Not pulling your Lego.

JulieW

Well-Known Member
Silver Stacker
It may appear as no more than a popular children's toy, but investors were able to secure a better return buying Lego sets over the past 15 years than from the stock market, gold or bank accounts, a Telegraph analysis found.
Share prices tumbled on Friday, cancelling out all the gains made this year. The value of the FTSE 100 is no higher than it was in February 2000, meaning the average annual return to savers over the past decade and half is just 4.1 per cent once dividend payouts are included.

By contrast, Lego sets kept in pristine condition have increased in value 12 per cent each year since the turn of the Millennium, with second-hand prices rising for specific sets as soon as they go out of production. Modern sets are performing even more strongly, with those released last year already selling on eBay for 36 per cent more than their original price.
The analysis found none of the main investments favoured by savers matched returns on the plastic building bricks.
Savers who invested in gold received a 9.6 per cent annual gain over the past decade and a half, while those who went with a savings account or Isa generated 2.8 per cent, according to investment company Hargreaves Lansdown.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...a-better-investment-than-shares-and-gold.html
 
Pretty much, but the money is in the themed Lego rather than the standard. Check out Star Wars Lego, that stuff gets decent money for the original 3 movies
 
Funny you should mention that, here is one I made a few years ago now
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They conveniently leave out how much effort it is to store them, and also sell them set-by-set to realise your return.
 
SilverDJ said:
They conveniently leave out how much effort it is to store them, and also sell them set-by-set to realise your return.
And the very real risks associated with lego, such as stepping on them in bare feet.
 
SilverPete said:
And the very real risks associated with lego, such as stepping on them in bare feet.

Investor newbie alert! You never open the box silly. And don't scratch them, breath on them, or take them out of the climate controlled vault or you'll lose your premium and barely get spot for them.
 
SilverPete said:
SilverDJ said:
They conveniently leave out how much effort it is to store them, and also sell them set-by-set to realise your return.
And the very real risks associated with lego, such as stepping on them in bare feet.

And by implication, the much greater risk of kids (big and small) opening the packages.
 
willrocks said:
And by implication, the much greater risk of kids (big and small) opening the packages.

If kids find out about your lego stack you are screwed.
Worse than telling the world you have a safe full of gold.
 
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