Hi,
I saw mention on this in the Sunday Business Post yesterday and thought it looked interesting:
http://www.davy.ie/TopLevel?page=davydirectpension
It is a PRSA where you can control the funds that are purchased and it looks like it allows you access index based funds and ETFs for a lower cost (that is the bit I am wondering about).
To keep the numbers simple, am I on the right track in the following:
'standard' executive pension, through Aviva for example, annual management charge = 1%, but then we have the hidden charges (that I am just getting a handle on through other readings here), combining to give a total expense ratio of say 2.75% (this is just a guesstimate).
With the Davy's product it says they have an annual management charge of 0.75%. You also pay one-off transaction charges: (0.75% for first 50k, 0.5% after that) http://www.davy.ie/Generic?page=selfdirectedcommissionsandcharges
If you were interested in buying an ETF and leaving it for the long term you would also incur an annual management charge on the ETF of 0.5% (quick example http://uk.ishares.com/en/rc/funds/IWRD).
So in terms of costs you are saving 1.5% annually if you did a buy-and-hold long term? (on the basis that the TER for actively managed funds is 2.75% - nobody seems to know for sure!)
Until now I was under the impression that self-drected funds cost a relatively high amount annual (2-4k I have seen mentioned in other threads) in pensioneer trustee costs but this Davy's solution would look to be a reasonable middle ground?
I have aAbsolutely no connection to Davy's by the way in case anybody thinks this is trying to promote the product.
Just trying to get a handle on how it compares to a 'self directed fund' that would have required the pensioneer trustee and also how it compares to traditional actively managed pension products.
I saw mention on this in the Sunday Business Post yesterday and thought it looked interesting:
http://www.davy.ie/TopLevel?page=davydirectpension
It is a PRSA where you can control the funds that are purchased and it looks like it allows you access index based funds and ETFs for a lower cost (that is the bit I am wondering about).
To keep the numbers simple, am I on the right track in the following:
'standard' executive pension, through Aviva for example, annual management charge = 1%, but then we have the hidden charges (that I am just getting a handle on through other readings here), combining to give a total expense ratio of say 2.75% (this is just a guesstimate).
With the Davy's product it says they have an annual management charge of 0.75%. You also pay one-off transaction charges: (0.75% for first 50k, 0.5% after that) http://www.davy.ie/Generic?page=selfdirectedcommissionsandcharges
If you were interested in buying an ETF and leaving it for the long term you would also incur an annual management charge on the ETF of 0.5% (quick example http://uk.ishares.com/en/rc/funds/IWRD).
So in terms of costs you are saving 1.5% annually if you did a buy-and-hold long term? (on the basis that the TER for actively managed funds is 2.75% - nobody seems to know for sure!)
Until now I was under the impression that self-drected funds cost a relatively high amount annual (2-4k I have seen mentioned in other threads) in pensioneer trustee costs but this Davy's solution would look to be a reasonable middle ground?
I have aAbsolutely no connection to Davy's by the way in case anybody thinks this is trying to promote the product.
Just trying to get a handle on how it compares to a 'self directed fund' that would have required the pensioneer trustee and also how it compares to traditional actively managed pension products.