They reference the Report on Pension Charges in Ireland 2012 by Dept Social Protection which mentions an average figure of 2.18% and then reference a note to this Dept Social Protection document by the Trinity School of Business which claims the 2.18% figure underestimates the total fees significantly and provides some detail of where the original document went wrong. The Trinity note doesn't come to a firm number, but it does reference studies in the UK which saw figures of 3.2%.It assumes that the "typical" annual charge is circa 3% without having any evidence to back it up, at all.
I can't find any KIDs for pensions funds, but I'm going to assume that the similarly named investment funds from the same company apply similar fees. So lets use Zurich Life.
Their monthly saver type product lists Other on going charges on a range from 1.72% to 2.86%. This isn't the AMC.
If you go for fund specific information
Indexed Eurozone Equity (BlackRock) - "The fund currently invests in the iShares EMU Index Fund managed by BlackRock"
This is which has an ongoing fund charge of 0.30%.
The Zurich document lists 1.86%. Even if you take this figure as the worst case, and that they are putting the entire AMC into this figure and that the Entry Costs listed will be zero and not the 1.53% listed, there is a still a substantial mark up on top of the underlying asset for on going charges for a passively managed product.
I suspect the author of this new paper took 3% as a round number somewhere between the low 2.18% from Social Protection and the high 3.2% mentioned in the Trinity note. Considering they went on to reference 3% nearly 90 times in the document, it seems quite sloppy not to have provided a clear statement as to why they chose that figure.
I can't find any KIDs for pensions funds, but I'm going to assume that the similarly named investment funds from the same company apply similar fees. So lets use Zurich Life.
Their monthly saver type product lists Other on going charges on a range from 1.72% to 2.86%. This isn't the AMC.
If you go for fund specific information
Indexed Eurozone Equity (BlackRock) - "The fund currently invests in the iShares EMU Index Fund managed by BlackRock"
This is which has an ongoing fund charge of 0.30%.
The Zurich document lists 1.86%. Even if you take this figure as the worst case, and that they are putting the entire AMC into this figure and that the Entry Costs listed will be zero and not the 1.53% listed, there is a still a substantial mark up on top of the underlying asset for on going charges for a passively managed product.
The author spends a lot of time explaining how small changes in fees make big differences to net returns over the long run. Then he or she runs with 3% despite the fact that a slightly lower choice (say 2.8%) would have given a materially different set of results.
It's a bit of an own goal.
The figures I posted were not the RIY figures, but the composition of costs ones. On the example I gave, even taking a worse case of 1.75% AMC, adding on the ETF charges of 0.3%, you are still seeing 0.15% in fund charges in this scenario. 2.2% - 1.75%(AMC) - 0.3%(ETF - in reality this just lowers yield so it being here feels, wrong but for arguments sake) = leaving the 0.15% of charges to the fund.The purpose of the KID is to provide generic information, address the market in general & highlight the worst case scenario to the investor. For this reason companies are obliged to use the worst available charging structures in order to determine the RIY.
The charging structure used to determine the RIY for the product you referenced might be a 95% allocation, 1.75% AMC contract.
Therefore the RIYs shown demonstrate the worst case scenario for the client & will in practice illustrate a much higher RIY than those actually applying to the client specific policy as typically the modern charging structures are much more client favourable.
In short, KIDs are useless and totally irrrelevant if you're buying a regular savings contract with 101% allocation, no entry/exit charges and a quoted AMC of 1%.
If you wanted to invest in a eurozone equity tracker fund you'd probably add about 0.1% to that AMC and that 0.1% includes ongoing charges figures and portfolio tranasaction costs (if the latter apply). If they're not disclosed, all you have to do is ask. If you don't get them, walk away.
Gerard
www.prsa.ie
What are they even trying to achieve I wonder - put people off sorting their own pensions altogether? A headline like that certainly would as it pretty much insinuates your hard-earned cash will be just gobbled up by the moneymen.This article is yet another example of how low the journalistic standards have fallen at the Irish Independent. A sensationalist headline based on an unsubstantiated assumption in a poorly researched and badly written report. Complete and absolute cobblers.
What are they even trying to achieve I wonder - put people off sorting their own pensions altogether? A headline like that certainly would as it pretty much insinuates your hard-earned cash will be just gobbled up by the moneymen.
What are they even trying to achieve I wonder - put people off sorting their own pensions altogether? A headline like that certainly would as it pretty much insinuates your hard-earned cash will be just gobbled up by the moneymen.
And where the compliance costs of increased regulation might actually drive up costs?Looks like they're just concerned with Occupational Pension Schemes (where AMCs are traditionally the lowest).
Not only that, but the "average fees" of 2.18% referred to in the 2012 Report comes from "maximum commmission" RIY RAC or EPP contracts.
So, that 2.18% 'average' doesn't include RACs and EPPs with better pricing structures and totally excludes PRSAs and Occupational Pension Schemes as well.
I only understand one of those acronymsCould you explain a bit for the slow learners?
Pity. That draft Bill really misses the mark.The Labour bill is [broken link removed]
Looks like they're just concerned with Occupational Pension Schemes (where AMCs are traditionally the lowest).
Pity. That draft Bill really misses the mark.
The Bill should simply oblige life assurance companies to publish a comprehensive ongoing charge figure (OCF) for all unit linked policies. UCITS funds are already required to publish this information.
Going back to my college days here where we had a finance / economics lecturer point out to us about the fact that management fees are low, but the funds your pension invests in may also have management fees themselves, which you have no sight of.@GSheehy thanks for your analysis, just out of curiosity and to make it simple, if I open a prsa with 1% annual management charge and I just have one fund in it for example Zurich eurozone equity fund, 100% allocation, what are the total charges for that prsa?
Thanks
To be fair I think they're talking about the average pension Joe Public have, no doubt cheaper is available but most people just take what is given when they move to a new job. Somebody sophisticated enough to be building a self administered pension is probably able to look after themselves on fees.On a self administered pension, you can get all of that for about 1.1%. A long way from 3.25%
Not really sure what the outrage is about the person being anonymous, the report is either relevant or it isn't, knowing who it was written about won't change that.Reading this anonymous paper
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