Summertime12345 wrote: » I hope I'm on the correct thread. I'm looking to invest in AVCs and possibly bonds I seen a company called expertadvice.ie they are supposed to give impartial advice? Has anyone heard anything about them? They are based in Maynooth. I'm hoping to top up my pension I work for the HSE and I've been told the pension with them is ****e so now I'm panicking I'm 45 and I'd love to retire in 15 years. I have worked with them for a long and painful 20years. Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated.
Geuze wrote: » The PS pension is not "****e". First of all, establish how much PS pension you expect to get. It seems you will have 35 years service at age 60? Therefore, calculate your expected work pension based on that, for a start.
I work for the HSE and I've been told the pension with them is ****e so now I'm panicking I'm 45 and I'd love to retire in 15 years. I have worked with them for a long and painful 20years. Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated.
athlone573 wrote: » The broker commission rates on private pensions are significant....
Henry Ford III wrote: » How significant exactly?
athlone573 wrote: » Well if you take out a private pension I think they have to give you a letter disclosing their costs but it's not something I'm qualified to advise on. Just saying there may be better value in topping up a company pension with AVC's in some cases.
Jim2007 wrote: » You know the point I made about dealing in facts not opinions...
thebiggestjim wrote: » Enough to decimate your pension,
athlone573 wrote: » Not being smart no I don't as I don't read this forum regularly Better to pay for professional advice than to rely on what someone says on a forum.
The broker commission rates on private pensions are significant.
Jim2007 wrote: » But the problem is that people do take what they read here and act on it. And when you make statements like: And then roll them back... Decisions on pension funding can have serious long term consequences for people and should be held to a higher standard than many of the other topics we discuss here.
Jim2007 wrote: » Quoting a bunch of figures does not even come remotely close to answering the question being asked.
Jim2007 wrote: » I never worked as an advisor so I don’t know the ins and outs of that area, but I have managed money and spent a significant amount of time working on performance attribution.
Jim2007 wrote: » And to my mind keeping the fees low amounts to paying for average or below average performance and does not represent the best outcome you could have achieved.
Jim2007 wrote: » I retired at 55 and let someone else manage my funds. I pay around 2% for an annualized return of around 17%. With the general consensus return on equities being around 8% and my own annualized return over a thirty year period being around 14%, I’d say it is worth paying the extra.
Jim2007 wrote: » So far I don’t think this discussion is very helpful to the OP as we don’t even know what 45 years service might bring in terms of a pension! Anyone know the HSE pension system and can run the numbers to give the OP a feel for what is in his future?
thebiggestjim wrote: » I was answering the question asked by Henry Ford which was specifically about broker commissions. The Irish pension industry love to downplay costs which have an outsized negative impact on a savers final pension pot. A fee of 1% per annum reduces your return by 1% every year, which compounds to a lot of money over a long period of time. So how did you manage other peoples money without being an advisor? Did they just give you money no questions asked? You sound like you still work in the industry or are closely related to someone who does Congratulations but I have little faith in what you are saying To Henry Ford and the OP my point to you which I hope you find helpful is that costs are a very significant negative impact on your pension and savings. You should do everything you can to reduce them. Irish pension brokers and industry professionals will do everything they can to downplay and hide their fees. They have practiced their answers on fees a lot.
thebiggestjim wrote: » Enough to decimate your pension, typical example below:https://hermoney.ie/charges/ (Note: There is no gender bias here, I just happened to look at this advisor recently as there was an article with the founder in the paper recently. All pension advisors charge these types of fees.)Defined Contribution Pension Product Initial % Recurring Commission % Clawback Period (Months) Regular Premium pension 20% 1% 48 Single premium pension 5.25% 1% -Approved Retirement Fund (ARF) & Approved Minimum Retirement Fund (AMRF) Product Initial % Recurring Commission % ARF 5.25% 1%
athlone573 wrote: » Not rolling back at all! Commission and fees can make a significant difference to returns. Expert advice can and should be sought. All we can do here is suggest some areas to consider in more detail, fees being just one part of the picture, alongside tax, attitude to risk, etc etc.
Henry Ford III wrote: » Expert advice isn't free either.
athlone573 wrote: » Many people are fortunate enough to have a company pension with low fees which they can top up with AVC's and that should definitely be considered, although being a public sector employee makes this more complicated.
thebiggestjim wrote: » So how did you manage other peoples money without being an advisor? Did they just give you money no questions asked?
You sound like you still work in the industry or are closely related to someone who does
Congratulations but I have little faith in what you are saying
killbillvol2 wrote: » Not enough detail in the OP but if they started in 2001 they should be on the old public service pension scheme which basically is half salary (40/80) after 40 year's service and 1.5 times salary (120/80) in a lump sum. Assuming 35 year's service at age 60 that would give a pension of 35/80 of final salary. For simplicity let's put final salary at €80,000 - pension would be €35,000 with a lump sum of €105,000. There are so many grades/conditions etc. in the HSE though that none of that might be relevant.
killbillvol2 wrote: » You literally have no idea what you're talking about. Please explain what's complicated about AVCs for public sector employees?
athlone573 wrote: » .....If I just walk into a broker off the street I assume that they'll push me towards the choice that pays the highest commission, same as any other type of salesman.....
Summertime12345 wrote: » I do apologise I didn't mean to upset you. I don't actually know what my pension is going be like I'm just going on what other staff members have told me.