Thanks for the info. Your demonstrating our value presentation from your website has quite a bit of useful information about net returns too. Very interesting to see different net return scenarios laid out on different investment targets and risk profiles like that.I actually like this line of reasoning.
Its virtually impossible to establish the ex-ante real cost of investing in Ireland for most investors because the charges are generally opaque and in many cases misleading.
However ex post results are capable of being benchmarked against a reference index or fund.
So if a real investor makes an actual investment of €10,000 in say a Vanguard Global Stock index fund offered by an Irish provider at the end of any period it is possible to establish their return vs the realised return on a more transparent version of the same investment and thereby establish the real cost of investing.
I did a similar exercise a few years ago measuring the published returns of various Irish unit linked funds vs their UCITs counterparts and established that the charges for an Irish investor were much higher than the published AMC in the past. In some cases investors had been paying over 3%pa and in the worst case we found was over 5%pa.
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Obviously not everyone wants to pay an adviser in order to get the best investment outcome but I’m confident that our non-EU ETF offering is about the best option on the market for taxable accounts.
That’s not really true Steven.
Mutual funds always disclose past performance net of costs. In fact, they are legally obliged to do so.
Ireland is an outlier in that personal pension savers are effectively forced to invest through life companies or use expensive intermediaries.
In the UK, a self-invested personal pension account can be opened with a fund platform for as little as £90pa.
According to the Indo –RTE of course didn't link to the report so I can only quote the article
According to the Indo –
"The report author cannot be publicly identified as he works for a State agency, but the findings have been verified by this publication after it was shown to experts in the area."
A nil commission fund will still have fees such as trading costs or other ongoing management costs separate to the AMC. While the PRIIP documents do list the worst case scenario, seeing an Irish fund which solely invests in a single ETF with ongoing costs of 0.07% say its ongoing charges are up to 2.2% is bit obvious that something else is going on in there.I mean, the "average fees" of 2.18% referred to in the 2012 Report comes from a "maximum commmission" RIY (RAC or EPP) and doesn't take account of Nil or Reduced commission RAC/EPP contracts. I would have thought that you'd have to include them to get an average figure.
I wouldn't disagree with your figures, but if we are talking of a 15 year old fund, i.e. started around 2005, there was a massive stock market crash in 2007 and 2008 (for example, the Iseq down by about 26% and then 66%), and there was another serious decline in 2018. The effect of these declines most likely had your investment in negative territory until about 2016/7 and then it performed poorly again in 2018. And there are the charges Apart from fund charges, QL also sliced 1.74% off amounts invested in the early days. There is the government's 1% investment levy and 41% take on returns. These also have a serious impact on fund performance. So over a 15 year period an EAR of about 3% is probably typical of the available returns, considering both the losses the investment would have made in its early years (i.e. 2007/2008) and the fund charges.As a more concreate example, I recently got to see some figures from a 15 year old Quinn fund which ended at a little over 3% EAR, and this is before the second deemed disposal event. Seeing similarly low returns from my own pension, although those are admittedly much harder to calculate.
My regular premium unit linked Savings Plan with Zurich is currently achieving 7.03% annualised. Thats after accounting for exit tax, levy and charges. Its running since July 2018.
Before accounting for exit tax thats 11.916% annualised. Fingers crossed they reduce the rate before July 2026!
Thanks Marc. I get that mathematically you end up with a higher amount going the pension route. The tax relief plays a big part in all that. But when you look at the net cash amount in your hand at the end of the investment period in both scenarios it seems you’ll have more if you chose the second option.All things being equal the pension will give you more in the future due to genuine gross roll up.
so the longer you leave it the more valuable this is -compound interest
The main time to be wary of “overfunding” a pension is if you risk pushing through the standard fund threshold of €2m and paying 71% tax on the other side but even then there are strategies that can be deployed
BTW there’s a snowball’s chance in hell of me pushing through the €2m standard funding threshold. Oh to have that problem....
Excellent report - quite long but very readable with a clarity of purpose that is often missing from such documentsA nil commission fund will still have fees such as trading costs or other ongoing management costs separate to the AMC. While the PRIIP documents do list the worst case scenario, seeing an Irish fund which solely invests in a single ETF with ongoing costs of 0.07% say its ongoing charges are up to 2.2% is bit obvious that something else is going on in there.
Labour have uploaded the full report to their site. Available at [broken link removed]
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