I have just invested a large amount with Irish Life in an AVC, how safe is this now in the light of current events?
Current events make no difference at all. Irish Life will NEVER go bust. Part of the reason is that any losses on your AVC will be passed straight through to you. Your safety depends on your investments not on Irish Life.I have just invested a large amount with Irish Life in an AVC, how safe is this now in the light of current events?
Current events make no difference at all. Irish Life will NEVER go bust. Part of the reason is that any losses on your AVC will be passed straight through to you. Your safety depends on your investments not on Irish Life.
I was overgeneralising. Life companies do take some risks, for example in providing life assurance protection. But it is extremely controlled, not in the same league as the mismatch between a bank's deposit liabilities and its loan assets.Are you sure that this is the case for all their funds, Duke? What about the [broken link removed] where the value of the investment is guaranteed not to drop?
Complainer, the link in that thread is to an article last November. I have no familiarity with Quinn Life. It appears to be losing money, basically because it is not writing enough business to cover its expenses. As far as policyholder safety is concerned, I would expect there to be no issue as the regulatory requirements of a life company are much stronger than how it reports profits.Thanks for the clarification, Duke. I'd be interested to hear your views on QL on this thread.
What kind of investment companies do you mean? Could you give some examples?Investment companies and ETFs do not carry this type of counterparty risk and, in my view, are superior investment fund vehicles in that regard.