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MSE News: Pension firms promise clearer charges

"Major pension providers have pledged to disclose charges and costs more clearly and consistently to people in workplace..."

Comments

  • JCL
    JCL Posts: 574 Forumite
    Debt-free and Proud!
    Seems a good move. Clearly we all know you don't get something for nothing but it's important to know we are paying. A good investment is worth the cost if it generates a decent return for you over time.
    MFW 2015 #41 = £20,515/£20,515
    MFW 2014 #41 = £26,100/£25,000
    MFW 2013 #41 = £10,000/£10,000
    Original MF date = May 2036 - MF achieved on 15 June 2015
  • Ken68
    Ken68 Posts: 6,825 Forumite
    First Anniversary First Post Energy Saving Champion Home Insurance Hacker!
    Nothing new here.These pledges to be more straightforward have been made every year for 50 years.
    Time for Le Guillotine
  • dunstonh
    dunstonh Posts: 116,354 Forumite
    Name Dropper First Anniversary First Post Combo Breaker
    You are right, nothing new here. The information has been available for ages. Effectively it is just standardising what most have been doing for ages and what you would expect if you would be buying an individual plan rather than a group scheme.

    Anyone that wanted to know it could find out and read it. Those that dont read it wont be any the wiser regardless of how it is presented. Majority fall into the latter camp.
    I am an Independent Financial Adviser (IFA). The comments I make are just my opinion and are for discussion purposes only. They are not financial advice and you should not treat them as such. If you feel an area discussed may be relevant to you, then please seek advice from an Independent Financial Adviser local to you.
  • There is something new here. :j What's disclosed at the moment is only part of the truth. The scandal is about what are called trading costs.

    Actively managed funds usually trade (churn) about 80% of the stock in the portfolio once a year. The FSA estimated a couple of years ago that the "round trip" cost of a trade is 1.8% of the transaction so a fund with 80% trading is costing the punter 1.4%pa on top of the fees you currently pay.:eek:

    This is why most savvy companies have moved out of active and into passive funds which have reduced transactional costs and offset what they have by lending stock to others.

    WHICH have confirmed this research and estimate that the extra charges are 1.07% pa of a typical fund. Their number is lower because they thought "portfolio turnover" slightly lower than the FSA but either way you should know that you may be paying twice as much in these costs than you do in all the other charges put together!

    And currently these charges are not declared!:mad:

    Let me say this again, you do not have to pay these charges- you can avoid them- but you have no way of telling which funds have high transactional charges and which haven't.

    One man, Terry Smith (you may know him as a boxer) but he now is a financier, has been shouting about this for a long time and I'm glad for him that people are at last doing something about it.:beer::T

    The move to disclose the difference in costs between funds with high transactional charges and those with low ones, will help people not to buy rubbish funds SO IT IS A GOOD THING!

    Don't look this gift-horse in a mouth - this is a big deal.
  • hennerst wrote: »
    There is something new here. :j What's disclosed at the moment is only part of the truth. The scandal is about what are called trading costs.
    .
    This is true, these costs are important. Just to clarify to anyone else, the level of costs per trade are not the scandal and these occur in any investment medium, it is the frequency at which they occur in most active funds which mean that any added value (and this is a rarity rather than the norm) is more than offset by them.

    Active managers frequently rely on the random chance of being at the top of the tables to promote their "skill".

    If you are thinking of the same Terry Smith though as I am, he is not unique nor the first to highlight the problem, and he really is as much part of the spin and BS about his own stock-picking skills as the rest of them.
  • hennerst wrote: »
    There is something new here. :j The FSA estimated a couple of years ago that the "round trip" cost of a trade is 1.8% of the transaction so a fund with 80% trading is costing the punter 1.4%pa on top of the fees you currently pay.

    New?? These figures are from a a paper published and written by Kevin James in the year 2000 (but still accurate) If you want even older material look at what Ken Fama and Gene French did in the 90s and I can go back further, but can't be bothered.
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