I am due to retire very shortly and for over 20 years had a broker who i thought was looking after my pension. I have only ever recieved yearly reports and never any montly statements. After numerous phone calls recently they issued me with a statement showing that i had lost over 25% since the previous report. In the two weeks it took to for the brokers to meet me i had lost a further 10%.
Had I known that my pension was losing so much i would have done something about it. All i am told is it may go back up in value.
When was i going to be told of this? Do brokers owe a responsibility to their clients to inform them that their pensions are losing so much? I have no idea what to do next!
You are I imagine fairly typical of what has happened in this country.
People leave it to their broker to make decisions on their behalf and at most they choose a medium risk investment profile for their pension. The brokers depend on fees and commission, so they are not going to tell you to stop paying into your pension, ie they are a vested interest, and the last person you should go to for independent advice is a vested interest.
I do however think that a good financial advisor who doesn't act as a vested interest, is a good person to know and have manage your pension portfolio and for the money you pay them, they could save you hundreds of thousands in the long run....there are a few posting on this site for example...as long as they give you good independent advice about how to move your pension around to limit your exposures to crashes, then you should talk to them.
Now is the worst possible time to be exposed to the stock market in any way shape or form. The losses we have seen in the last year may take years and more than likely decades to make up, and we haven't even seen the bottom yet.
But your broker does seem negligent not to have transferred your pension into a safer investment five years prior to your retirement. And your pension may have a bit to drop yet I am afraid.
My advice would be to contact your broker and request them to transfer the remainder of your pension into a safe option such as a savings account or something like that.
If your broker is unresponsive within a day or two, get onto the Financial Regulator or someone like that. Your pension is far too important to sit back and let others do what they please with it.