LDFerguson
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My poor boss is up for retirement this year and his fund has literally evaporated before his eyes. I know the funds can rise and fall, but what if there was another financial meltdown like this one in the year I am due to retire?
In fairness, I don't think it was down to bad advice. He started pension very late, due to financial circumstances earlier on in life and was playing catch up, to a large extent. Knew the risks and needed to go with a "higher risk strategy" to build the fund and unfortunately did not pay off. Because of failing health, needs to retire but pension is very poor at the moment. He has accepted the position with a "dem's the breaks" attitude but I know if I were in that position, I would be going mad.
Looking at it in more depth, I really think I have a very conservative attitude to risk and am not prepared to lose any of my savings in years to come. I am already going mad over losing a quarter of €5k instead of getting the benefit of paying €5K off my mortgage, so I am probably not the best person to gamble on a pension.
That's like saying I needed €100k but only had €50k so I'd no option but to play roulette
Once again, many pension providers offer products where your money is effectively in a bank deposit and you get the tax benefit. By all means give up on the stock market if you're risk averse but that does not mean you have to give up on pensions
I am already going mad over losing a quarter of €5k instead of getting the benefit of paying €5K off my mortgage, so I am probably not the best person to gamble on a pension.
Also brings me back to what I was thinking earlier - very difficult to predict the market - if the market were to crash in or around the time I was either (a) due to retire or (b) due to transfer the fund to a less risky one, then I would be in a position similar to people due to retire around now.
But you haven't lost anything! I'm assuming that you're not about to retire and have many years to go yet. (I have a mental image of you as being 20s or 30s, for some reason.) Pension funds go up and down. They've recently gone down. They will go up again, unless you lose your nerve and switch out now - if you do that you HAVE lost money.
Just by way of an alternative, if you put an initial 5000 into a savings account with 5% interest(-1% dirt) for 35 years and added 5000 every year you would end up with 402,722.01.
Calculator here
http://www.moneychimp.com/calculator/compound_interest_calculator.htm
Yes it's not spectaculor, but it is safe money and will continue to accrue interest if you leave it in during retirement. Imo it mightn't be your main pension contribution, but something to fall back on if you pension went belly up on the stock market nearing retirement.
I agree that you can choose the option of a low risk savings account when asked by your broker, but I think most people trust that their fund manager knows best where to invest money and where to get the highest if sometimes riskiest return and so leave it to them.
So if a friend said to you they had a spare €5k they wanted to put away for retirement which of these options would you recommend?
1) invest €8.5k in a pension and reduce your tax bill by €3.5k, choosing a deposit type fund with no dirt tax payable
2) Put €5k into a deposit account
well €8.5k p.a. getting tax free interest over 35 years will amount to more than €5k p.a. getting taxed interest over 35 years.I could answer that if you could tell me the value of 1 at retirement and using the rocks figure for 2 in the same period.
Even for someone paying marginal tax at 41% in retirement the pension proceed should still be over 20% higher.
For a pensioner paying the standard rate of tax (20%) the pension will be almost 50% higher.
You should explain those figures to MandaC's boss. It doesn't appear to have worked out that way for him.
I'm not against pensions and I think people need them, I just think people need to understand the negatives as well as the positives.
Nice calculator ! Unfortunately it does not take into account what 400K will be worth in the said timeframe in real terms after inflation. If history is anything to go by it will not be worth as much as it needs to be in order to retire - so if the saver in question used this method to prepare for retirement they would likely be looking for a part time job (would you like fries with that) around their 70th birthday.
yes agreed re inflation....lets assume inflation averaged out at the rate of interest, ie 4%
we would then be talking of 35 years times 5 = 185,000...
I did make the point that it mightnt be any good as your main pension, and that you might be wise to keep a main pension, but as a just in case fund, it might be no harm...ie in case your pension loses for example 50% of its value on the markets five years before your retirement a scenario many people are now experiencing.
Bricks and mortar might also be an option for those who are risk averse...since, over the course of 35 years, you are bound to hit a period when property prices are at a high. Again this would be a fall back in case your main pension hit trouble.
Would you not agree given the tax advantages on pension funds that it would be wiser to perhaps take out several different pension funds, different assets etc.. as opposed to ordinary savings account if risk is your main worry, again deposit funds and Lifestyle funds take away these concerns for me, but you seem to be fixated on the possibility of all funds crashing out before retirement.
Property is not a liquid asset given the tax treatment and the blind luck trying to chose a time to sell to match your retirment age this would prove to be much riskier option in my mind, as you may appreciate many people are experiencing today!!
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