Are you sure that's not the annual management charge (AMC)?My DC pension fund's TER is 0.19%.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The AMC is defined as 0.17%.Are you sure that's not the annual management charge (AMC)?
That's exceptionally good value by Irish standards. I assume it's a large occupational scheme?The AMC is defined as 0.17%.
It is. I take it occupational schemes have lower fees because the employer can cover some costs?That's exceptionally good value by Irish standards. I assume it's a large occupational scheme?
It is. I take it occupational schemes have lower fees because the employer can cover some costs?
A couple thousandRoughly how many members as a matter of interest? I've been encouraging our trustees to negotiate lower AMCs based on the significantly increased volumes in our scheme.
@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
I would be shocked if it’s more than 1.1% to 1.2%.Would love to know this also
This is exactly why the legislation is needed, there should be no guess work.Would love to know this also
Investors with £50,000 or more will be able to access the financial planning service at an ‘all-in’ annual 0.79% price tag, which will include fund charges, transaction costs and platform fees
This is the 10 years ending March 2021.
The difference in reported performance between the MSCI EMU Index and the Pension fund is 0.74%pa
The disclosed charge is 0.40%pa
This is just the fund not the pension contract. Lots of brokers have been told that the additional cost is only 0.01% so don't worry about it.
But in reality we need to separate out
What are you paying for a fund?
What are you paying for a pension?
What are you paying for distribution and advice?
In the example of 100% allocation and 1%AMC you might assume a margin to Zurich of 0.60% and the disclosed fund cost of 0.40% but as you can see you would be understating charges by around 0.34%pa
How much of this under performance is due to explicit charges ?
How much of this is due to transaction fees (brokerage commissions, bid offer spreads, stamp duty etc)?
How much of it is down to other factors such as dividend withholding tax?
This is just one fund that is meant to replicate a publicly available index.
The real culprit here are the contracts that are not required to fully disclose these charges and therefore just don't
That has been my main issue. All of the pension funds I have available through my occupational scheme don't list fees beyond the 1% AMC, and even that is buried in the initial documentation only. Zurich so far has been the most transparent with some of their index funds, and full disclosure, the application fees are here beside me for their savings product for my partner - the fees while high relative to my own self directed funds, are the cost of doing business.The real culprit here are the contracts that are not required to fully disclose these charges and therefore just don't
Really I'd like to see an accurate RIY figure, against the funds benchmark. Or even as a direct example, if I took 1k a month and invested it into the Indexed fund, and another 1k an bought the ETF directly, after 7 years what would the balance difference be.
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