Tuesday 29 July 2014

More pension changes and updates/HMRC


More pension changes and updates / HMRC
 
In the mid 1990's the then Inland Revenue (now HMRC) introduced a new term that they found unacceptable. This was called 'Cascading'. Cascading was the process of drawing pension benefits and tax free cash and re-investing the tax free cash into another pension to claim further pension tax relief. In effect, using tax free money to claim tax relief through recycling. The authorities made it very clear that they would be looking out for such manoeuvres and now, when claiming benefits with most providers, there is a declaration to be signed to confirm that you will not undertake such related transactions.
 
1. Reduction in Pension Annual Allowance for those drawing tax free cash AND taxable income

Taking this a stage further, the Government has added to this by restricting the amount of Annual Allowance (the maximum gross amount you can put in a pension in a tax year from all sources and receive income tax relief) from £40,000 gross to £10,000 gross for those that draw pension tax free cash AND taxable income after age 55. Full details of this planned change (from April 2015) can be found here:


Those drawing only tax free cash should not be affected.

This change as a headline does not look significant, but it will catch out some pension investors who are trying to be flexible with their pension benefits whilst still continuing to work.

2. Individual Protection (for those with pension benefits over £1.25M at 05 April 2014)

HMRC has confirmed that applications for Individual Protection 2014 can be made online from 18 August 2014. An HMRC tool for checking your pension Lifetime Allowance is available here: http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/tools/lifetimeallowance/index.htm

 Full details of Individual Protection for pensions can be found here:


 Those who have Fixed Protection from HMRC can also hold Individual Protection (up to a benefit of £1.5M maximum)at the same time in certain circumstances and individual advice should be sought accordingly.

3. State Pension uplift in deferment

The DWP has announced in a Ministerial Statement that the current uplift of 10.4% pa (1% for every 5 weeks deferred) for those not claiming the State Pension at their allowed date will reduce from the tax year 2016/2017 by almost half to 5.8%.

Full details can be viewed here: http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-vote-office/July-2014/22%20July%202014/29-DWP-PensionIncrements.pdf

This change will be disappointing for some, but is not a surprise, due to the demographic pressures being placed on the State Pension system. There are other opportunities to top up the State Pension and we will detail this further in an additional blog.

          Chapters Financial is not responsible for the content of external webpages

 
Summary

It is very clear that the authorities involved in pensions legislation are busy people at the moment. These updates have been provided to keep our clients and enquirers up to date with the latest changes planned and announced for pension and retirement planning. Some investors choose to use other alternative vehicles (usually in combination with pension benefits) for their retirement, such as ISAs, or New ISAs (NISAs) as they are now called. The contribution limit for these has increased to £15,000 from the beginning of July 2014 (from £11,880) and this tax efficient allowance is usually worthwhile using where possible.

No individual advice has been provided during the course of this blog. If you would like financial advice on the allocation of your funds or your investment strategy, then please contact the Chapters Financial team in Woking (01483 330800) or Guildford (01483 578800).

Keith Churchouse BA Hons FPFS
Director, Chapters Financial Limited
Chartered Financial Planner
Certified Financial Planner
ISO22222 Personal Financial Planner

Chapters Financial Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, number 402899.


 

Tuesday 22 July 2014


Guidance or Advice? The confusion yet to follow

 

Following the significant changes in retirement planning detailed by the Chancellor in his Budget of Spring 2014, we have now received the full details of the ‘guidance’ planned for retirees from 2015. Although this document is still in consultation, the details are quite clear on the way the government expects this guidance to be deployed.

The keyword that is apparent is the word 'guidance' rather than 'advice'. It is planned that guidance within set parameters will be provided by organisations such as the Money Advice Service and TPAS (The Pensions Advisory Service)  to detail to clients the options that are available to them and the way that they could approach their retirement – without actually providing advice. No individual products or solutions, it appears, will be provided other than to detail the options available to you.

It is of interest that the planned cost of this service will be partly borne by the current advisory industry, almost robbing Peter to pay Paul.

For those that want to read further, the FCA consultation document is here:  http://www.fca.org.uk/your-fca/documents/consultation-papers/cp14-11

Chapters Financial is not responsible for the content of external websites.

