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• #4527
Yeah, Aberdeen acquired II recently
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• #4528
I just did a quick google and it was a acquired in 2022 so hopefully if they were going to make any drastic changes they would have done it by now.
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• #4529
Yeah, abrdn acquired ii recently
For the vowels?
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• #4530
"abirdin" sort of works, phonetically
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• #4531
They should have bought EE.
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• #4532
@Matt101 @Arvy. @cjr thank you so much for the advice. I have set up a meeting with the IFA in a couple of weeks and will be curious to see what they say about why they've recommended that. I suspect they get a kickback from it, but if so that makes me wonder how independent they really are.
@cjr I will find out more and if I decide to go that way I will definitely get in touch with you beforehand.
FWIW in their written consultation the IFA said they recommended abrdn for the following reasons:
- They are financially strong and experienced in this marketplace.
- They have a proven track record of providing excellent customer service.
- They have a clear and transparent charging structure.
- The plan charges are competitive.
That all sounds great, until some light research on the internet as a non expert proves 2 and 4 to be apparently incorrect. I'm starting to lose some trust ...
Edit: I realise I forgot to add amount and what the fees are on abrdn. Amount will be £104k, and yep, platform fees are 0.30%. Advisor fees are 1%.
- They are financially strong and experienced in this marketplace.
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• #4533
One has to say that those reasons do not really sound a lot like current specific individual experience ... rather it sounds like it might be the marketing literature ... perhaps I'm just cynical.
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• #4534
I guess if you want to have flexibility to invest your pension pot on a regular basis then maybe someone like abrdn might be a good bet. But if it's a case of putting it in and leaving it then I'm not sure why you would want to pay anything more than the bare minimum.
@cjr thanks for the heads up on the II fee structure, am on Vanguard and also very happy but could see in the future that I would save a bit of money going to a monthly charge, will DM
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• #4535
Yes indeed, I do want to add contributions regularly, rather than just leave it.
Could you expand a little on why abrdn might be good in that situation? Apologies, I'm a real SIPP rookie, but looking to learn.
Until now I'd just done a workplace pension, but after seeing an IFA for a couple of reasons, they come back with a recommendation to move my current pot to a SIPP, add a one-time contribution, and then assess again next financial year.
I believe the plan is then to regularly move between my workplace pension and the SIPP. This way I keep the employer contributions, but move over to a place where the IFA believes they can get a better return on my money than a workplace pension scheme.
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• #4536
Did you get an answer on why the withholding is 53% ?
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• #4537
I wasn't meaning adding contributions, I mean changing the funds you want to invest your pension in. I don't know if abdrn might be good if you wanted to do that, more that I would imagine they and others sell themselves on having higher fees by making it easy for you to regularly make active investment changes. I don't, I have just put into ETF and leaving it, hence I don't need to pay more for 'services'.
re your other points, I combined 3 separate historic work pensions into one SIPP, but my current work pension scheme is with a different provider. There's no option for me to get work to put it into my SIPP unfortunately which I think is not uncommon. If/when I leave I'll put it into my SIPP where I have control over it.
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• #4538
Sorry, I totally see where I misunderstood what you meant. My mistake.
Well the IFA wants to invest 100% in their own firm's fund, which is regularly changed and updated to make sure it meets the risk profile. As such, I don't imagine they're going to be changing the investments regularly, if at all.
Their advice is certainly not adding up the more I learn on the subject. Hopefully they can clarify when we meet. If not, I will not be moving forward with their recommendation!
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• #4539
IFA wants to invest 100% in their own firm's fund
Err.... Right.
Assume they are a commission based IFA?
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• #4540
Could I ask how long you have before you want to draw a pension from this SIPP?
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• #4541
Yep. Talking to my wife about it this afternoon (I'm off sick, she's on maternity leave), we are both feeling increasingly bad about this. If I can't understand how I'll be better off via their advice, but I can clearly understand how they'll be better off, it feels like I should run a mile.
I'm tempted to ring him up and ask him to explain why he's recommended that SIPP and that fund, rather than wait a couple of weeks and spend the time going to meet at their offices.
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• #4542
I'm 34, so absolute minimum age to take pension being 57 under current rules, I think at least 23 years, but likely more like 30 years.
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• #4543
Do you remember what the cutoff amount invested is to make it worth the switch from Vanguard to II?
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• #4544
Ok, based on your pot size I would suggest II is the best platform and based on your age I would suggest a low cost 100% global equity tracker
Basis for fund is here: https://monevator.com/why-a-total-world-equity-index-tracker-is-the-only-index-fund-you-need/
Answer to which fund specifically is HSBC FTSE All-World Index Fund C from here: https://monevator.com/best-global-tracker-funds/
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• #4545
£115k
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• #4546
Thank you 👍🏻
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• #4547
Thank you very much, that's very kind of you to give me specific advice.
Yes, backup plan if I don't like the answers from the IFA was to keep my company pension where it is (it's actually done fairly well, up 29.5% over 5 years), put the lump sum I need to add this tax year into my own SIPP, and then put it into some sort of global tracker fund, or perhaps spilt across a small number of global tracker funds to diversity a little.
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• #4548
70% over 5 years……
Regarding diversification, have a look at what specific companies the global trackers are invested in before you spread your money around. You’ll see that a lot are invested in the same ones.
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• #4549
I got in touch with HMRC recently to claim higher rate tax relief on my pension contributions. Unless I'm mistaken about how this stuff is calculated they've massively short-changed me, but am struggling to figure out how I can resolve it without employing an accountant.
Regarding private pension contributions, I get the 20% basic rate relief applied automatically but should I still expect another 20% back?
When I put the numbers into this calculator it says "As a 40% higher rate taxpayer you can claim back up to an extra £****"
The amount corresponds to 20%, but I don't understand when 'up to' might mean less than that.
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• #4550
If you put it in a SIPP or similar, the SIPP provider will have claimed 20% back for you and added it to your total. HMRC will then give you the other 20% back as rebate or offset it against other tax you have to pay.
But if you earn 60k for example and put 20k in a pension, you will get 20% of it added to your SIPP, but only get the extra 20% rebate on the amount over £50,200 that you paid 40% tax on.
Also ii are abrdn now - so broadly the same thing. Ask what the differences are beyond fees...