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Is a Paid Investment Newsletter Worth It? The Honest Answer

The Cost of Getting It Wrong

Before you ask whether a paid investment newsletter is worth it, ask yourself: what did your last investment mistake cost you? If the answer is more than £85, the maths on independent research already starts to make sense.

The real question isn't whether research is expensive. It's whether the quality of your current decision-making is good enough to justify the risk you're taking. Most private investors would benefit from an honest second opinion from someone who has no incentive to tell them what they want to hear.

What You Get From Free Investment Content

Free investment content is almost always one of three things: a lead generation tool for a brokerage or fund, a media property monetised through advertising, or surface-level analysis written to maximise search traffic rather than investment insight. That doesn't mean it's useless — but it means you should know what it is.

What a Good Paid Newsletter Looks Like

A good paid investment newsletter has three things: a credible author with real skin in the game, editorial independence from brokers and advertisers, and a publication frequency that keeps you genuinely current. It takes clear positions, explains the reasoning, and doesn't hedge everything into meaninglessness to protect the writer's reputation.

Nutstuff, written by William Nutting, is built on exactly this model. Thirty years of investing experience. No advertising. No broker partnerships. Three issues per week. Clear stock ideas. Honest conclusions — including when the analysis is revised.

The ROI Calculation

At £85 per month, a Nutstuff subscription costs less than one working day of most professional service fees. If it surfaces one stock idea that performs — or helps you avoid one significant mistake — it has paid for itself. For investors managing six-figure-plus portfolios, independent research is not a luxury calculation. It's a risk management one.

Start with a free trial at nutstuff.co.uk. Read a few issues. Form your own view. That's exactly the kind of thinking Nutstuff encourages.

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