Misplaced, 50,000 euros can yield less than a simple Booklet A. Worse: some individuals find themselves stuck in illiquid investments, loaded with fees, or seduced by promises of return without measuring the real risk. For Charley Arod, associate portfolio manager at Avenar and former private banker, the first question is never “ where to invest? » but “ what does this sum really represent? ». “We must already know if these 30,000 Or 60,000 euros represent the entire financial surface or only part of it” . If this envelope constitutes the bulk of the heritage, it is impossible to start other than with a precautionary savings.
This safety mattress remains the basis. “In general, we estimate this to be three to six months’ salary depending on the family situation, and we do not take any risks: Booklet A, LDDSnon-taxable media »he recalls. THE Booklet A and the LDDS display today 2.4%while the THE P remains to 3.5%according to Service-Public.fr. Without this immediately available reserve, seeking more yield often becomes a bad idea. Once this basis has been established, the real reflection begins: investment horizon, need for liquidity, risk tolerance and taxation.
ETF, life insurance: simplicity often remains the best strategy
Private equityreal estate crowdfunding, structured products or promising platforms 8 to 12% yield: these offers are easily attractive, but they are rarely adapted to this level of assets. ” With 30,000 to 60,000 eurosI would stay on liquid listed assets. I would not go for alternative or exotic assets”slices Charley Arod.
He favors ETFsthese index funds which replicate a major stock market index like the CAC 40 or the S&P 500 with lower fees than traditional funds. According to studies SPIVAover a long period, the majority of active managers do not beat their index. “If the best fund managers, in 90% time, don’t beat the markets, you might as well replicate them” .
Same logic forlife insurance : it remains above all a tax envelope. At the end of 2025, its outstanding amount exceeded 2.100 billion eurosaccording to France Assureurs.
Hidden fees and fake advisors often cost the most
Many individuals look at the costs of the contract, but forget those of the supports chosen within. However, some traditional funds cost much more than ETFs. ” THE UCITS are five to twenty times more expensive than an ETF »underlines the expert.
Another trap: fake boosted booklets and misleading platforms. “We see a lot of boosted booklet offers at 4 or 5%sometimes offered via fake sites that imitate well-known establishments”he warns. His first instinct: check ORIAS registration of the advisor, obligatory to market certain products such aslife insurance. Then compare at least two or three propositions. “You have to understand who makes money on what, look at hidden fees and see if the advisor really took the time to understand your project”he insists.
Investing gradually remains often the best protection
Last reflex often neglected: do not invest your entire risk pocket at once. “Stocks often need to be invested gradually”advises Charley Arod. Rather than immediately placing all of its capital on the markets, better to enter in stages. This makes it possible to smooth entry points, limit the impact of a sudden correction and preserve cash to benefit from possible declines.
Because in wealth management, the worst mistake is not always the wrong investment. It’s often about trusting, or investing, too quickly.


