marathonic
Registered User
- Messages
- 122
Can you at least put some realistic growth assumptions. You've left out the pension levy (next 4 years at least).
Aside from that I like the purpose of the post
As I'm working across the border, I usually keep my posts as generic as possible. Besides, if the current plans are for the levy to last 4 years, they should be negligible for all in the categories above, i.e. those with at least 23 years left until retirement.
Regarding the growth figures, I feel they are realistic for me. My employers pension scheme has total charges of 0.4% so a 6% after charges growth rate would be 6.4% overall.
I can't really tweak the post for everyones circumstances but the idea is that the post should be a wake-up call for the twentie-somethings who feel smug in the knowledge that they're contributing €50 per month to their plan - which, although better than nothing, probably won't cut it when they reach retirement if it's their only retirement provision.
It's an Irish site, your whole I can do this or that in Nortern Ireland/UK is getting tedious.
Where can you get 6.4% guaranteed?
How many funds have had 6.4% compound growth ever year over 30 years? You know thats a whopping 504.37% growth over that period? Can you show me funds achieving this please.
FTSE All Shares Index:
1985: 682
2011: 2858
That's a 319% return over 20 years
That just means that fund value at 1985 has increased, takes no account of the price of units bought in intervening period. It's a useless figure unless it was a once-off payment into a fund. If you were paying €100 / mth since 1985 it would be interesting to see what the internal rate of return on investment was.
It doesn't show that 7% has been achieved for a continuous monthly investment over 25 years. That average is just an annualised average calculated the same as your original figure of 319%, based on the first and last price.
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