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Pension options

Stargunner
Posts: 966 Forumite

I am a mid 50s guy and as well as paying into my company pension I have an old Wesleyan private pension that I still pay £100 a month into.
There is around £125000 in it but I notice from my statements that I am paying around £1400 a year in charges.
I have around £25000 in Wesleyan pension deposit fund series 3 which is rated as risk average.
I have around £55000 in Wesleyan pension managed fund series 3 which is rated as moderate high risk reward.
I have around £45000 in Pension managed fund series 1 which is rated as moderate high risk reward.
I have no mortgage now and am in a financially comfortable position so I am looking to increase my contributions but wondering whether I would be better to transfer it to another provider with much lower fees.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
There is around £125000 in it but I notice from my statements that I am paying around £1400 a year in charges.
I have around £25000 in Wesleyan pension deposit fund series 3 which is rated as risk average.
I have around £55000 in Wesleyan pension managed fund series 3 which is rated as moderate high risk reward.
I have around £45000 in Pension managed fund series 1 which is rated as moderate high risk reward.
I have no mortgage now and am in a financially comfortable position so I am looking to increase my contributions but wondering whether I would be better to transfer it to another provider with much lower fees.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
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Comments
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Does your company match your contributions?
If so it would make sense to make whatever contributions you need to get theirs.
Anything unmatched is a different matter.
Also do you get salary sacrifice?
If you get employees NI relief that’s also a benefit that you won’t get through your own pension.0 -
My company just pay in the 3% minimum and I pay in 5% on a salary of around £45k. I dont have the option of a salary sacrifice scheme.
I have around £100k in cash isa’s/fixed rate savings earning between 2,2 and 2.75% and will shortly inherit around £150k0 -
Stargunner wrote: »I have an old Wesleyan private pension that I still pay £100 a month into.
There is around £125000 in it but I notice from my statements that I am paying around £1400 a year in charges.
Does the pension have any guarantees such as a guaranteed annuity rate?0 -
It doesn’t have any guarantees.
It says if I buy an annuity the cost will be at an interest rate of 2% below the rate of inflation each year and that the annuity will increase in line with inflation.0 -
There is around £125000 in it but I notice from my statements that I am paying around £1400 a year in charges.
Other pensions just have one all in charge . If your pension is like that then the charges are not excessively high for managed funds , but you can probably get cheaper.
If this £1400 is only the platform charge then its very expensive.
Have another look at the paperwork and maybe give them a call to get 100% clarity on the charges.0 -
I am fairly sure that it is a all in charge for managing the fund but I have booked a review meeting for tomorrow with one of their advisors and I will check with them when they come round.0
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Is your workplace pension a standard DC/money purchase scheme? and do you know your workplace pension charges ? If you do transfer the Wesleyan one , then it could be an option to transfer to. Often employers will have negotiated a good discount , better than you can get yourself.It says if I buy an annuity the cost will be at an interest rate of 2% below the rate of inflation each year and that the annuity will increase in line with inflation.
Normally some kind of drawdown ( where the pension remains invested and you take money from it slowly) is the main method. However many old pensions do not support this ( IT issues) and you may have to transfer the pension anyway due to this . Something else to ask the advisor !0 -
The workplace pension is with NEST and I have copied this info from their website about their charges.
We have the same low charges for all members. This stays the same whether a member is contributing or not, whatever fund they’re contributing to, and no matter how much is in their retirement pot.
These charges are made up of two parts:
a contribution charge of 1.8 per cent on each new contribution into a member’s retirement pot
an annual management charge (AMC) of 0.3 per cent on the total value of a member’s fund each year
So if a member paid £1,000 into their pot over the year, the contribution charge would be £18. If their pot was then worth £10,000, they’d pay an AMC of £30.
The total charge would come to £48. That’s just under 0.5 per cent of the total value of their retirement pot.
I don’t have to buy an annuity with Wesleyan and I probably wouldn’t anyway with the interest rates so low.0 -
Stargunner wrote: »My company just pay in the 3% minimum and I pay in 5% on a salary of around £45k. I dont have the option of a salary sacrifice scheme.
I have around £100k in cash isa’s/fixed rate savings earning between 2,2 and 2.75% and will shortly inherit around £150k
Ok.
My point was that it’s worth having their 3% and at least doing the minimum you need to do to get that.
Additional money can go somewhere else if there is no advantage to this scheme over say a SIPP.0 -
Had my meeting with the Wesleyan representative. I will probably top up my pension with a lump sum of around £60k over this and next tax year. Wesleyan take charge 3% of all contributions and then charge between 0.5 and 1% annual charge. So I think that I need to look for another provider. I don’t have enough knowledge to be buying and selling shares so will probably just settle on a fund like Vanguard lifestyle 60 or 40. I am aware that Vanguard will be introducing their own sipp shortly but I can also invest into these funds from other pension providers. Fidelity are offering £500 cash back if you transfer your pension to them for my size pot. Can anyone suggest any other good pension providers and possible funds that I should be considering.0
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