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“Let my pension go!” Important news for those in workplace pensions

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let my pension go

 

 

 

This morning I got this email from John Yeo at the FCA

We have published our final rules on capping early exit charges for consumers eligible to access the Government’s pension reforms from age 55.

From 31st March 2017, early exit charges will be capped at 1% of the value of existing contract-based personal pensions, including workplace personal pensions. Early exit charges that are currently set at less than 1% may not be increased. Firms will not be able to apply an early exit charge to personal pension contracts entered into after these rules take effect.

This is very important news both for employees in a workplace pension scheme and for those employers who have set such a scheme up (as part of auto-enrolment).

It is important as many of us who have been saving for our later life have used what the pension industry call “legacy pensions” and the vast majority of these legacy pensions are not as good as the workplace pensions that we’ve been setting up over the past four years.

Not only are they not as “good”, some of these legacy pensions are positively “bad news”. This is because of the way that their complicated charging structures work. These structures are “back end loaded” – that means that the costs and charges are loaded into the back end of your contracts with an insurer. So when you have the most money in your pension, you find yourself being hit with the worst charges.

I have a pension where I am paying around 6% pa in charges. This is because I only paid into it for three years (back in the 1980s). But that pension is now worth £20,000 meaning I’m paying my insurer £1200pa for virtually nothing, that’s £100pm for sending me a letter once a year telling me the value of my fund is the same or less than it was last year!

What this ruling means is that I will be able to release this terrible pension sometime between now and April 1st of next year for a fee no greater than £200.

My workplace pension only charges me 0.5% pa, so I’ll be paying £100 to my provider, that’s around 1/12th of what I was paying for my legacy pension.

Some legacy pension providers (like Scottish Widows) have decided to jump early and already allow you out of these expensive legacy pension contracts, others (like Zurich) seem intent on hanging on to our money (and their charges) to the last possible minute.

I have been writing to the Chairs of the insurance company Independent Governance Committees asking to hear what they are doing to get the pension providers they govern to give them a timetable for change. The sooner we clean up these mucky legacy pensions the better.

Here is something you can do – assuming you have a qualifying workplace pension that accepts transfers from legacy schemes (they all do apart from NEST and NEST should be able to do from April 2017).

You can write to your staff with the notice from the FCA that I’ve put at the top of this article. You can suggest that your staff can contact the insurance company with whom they have a personal pension and ask it whether the pension is eligible for transfer to your workplace pension.

At this point, I should be suggesting they get in touch with an independent financial adviser to help them, but it may be that the job in hand is not one that an IFA will want to advise on. It may be that the IFA will give advice on the transfer but at a price that makes the transfer un cost-effective.

So I have a Plan-B. If your staff haven’t got an adviser but would like help with how to go about things, they can contact the Government’s Pension Advisory Service (TPAS)

Or you can go their website and book either a telephone conversation or even a video call.

Here’s the address http://www.pensionsadvisoryservice.org.uk/

 

A lot of people feel powerless to manage their pension pots into one place. They have a right to be, there are a lot of snags and pitfalls along the way. I’ve found dealing with TPAS really helpful, they won’t tell you what to do but they’ll give you a clear path to the decision you have to take that will make sure you are aware of pitfalls and don’t give up any important guarantees when transferring. What is more, their help and guidance is absolutely free.

I’ve written a lot about how employers can help their staff to better pensions. Though I am an advisor myself, I don’t believe in charging people to help them do transactional stuff like transferring legacy pensions to workplace pensions. I think this is work that people can do for themselves. But they need a leg-up from employers.

If you or your employees want to understand how this impacts them, then they might like to give TPAS a ring, web chat or send an online enquiry. This is the Government service that helps employees with their pension questions or issues.

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