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Has it been clearly/legally established that they are entitled to do this?
Is there any way to avoid this?
The levy does not apply if you are invested in:
an Approved Retirement Fund (ARF);
an Approved Minimum Retirement Fund (AMRF);
a PRSA that is being used for ARF or AMRF purposes
differ from a normal PRSA?a PRSA that is being used for ARF or AMRF purposes
Has it been clearly/legally established that they are entitled to do this?
A chargeable person who, in relation to the assets of a scheme, being a scheme approved by the Commissioners, is liable to pay the duty charged under subsection (3) on a statement delivered by the chargeable person pursuant to subsection (2) shall, for the purposes of payment of the duty, be entitled to dispose of or appropriate such assets of the scheme as are required to meet the amount of the duty so payable and the scheme shall not cease to be a scheme approved by the Commissioners as a consequence of any such disposal or appropriation by the chargeable person.
Where in pursuance of this section a chargeable person disposes of or appropriates an asset of a scheme in accordance with subsection (5)(a), then no action shall lie against the chargeable person in any court by reason of such disposal or appropriation.
It's a PRSA from which the lump sum has been withdrawn and the balance is being used as an Approved (Minimum) Retirement Fund substitute. In other words, a PRSA owned by a person who is of age to draw their retirement benefits.
The applies to pre-retirement pension funds. The majority of post-retirement pension vehicles are exempt. A PRSA can be used pre and post-retirement. When used for the former, it's not exempt; when used for the latter it is.
Is is 0.6% per tax year? or June-June?
In other words, if the pre retirement PRSA goes post retirement PRSA or ARF/AMRF/Annuity before June 30th 2012 then the deduction does not happen?
Perhaps a little more research would be appropriate. I do appreciate that this is an area that most people do not understandThe legislation seems to make the owner of the money chargeable for the levy. The question is - Who owns the fund? Most private pensions are notional shares of composite funds controlled and managed by the pension companies. The investors have no right of ownership to any of that fund. Their rights are purely contractual (for example, if the pension company went bust, the investor wouldn't have any right to recover his or her "fund" from the receiver on the basis that it is not the property of the pension company)..
Untrue.It thus appears that insofar as fund-based pensions are concerned (i.e. Most private pensions), the pension company is liable for the levy, and unless the company has specific authority under the terms of its contract with the investor, it cannot compensate itself for the levy by making the investor pay..
Can you back that statement up with a real example? I am not aware of any company that deducted the levy before the 30/06/2011I notice that some of the pension companies have had the affrontry to deduct this value from investors intitlements ahead of the designated date.
Can you give examples of where Irish pension funds have higher than average charges than the EU norm or is this just your opinion again rather than actual fact? Again you seem to have little understanding of what funds options are available in a pension. Indexed Funds track an index of shares so fund managers have no control of the performance. Majority of pensions have single premium deposit options and all pensions have cash holding funds used for a tempory safe haven. Managed funds however rarely beat the index that they are tracking and so offer poor value due to higher management chargesBut what really p.....es me off is the whining of the pensions industry over this levy. I didn't notice much contrition when their world beating fees and world-beating underperformance resulted in a destruction of pension wealth many multiples of the 0.6% they are so outraged about!.
Would be nice but will never happen. In reality pension's have a very low profit margin for the pension companies, just look at the online discount brokers which are charging as little as 0.75% AMC. Most of the group schemes that I have put in place over the years have 0.65% AMC. If the company that I have placed group schemes with absorbed the pension levy, they would only have 0.05% AMCPerhaps, as an act of contrition for the lousy value they have given to investors in their rotten products in recent years they might volunteer to pay the levy out of their handsome fees and charges - and before someone brings the issue of who exactly is chargeable for this levy before the courts of law.
So why, if they haven't any control over the performance of these funds, do they charge fees for doing what a monkey sticking a pin into the financial times could do just as well?
I fail to see how Irish Life would be unable to absorb this 0.6%.
By the way, I haven't a clue what an AMC is. Nor, as a consumer, should I have to care.
The literature with my "cash" fund posited year on year returns of 6%. In fact, I have learned that analogous funds managed by Irish Life have earned about 2% in the recent past. Why is this allowed by the regulatory authorities?
Ordinary people need to be able to put their pensions into simple dirt-exempt, fee-exempt, interest-bearing savings accounts with the same tax benefits as pensions-industry products, but without the risks, lack of transparancy, and unreliability. Sure, they would have to accept modest returns and the risk of inflationary losses. However, inflation erodes all products - but not as surely as fees and charges - and the depradations of the hapless fund-managers who haven't managed to outperform deposit returns in a decade.
One great benefit of having this alternative would be to introduce proper choice and competition into the sector, and force the industry to justify its fees and charges. On the evidence of the last decade, it can't.
Of course there is cost in managing indexed funds as per DK's post. There is also trading costs and the tighter the tracking margin of the indexed fund the higher the trading cost's. Indexed funds have lower charges than managed funds as previously stated. I am at odds to know how you lost 30% of your pension fund as you have quite clearly stated in this thread that your "priority is maximum security" http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?t=154624 Am I to assume that you have switched funds? May I also ask which fund that you refer to, that has droped by 30% and over what period did this happen? I would like to see if that statement can be backed up by fact (or is it just another sweeping statement based on your opnion?) That said it is quite possible.This single statement is the most devastating demolition of the pensions racket I have yet encountered. Well done. I agree wholeheartedly. So why, if they haven't any control over the performance of these funds, do they charge fees for doing what a monkey sticking a pin into the financial times could do just as well? (In fact a monkey would have done better than the geniuses who lost more than 30% of my pension during a period the market as a whole dropped only 25%!)
If you were compare cash to a demand account and after listening to the "Money Doctor" on Today FM during the week 0.6% return would seem be the average that the banks are paying. However cash funds are invested with hundereds of banks throughout the world on a week by week basis to reduce risk, should one of those banks default.I selected Irish Life's cash fund because I thought my money would be kept in cash and my capital would be secure. After they took 3.5% off the top I discovered that "cash" isn't cash at all, but something called "cash-backed", and that the geniuses in Irish Life have managed to get a return of 0.6% on my money, and I have been advised that I have no hope of getting back to par by my chosen retirement date. Another jolly little practice of this industry is to state projected earnings which bear no relation to what analogous funds have actually earned in recent years. The literature with my "cash" fund posited year on year returns of 6%. In fact, I have learned that analogous funds managed by Irish Life have earned about 2% in the recent past. Why is this allowed by the regulatory authorities?
You only have to look here on AAM to see that people are genuinely concerned about the pension levy and the possible reduction in tax relief and this is one of many reasons why people are considering stopping their pension contributions. The main reason's why people have stopped paying into their pension is because of reduced income and mass unemployment.My only consolation is that there is now a stampede away from endowment pensions. This failed industry, which cannot see past its own self-interest, would like to blame the stampede on tax-relief and the levy.
5. Legislation would stipulate that the interest applying on PDAs could be no lower than the highest rate of interest applying on any term deposit up to and including 5 years on offer by the financial institution concerned (This would prevent banks offering a high initial "come on" rate and then degrading it). The same rule would apply to transaction-charges. Management fees etc. would be prohibited (Being cash, there is nothing to "manage" anyway)
PDAs would be guarranteed to their full value by a Government guarrantee (I presume that at some time in the future normal deposit guarrantees will be reinstated).
After they took 3.5% off the top I discovered that "cash" isn't cash at all, but something called "cash-backed", and that the geniuses in Irish Life have managed to get a return of 0.6% on my money
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