As the Financial Conduct Authority notes in the detail (Page 6 & 11) ‘The guidance does not replace financial advice given by regulated advisers’ and ‘would be better handled by an authorised independent financial adviser (IFA)’ in reference to product or provider recommendations.

There is a part of me that feels that this blog is of a very defensive nature. To some extent it is, not because of the principles involved, but because of the confusion that is already being caused and the likely end result of consumers’ expectations not being met.

Although for some this guidance will be extremely useful, for others it will be like receiving the instructions for a flat pack furniture unit where the instructions and the reality seem to bear very little resemblance to each other. My concern is that the guidance offered may lead individuals to make decisions which are not suited to their circumstances and, although there is a planned complaints procedure, the ability to receive financial recourse in the consultation paper seems to be limited. This is not the case with true advice.

As you may anticipate, Chapters Financial will respond to the FCA's consultation along with many others. The devil will be in the final detail as to what will be achieved and whilst we applaud the plan to raise awareness of the retirement options that are available to individuals taking into account the new flexible legislation, the way it is applied may lead to much unnecessary confusion.

No individual advice has been provided during the course of this blog. If you would like financial advice and implementation (and not just guidance) on your retirement planning, then please contact the Chapters Financial team in Woking (01483 330800) or Guildford (01483 578800).


Keith Churchouse BA Hons FPFS
Director, Chapters Financial Limited
Chartered Financial Planner
Certified Financial Planner
ISO22222 Personal Financial Planner

Chapters Financial Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, number 402899.


 

Tuesday 1 July 2014

Financial Review, but also re-balance

At Chapters Financial, we have always noted the benefits of clients reviewing their finances on a regular basis to ensure their existing planning meets with their needs and objectives. Individual circumstances change, markets change and the asset allocation of funds can also change. A review may occur once a year or more regularly, dependent on the needs of the client.

The asset allocation of an investment portfolio is informed by the risk profile of a client and the returns that are sought. Over time, market movements can cause one or more asset classes to drift from their initial targets, resulting in the investor holding a portfolio that may not reflect either their attitude to risk or their investment goals. Rebalancing, as one financial planning solution, is about controlling risk and ensuring that your portfolio is not overly exposed to the success or failure of one particular asset class.

Rebalancing can be an important part of financial planning. Simply put, the process involves periodically buying or selling assets in a portfolio to bring it back to its original asset allocation level. However, there is no accepted industry-wide ‘best practice’ on how and when to rebalance a portfolio. Some providers offer an automatic rebalancing model as part of a passive investment approach. There is much data to suggest that this can work, particularly if fairly wide tolerance bands on both the upside and the downside are in place to avoid excessive trades and associated charges which could erode returns. However, automatic rebalancing is just that – automatic – client portfolios are rebalanced once they drift beyond set tolerance bands. If this is set to occur at pre-determined times over the year, e.g. quarterly, it will take place even if market conditions at the time are not optimal.

Chapters Financial prefers to take a more active approach to investment management and review. Our view is that calendar-based rebalancing alone is not the best approach – at each review, it is important to consider the prevailing market conditions, the specific circumstances of the portfolio in question and to tailor the solution to the needs of the client. We are all different and our investments are likely to mirror this.

At a review, we would anticipate examining the performance of the funds, recommending changes where required to improve the potential to meet the client’s investment objectives and also re-allocating fund balances to meet with a client’s attitude to investment risk. Our active approach means that we can take a view on the ongoing performance of each asset class within a portfolio, rather than just following a set of systematic rules for rebalancing. Given the levels of volatility that all financial markets can experience, we believe that this individual and ‘hands-on’ approach offers the best way to work towards our clients’ investment objectives within agreed risk parameters. This does not mean that at a review you would anticipate a wholesale change of your holdings. However, areas of underperformance can be addressed and areas of good performance may see a ‘profit-take’ situation.

As suggested, each of you is individual and your investments are likely to be the same. No individual advice has been provided during the course of this blog. If you would like financial advice on the allocation of your funds/ investment strategy, then please contact the Chapters Financial team in Woking (01483 330800) or Guildford (01483 578800).

Keith Churchouse BA Hons FPFS
Director, Chapters Financial Limited
Chartered Financial Planner
Certified Financial Planner
ISO22222 Personal Financial Planner

Chapters Financial Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, number 402899.