Dave Vanian
Registered User
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Yes, that's my reading of the proposal.I think it means that if there are 4 investment managers, each one has to offer the four fund choices. If a punter decides to go with "Moderate risk", it looks like the CPA will split their contributions 25% each to the Moderate risk options of the four investment managers. Would that be your understanding?
The fund managers will have to be compliant with the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulations anyway. Not a bad idea to just offer ESG funds with different risk ratings. It won't be too long until that are the main options that European investors will have.Yes, that's my reading of the proposal.
Personally, I think it would be more efficient to appoint a single manager for, say, 6 years following an open competition. It would certainly reduce the administrative complexity (and costs) of running the scheme.
I think the default option should be a series of passively managed, target date funds with a glide path agreed with the Department. Perhaps this is what the Department has in mind.
I don't have any objection to offering members of the scheme the alternative option of an aggressive, balanced and conservative fund in addition to the default option. It might also be appropriate to offer a Sharia law option and, perhaps, a "dark green" sustainable investments fund.
Fair point.The fund managers will have to be compliant with the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulations anyway. Not a bad idea to just offer ESG funds with different risk ratings. It won't be too long until that are the main options that European investors will have.
Reading through the report now. If the money is going to be split, they want to ensure the lifestyling option is done the same way. Currently, different fund managers have different trigger points for moving to less volatile assets.Fair point.
I think the most important thing is to get the default option right - that's where the vast majority of contributions will end up.
Yeah, that's one of reasons why I think it would be more efficient for a single manager to be appointed for a number of years, following a competitive tendering process.If the money is going to be split, they want to ensure the lifestyling option is done the same way. Currently, different fund managers have different trigger points for moving to less volatile assets.
That's a bigger debate!There's also the argument over the automatic sell off of equities to buy bonds based on age. We have seen over the last few years that equities generated the returns while bonds struggled to generate anything.
I don't have any objection to offering members of the scheme the alternative option of an aggressive, balanced and conservative fund in addition to the default option.
It’s a reasonable point but (IIRC) something like 95% of members of the AE scheme in the UK simply stick with the default option (which, by definition, has to be an off the shelf product).Thinking about this and bearing in mind that there seems to be no advice involved, I can see a potential problem here. Without advice, after a few good years of performance lots of people start piling into the aggressive fund choice, based solely on its past performance. Then a big correction occurs and it drops by 25%. Newspapers have a field day writing about "€1 billion wiped off the value of the Government's auto-enrolment scheme". Lots of people believe that they've been sold a pup, that the Government scheme is a "rip-off", comparing it to Eircom shares and so on.
Vanguard have to tender for the business. You can't just hand a massive contract to a company. That's not how it works.Can they not just put it in vanguard age targeted funds?
Would it not be better to tie in with a professional fund manager like Zurich for the selection of funds rather than a new government body to select investments for a fund.
I wouldn't have much confidence in the ability of a new government body to design a pension fund themselves. The management of what's left of the irish sovereign wealth fund leaves a lot to be desired
Vanguard aren't the only provider of target dated funds. And they aren't only passive either. And they aren't always the cheapest.But shipship's point is valid.
Can they not put it out to tender and then award it to Vanguard? Cut out all the messing with multiple providers.
Brendan
All the life companies do investment only group pensions with the likes of Mercer, Aon, Invesco etc doing the admin. The fund manager is just sent a lump sum of money each month and instruction on which funds to invest it into. They don't have any member names and they do no scheme admin. The amc for most of the funds offered under these schemes are less than 0.5%.Interesting bit is that any company that tenders for the investment management services bit can't tender for for the fund administration/Transfer agency piece. So they are capping the management services piece at 0.5% management charge but the fund administration and other pieces aren't free either. A lot of the large companies will offer these services almost at a loss to win the investment side of the business. This won't happen here. I don't really get the 4 companies either. They say it is to drive competition and yet be able to provide efficient oversight. I don't see what competition they are driving. No company is going to bid at less than the 0.5% management charge.
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