moneymakeover
Registered User
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- 952
Very interesting.
I presume at retirement...d day...a person liquidates his portfolio?
And next couple of weeks purchases an arf?
Is it possible to have more continuity ie keep the equities and avoid the exit/entry fees?
There's no point in me telling a client not to worry if his €1m pension pot falls to €800,000 because he's going to get lots of units at a lower price in his ARF. He's after losing 25% in tax free cash.
He hasn’t though; he’s lost 20% of what’s taxable cash.
Meaning he’s only down €40k/€250k, or 16%.
I hadn't thought about it before but in this scenario, if you're planning to take a lump sum from your pension fund at the date of retirement and put the rest into an ARF, there is reason for a certain level of lifestyling to remove the volatility from the lump sum element of the fund? If there was a drop in the equity markets in the months/years leading up to retirement date, the amount put side for income in retirement (through the ARF) would be hit by withdrawing a lump sum at the low end of the volatility range. Since the lump sum is being taken out of the fund at a specific point, it's not availing of low purchase costs at that point for future investment growth.The conflicting issues for those approaching retirement is protecting the tax free lump sum and going with the market. Lots of people in "the industry" say that if you intend on investing in an ARF in retirement, stay invested as you will sell out of the pension and buy into the ARF at the same price, so it doesn't really matter what the price is. If markets are high, you are going to sell with lots of gains but buy at a high price so get less units. If markets are falling, you sell with lower gains but get more units the ARF.
The issue is the lump sum, which is a percentage of the fund. There's no point in me telling a client not to worry if his €1m pension pot falls to €800,000 because he's going to get lots of units at a lower price in his ARF. He's after losing 25% in tax free cash. I could also tell him that because he stayed invested, that €800,000 is more than if he had been in low risk strategy from 5 years out.
He hasn’t though; he’s lost 20% of what’s taxable cash.
Meaning he’s only down €40k/€250k, or 16%.
If his pension pot is €1m at the time of retirement he gets 25% tax free lump sum, so €250k right?
While if it 'crashes' to €800k just before retirement, his lump sum is only €200k?
I think that's what Steven meant is that the average investor approaching retirement focuses on that rather than the bigger picture you are seeing.
Can you explain your numbers a bit more please?
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