Charges are 0.5% p/a with spread charges which I am not sure about
Well then comparing it to an index tracker makes no sense. And WP funds are notoriously difficult to value or assess in terms of the impact of charges. For example the surrender value of your fund would be worth less than the original amount because (a) charges were high (b) the surrender value involves the deduction of an MVA (c) the surrender value does not include bonuses only paid on maturity etc. etc.No it wasn't, it was a with-profits.
Eh?ClubMan. I wasn't comparing with-profits policy with an index tracker.
I put in about 10000 euros into a policy with them about 8 years ago. It's now worth less. Granted the timing was awful with the dot-com bust, but in fairness that doesn't excuse not even being able to track indices.
ClubMan. I wasn't comparing with-profits policy with an index tracker. I suppose the reason I brought up an index tracker is that that's the minimum I performance I would expect when investing in any fund now.
At the very least, these professionaly managed funds manged by 'experts' should perform as well as an index tracker.
If not, then what expertise are they actually bringing to the table ?
As Liam says - comparing a WP fund with an index tracker or managed fund is arguably meaningless. Different horses for different courses.At the very least, these professionaly managed funds manged by 'experts' should perform as well as an index tracker.
If not, then what expertise are they actually bringing to the table ?
Not comparing apples with apples. A With Profit fund is designed to be a lower-risk fund than an index-tracking equity fund, which is higher risk. Lower risk = lower potential return. It is only to be expected that a With Profit fund will underperform an index-tracker. (What index are we tracking by the way?)
That is indeed very naive. You really should have sought independent advice if you didn't know what you were doing.At the time I didn't know what I was buying (as I just wanted to put money somewhere and forget about it and concentrate on enjoying a year in Oz!!...financially nieve). At a very high level I would expect a 'fund', of whatever form, to have more value when redeeming than I bought it for.
As I said above if it's a WP fund then the current surrender value may reflect an early encashment MVA penalty, not include terminal/maturity bonuses etc. so it may be difficult to say with accuracy what it is worth at the moment other than if you cash it in before maturity.With this fund that I have it's not currently the case after something like 8 years, and so I would say...stay away from Acorn to the OP.
That is indeed very naive. You really should have sought independent advice if you didn't know what you were doing.
As I said above if it's a WP fund then the current surrender value may reflect an early encashment MVA penalty, not include terminal/maturity bonuses etc. so it may be difficult to say with accuracy what it is worth at the moment other than if you cash it in before maturity.
Why doesn't it state this on the statement?
So (a) as suggested above it may not be a WP fund at all and (b) unless it's some sort of guaranteed fund the possibility of the surrender value being less than the amount invested may simply be an characteristic of the investment especially depending on things like charges, what exactly it's invested in etc.Edit: By the way, regardless of whether or not I've got the policy type wrong, the value as of a few months ago (about 8500 euros) is still less than the original investment (7000 Irish Pounds).
Indeed - it saves other posters' time and helps to avoid confusion if the information posted is accurate.Although I accept that maybe there are early encashment charges built into the current surrender value as suggested by ClubMan. Will have to investigate further.
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