Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
Note: Investing involves risk. The value of investments can go down as well as up, and you may lose money. Deposit protection, tax treatment and inheritance rules vary by country and personal circumstances.
An inheritance can change your financial position quickly. It can feel unexpected or confusing, especially when money or assets arrive before you have decided how they fit into your wider financial plans.
The money may also carry emotion and responsibility, which can make decisions harder. So, the first step is to look at what you’ve received, what you owe, and what matters most to you before deciding how to move forward.
Investing an inheritance may be one way to give part of that money a longer-term purpose. Some of it may support near-term needs, while the rest may be considered for longer-term goals.
An inheritance often arrives with a mix of emotions and plenty of outside opinions. Some people tend to move too quickly, while others do nothing at all.
Before deciding where or how to invest an inheritance, it can help to focus on the first steps that bring structure to the situation:
Taking time before making major decisions may help separate the emotional side of receiving an inheritance from the practical choices that follow. This may mean waiting a few months before investing or spending a large amount, provided there are no legal, tax or estate deadlines. During that period, some people hold cash in accessible accounts or short-term products while they review their options. Risks, access, returns and protections vary by product and jurisdiction, and money market funds or short-term products are not the same as bank deposits.
Not all inheritances arrive in cash. They might include shares, property, pension rights, or a stake in a family business. Each type of asset has its own process for transfer, tax treatment, potential inheritance or estate taxes, and liquidity considerations. Before making changes, it may help to list each item and confirm ownership details, local tax obligations and any deadlines, with professional help where the rules are unclear.
Before investing a significant amount, current liabilities may need to be reviewed. Paying off high-interest debt, such as credit cards or consumer loans, may improve your financial position by reducing interest costs, although the right approach depends on your wider circumstances. If emergency savings are limited, strengthening them may be more relevant than moving straight into longer-term strategies.
If you inherit investments, adding them to an existing portfolio without review may create risks if they do not align with your goals, time horizon, or risk tolerance. Their portfolio may have suited their age and goals, not yours. Each asset’s purpose, diversification, risk level and tax position should be understood before deciding whether to keep or sell it.
Once the initial steps are complete, the next decision is how the inheritance money could be allocated in line with your goals, time horizon and risk tolerance.
Here are some principles to consider:
Short-term goals, such as buying a home or paying for education, may require lower volatility and liquidity. Savings accounts, short-term bonds or money market funds may be relevant, but risks, access, returns and protections vary. Longer-term goals, such as retirement or building intergenerational wealth, may allow for more growth exposure, depending on your risk tolerance and financial circumstances. Global equity funds, balanced portfolios, and diversified ETFs may offer broader market exposure across sectors and regions, but they can fall in value and are subject to costs, liquidity risk and market risk.
Holding everything in cash may reduce market risk but can limit growth potential and leave money exposed to inflation. Investing the full amount immediately may increase timing risk. One approach is to separate near-term liquidity from money intended for longer-term investment, with gradual investment sometimes used to reduce reliance on a single-entry point. This may make the decision less dependent on short-term market timing, although it does not guarantee better returns.
Some countries offer tax-advantaged accounts or wrappers for long-term investing, but eligibility, contribution limits, withdrawal rules and tax treatment vary and can change. Check local rules or seek professional tax advice before using them.
If an inheritance is intended to support different needs, such as daily living, family support or retirement, separate accounts or portfolios may make those purposes easier to track. This may make each goal easier to track and reduce the risk that short-term spending disrupts longer-term plans.
The right mix of assets depends not only on your goals but also on how much inheritance money you received.
Each range presents different possibilities and trade-offs:
A smaller inheritance may be used to strengthen financial resilience first, depending on personal circumstances. Part of it may be kept in accessible reserves for emergencies or essential goals, while any longer-term amount may be researched separately for investment. Diversified funds or mixed-asset ETFs can offer broad exposure, but they still require periodic review and can lose value.
An inheritance of this size may be large enough to support several goals at once. It may be divided into clear parts, such as debt repayment, large expenses, future goals, and longer-term investing. Balanced portfolios that combine equities, bonds and some inflation-linked assets may help address inflation risk, but they do not guarantee protection against rising prices. Tax-advantaged accounts may be relevant, depending on local rules, eligibility and personal circumstances.
Larger inheritances may create more options, but they can also increase the need for planning around tax, liquidity, diversification and timing. Diversifying across various asset classes, including equities, bonds, property, listed alternatives where available, and cash, may help manage exposure to single-market shocks, but it does not eliminate the risk of loss. For money intended for investment, gradual market entry may reduce reliance on a single purchase date, although it does not remove market risk or guarantee better results. Professional guidance may be appropriate where the amount, tax position or estate considerations are complex.
Even well-intentioned plans can go wrong when emotion or haste gets in the way.
Common issues that can affect the long-term value of an inheritance include:
Some people start using inheritance money quickly and lose track of where it goes. Impulse purchases or lifestyle upgrades can shrink the amount faster than expected.
Taking time to define priorities may help the inheritance support a clearer purpose, rather than being absorbed into daily spending.
Inherited assets often reflect someone else’s financial goals and risk profile. Keeping them unchanged can result in an unbalanced portfolio or exposure to areas that no longer align with your situation. Each holding should be reviewed against your goals, risk tolerance, time horizon and tax position.
Different assets are taxed in different ways. Interest, dividends, and capital gains from inherited accounts or investments may be treated separately under local laws. Tax treatment should be checked before selling or reinvesting, as outcomes vary by jurisdiction and personal circumstances.
Confidence after a windfall can lead to speculative decisions. Some people invest too aggressively, assuming the inheritance can easily recover losses. An approach aligned with your goals, time horizon and risk tolerance may help you manage risk, but investment values can still fall.
An inheritance may change several parts of your financial situation. It may affect your pension planning, eligibility for benefits, tax position or estate planning, depending on local rules and personal circumstances. Reassessing your finances after significant life events may help keep your plans realistic and in line with your new reality.
An inheritance may provide an opportunity to reassess your financial position, but the right approach depends on the assets you receive, your existing obligations, tax rules, time horizon, and risk tolerance. Some money may need to remain accessible for short-term needs, while any amount considered for investment should be assessed against longer-term goals and the risk of loss.
A clear plan can help you separate immediate priorities from future objectives. That may include reviewing debts, keeping appropriate reserves, understanding tax implications and deciding whether any remaining amount is suitable for investment.