Firstly not an employee or anything to do with Standard Life, nor a broker etc. etc.
They have set up a product range called Synergy which allows you to self direct a pension scheme without the hassle of setting up a formal Small Self Admin Pension scheme (also know as SART, retirement trust). Such vehicles were for the 'big boys' with hundreds of thousands to play with - needed that scale to get over set up costs.
Why it interests me, being a pleb, is that it seems to allow for playing the stockmarket through your pension fund - calling it "Stocktrade". This gives the advantage of being 47%/48% "up" verses a normal direct investment in shares since you save income tax on the way in. Now fair enough the money is locked into your pension fund but if you anticipate having to sell your share portfolio to feed yourself then it probably wasnt the place for you in the first instance.
From what I can gather the min pension investment is €175 p.m., Stnd Life use a British based stockbroker and the charge for execution only is €30 per trade subject to cap of €200 (I think its a rate of 0.75%, which means you'd be over €4k of a trade before above €30). I think the €30 is reasonable though, if memory serves me right the Tribune was quoting a €50 min charge as among its best buys.
Anyone any detailed knowledge of this or am I fundamentally missing something. It looks like something I might go for. I'll add in the warning that your pension is not something to goof around with on the stock market so have a professionally managed fund as well which is your "real" pension. But if you'd like to mess around with shares anyway then why not put yourself 47%/48% ahead of the game?
They have set up a product range called Synergy which allows you to self direct a pension scheme without the hassle of setting up a formal Small Self Admin Pension scheme (also know as SART, retirement trust). Such vehicles were for the 'big boys' with hundreds of thousands to play with - needed that scale to get over set up costs.
Why it interests me, being a pleb, is that it seems to allow for playing the stockmarket through your pension fund - calling it "Stocktrade". This gives the advantage of being 47%/48% "up" verses a normal direct investment in shares since you save income tax on the way in. Now fair enough the money is locked into your pension fund but if you anticipate having to sell your share portfolio to feed yourself then it probably wasnt the place for you in the first instance.
From what I can gather the min pension investment is €175 p.m., Stnd Life use a British based stockbroker and the charge for execution only is €30 per trade subject to cap of €200 (I think its a rate of 0.75%, which means you'd be over €4k of a trade before above €30). I think the €30 is reasonable though, if memory serves me right the Tribune was quoting a €50 min charge as among its best buys.
Anyone any detailed knowledge of this or am I fundamentally missing something. It looks like something I might go for. I'll add in the warning that your pension is not something to goof around with on the stock market so have a professionally managed fund as well which is your "real" pension. But if you'd like to mess around with shares anyway then why not put yourself 47%/48% ahead of the game?