Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,837
The only pension product that I know that is capable of those charges is a self directed PRSA that buys gold and that's if the fund is relatively small as the charges are on a sliding scale and get cheaper as more gold is bought. I do not know of any pension available through an insurance company that charges that much. 30 years ago, there were plenty of contracts like that but they're well gone.This is for the worst case of a full term pension with 3%+ annual fees.
I wonder how many pensions actually fall into this category?
[broken link removed]I would like to see the report which they don't provide a link to.
[broken link removed]
In reality fees on a pension are charged on the size of the existing pension pot. When you start saving your pension pot is almost empty, so you pay low fees. As the pot fills, the annual fees mount up, and very soon they outstrip the annual tax relief on pension contributions.
Everyone talks about "relief" as if you don't pay tax but it is really a deferral of tax until drawdown. The whole point is that pensions are "EET" - contributions exempt, returns exempt, drawdown taxed. Tax relief is not a state contribution. It is just a tax deferral.Given that the State, through tax relief, funds up to 40% of the value of pension contributions
They aren't saying a typical fund has an annual charge of 3%. They point out that when you take the annual charge and all the other charges a fund can impose, it starts reaching 3%. The AMC doesn't include things like transaction fees, or other internal management fees imposed on a fund and those do drag on the return of the fund.It's a grossly irresponsible poor piece of work, by an annonymous public servant, put forward by Labour on the eve (?) of proposed pension legislation by them.
They're basically calling for more transparency on the back of a report that has zero transparency.
It assumes that the "typical" annual charge is circa 3% without having any evidence to back it up, at all. How helpful is that for pension coverage?
Great headlines for the unquestioning media though.
Gerard
www.prsa.ie
If you properly account for transaction costs within a pension fund, such as brokerage commission, bid offer spreads, stamp duty etc then an actively managed fund with average turnover can double the disclosed ongoing charges figure of a fund.
so a managed Irish equity fund with stamp duty of 1% turnover of 80% could easily get to 3%pa
[broken link removed]
Still working for me.There's nothing at the end of that link for me! Has it been removed?
What would you expect the true annual cost to be for a passive index tracking global equity fund with a declared AMC of say 0.65%? (assume 100% allocation and any advice fees are paid by employer). I guess I could compare with the benchmark index, although that ignores the thorny issue of index tracking errors ...
Still working for me.
They aren't saying a typical fund has an annual charge of 3%. They point out that when you take the annual charge and all the other charges a fund can impose, it starts reaching 3%. The AMC doesn't include things like transaction fees, or other internal management fees imposed on a fund and those do drag on the return of the fund.
I can't find any KIDs for pensions funds, but I'm going to assume that the similarly named investment funds from the same company apply similar fees. So lets use Zurich Life.If you wanted to invest in a global index tracker fund in your pension (most people don't do that, they choose multi-asset type funds), your AMC would have to be circa 2.8%.
Show me the pension product you can buy in Ireland with an AMC of 2.8%.
The document says typically 3% four times.
Gerard
www.prsa.ie
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?