long horizon. Its tax treatment is designed to favour investors who leave money to compound over many years rather than dipping in and out. If you are investing for a goal a decade or more away, that advantage compounds quietly in your favour.
If you might need the money soon, or you value full flexibility above tax efficiency, the INR's rules on withdrawals and their tax effect can work against you. There is also a one-account-per-person limit, so it is worth setting up thoughtfully.
We will only recommend the INR where it genuinely fits — and tell you plainly when it doesn't.
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Value, size, momentum, quality — the return drivers four decades of research point to, explained without the jargon.
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