Colm Fagan
Registered User
- Messages
- 763
“My Future Fund”, the Irish Auto-Enrolment Scheme, starts receiving contributions from January next.
The default investment strategy (to age 51) is to invest in equities. My own pension is still almost entirely in equities (at age 75!). Its market value can fluctuate wildly: it fell by 15.7% in March 2020 and by 12.5% in June 2016; in the two months February and March 2020, its value fell by over a quarter (down 25.5%). I'm (supposedly) an “experienced investor”, yet I find the falls heart-stopping at times. God knows how people with no investing experience will feel - true for the vast majority of AE members.
Now, to introduce an alternative to “My Future Fund” - “My Past Fund”. It operates like an interest-bearing savings account. Between January 2014 and May 2025, the average interest rate on “My Past Fund” was 8.7% a year (compounded monthly); never in the 138 months did the "interest rate" fall below (plus) 4.8% pa. In contrast, monthly returns on my own ARF fund were negative almost 40% of the time.
The progress of “interest rates” on “My Past Fund” is shown in the graph below. In 124 of the 138 months from Jan 2014, the “interest rate” was between +6% and +12% pa.
As you’ve probably guessed, “My Past Fund” is the smoothed version of my own pension fund. Smoothing is per a mechanical formula - a 99% weighting to last month’s smoothed value increased by the expected long-term return and a 1% weighting to current market value. The precise formula, and the progression of actual and smoothed fund (per €1,000 on 1 January 2014, allowing for withdrawals) are shown in the entry dated 3 June 2025 on the Pensions tab of my website, http://colmfagan.ie/ (colmfagan.ie). The spreadsheet shows smoothed value (SV) and market value (MV) crossing 17 times in the period.
I use smoothed values/ returns to keep me sane when markets go crazy, e.g., in March 2020, when the market value fell 15.7%, the smoothed return was an annualised (plus) 4.8% (i.e., +0.4% in the month).
Of course, for me, smoothed returns are only a psychological crutch: they’re not real. However, the light-bulb moment was the realisation that smoothed returns can be made real for AE members. They buy in – always – at SV and they exit – always – at SV. AE means they can’t pile in when SV<MV, nor can they exit in droves when SV>MV.
Smoothed returns on “My Past Fund” show why it’s far better to be in equities than bonds. If my own pension had been invested in bonds (directly or through an annuity), I would have been lucky to get a third of the close to 9%pa I earned over the last 11+ years. AE members could have earned similar returns (or higher, because of lower costs) at deposit account volatility.
Why instead are we exposing unsophisticated investors unnecessarily to full market fluctuations, forgetting that AE is different, that the constraints on contributions and withdrawals make it possible to adopt a different, more inventive, and far better approach?
The default investment strategy (to age 51) is to invest in equities. My own pension is still almost entirely in equities (at age 75!). Its market value can fluctuate wildly: it fell by 15.7% in March 2020 and by 12.5% in June 2016; in the two months February and March 2020, its value fell by over a quarter (down 25.5%). I'm (supposedly) an “experienced investor”, yet I find the falls heart-stopping at times. God knows how people with no investing experience will feel - true for the vast majority of AE members.
Now, to introduce an alternative to “My Future Fund” - “My Past Fund”. It operates like an interest-bearing savings account. Between January 2014 and May 2025, the average interest rate on “My Past Fund” was 8.7% a year (compounded monthly); never in the 138 months did the "interest rate" fall below (plus) 4.8% pa. In contrast, monthly returns on my own ARF fund were negative almost 40% of the time.
The progress of “interest rates” on “My Past Fund” is shown in the graph below. In 124 of the 138 months from Jan 2014, the “interest rate” was between +6% and +12% pa.
As you’ve probably guessed, “My Past Fund” is the smoothed version of my own pension fund. Smoothing is per a mechanical formula - a 99% weighting to last month’s smoothed value increased by the expected long-term return and a 1% weighting to current market value. The precise formula, and the progression of actual and smoothed fund (per €1,000 on 1 January 2014, allowing for withdrawals) are shown in the entry dated 3 June 2025 on the Pensions tab of my website, http://colmfagan.ie/ (colmfagan.ie). The spreadsheet shows smoothed value (SV) and market value (MV) crossing 17 times in the period.
I use smoothed values/ returns to keep me sane when markets go crazy, e.g., in March 2020, when the market value fell 15.7%, the smoothed return was an annualised (plus) 4.8% (i.e., +0.4% in the month).
Of course, for me, smoothed returns are only a psychological crutch: they’re not real. However, the light-bulb moment was the realisation that smoothed returns can be made real for AE members. They buy in – always – at SV and they exit – always – at SV. AE means they can’t pile in when SV<MV, nor can they exit in droves when SV>MV.
Smoothed returns on “My Past Fund” show why it’s far better to be in equities than bonds. If my own pension had been invested in bonds (directly or through an annuity), I would have been lucky to get a third of the close to 9%pa I earned over the last 11+ years. AE members could have earned similar returns (or higher, because of lower costs) at deposit account volatility.
Why instead are we exposing unsophisticated investors unnecessarily to full market fluctuations, forgetting that AE is different, that the constraints on contributions and withdrawals make it possible to adopt a different, more inventive, and far better approach?