Hi Folks, I current pay into a pension via my day job PAYE employment. I pay 5% of my salary matched by 5% from my employer, its with Irish life.... I was a bit of a late starter to the pension game and the current value of both is €32k (im 44 years of age). I understand the projections are to be taken with a pinch of salt but would it be ill advised to increase the risk rating on one pensio to high for a number of years as it appears ill have very little to loose?
That blog is 4 years old. While it not something I update regularly, I have at times looked at Irish Life's tracking error periodically and it's never close.My apologies Steven - I thought Vanguard stopped using MSCI indices about 10 years ago.
I've just checked the latest financial statements for that fund and the tracking error (Institutional Plus EUR ACC class) was only 1bps last year and 4bps from inception. That doesn't seem to tally with your figures so I wonder why is there such a difference?
Absolutely agree - the Irish Life index trackers are fairly shocking.That blog is 4 years old. While it not something I update regularly, I have at times looked at Irish Life's tracking error periodically and it's never close.
I didn't look into it any further at the time. Looking back on the numbers in the article, there is quite a big difference between them and the other two.My apologies Steven - I thought Vanguard stopped using MSCI indices about 10 years ago.
I've just checked the latest financial statements for that fund and the tracking error (Institutional Plus EUR ACC class) was only 1bps last year and 4bps from inception. That doesn't seem to tally with your figures so I wonder why is there such a difference?
Look at the tracking error on the 10 year return. 1% per annum!!!
I asked Irish Life last year the following "We have noticed that the Irish Life funds are consistently underperforming their benchmarks. For example the Indexed World Equity Fund is consistently trailing it’s benchmark by more than one percent. How can this be possible on an index fund that has a fee of 0.65%?"
They responded with this
“The benchmark is actually the index itself the difference is management fee , and there may be a difference due to tracking difference between the actual Index funds and the indices itself. we are required to show the benchmark as the actual index return v the net return on the fund. This is normal for index funds. “
Which is unimpressive considering that the benchmark is one they created themselves
I'm afraid I have no idea what bespoke index Irish Life are trying to track. Without that information, the performance figures for the fund versus its benchmark are somewhat meaningless.
Amazing that they have fact sheets for the same fund and one says it tracks the MSCI World Index and the other doesn't
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?