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How safe is your pension?

Labour MP John Mann, who is a member of the Commons Treasury Select Committee, said: ‘Sir Philip Green and his family have made millions out of BHS and its hard-working staff. He took over a company with a healthy pension pot, yet when he sold BHS a black hole had appeared in its fund.’

The Guardian has calculated that Green and his family collected £586m in dividends, rental payments and interest on loans during their 15-year ownership of the retailer. 

 

What is the pension protection fund and what does it do? 

The Pension Protection Fund was established to pay compensation to members of eligible defined benefit pension schemes, when there is a qualifying insolvency event in relation to the employer and where there are insufficient assets in the pension scheme to cover Pension Protection Fund levels of compensation.

What does it offer:

1) If you were retired and over the scheme’s normal retirement age when your employer went bust, and receiving your pension then the Pension Protection Fund will generally pay 100% level of compensation.

2) If you retired early (except through ill-health) and had not reached your scheme’s normal pension age when your employer went bust, then you will generally receive 90% level of compensation based on what your pension was worth at the time. The annual compensation you will receive is capped at a certain level. The cap at age 65 is, from 1 April 2016, £37,420.42 (this equates to £33,678.38 when the 90 per cent level is applied) per year.

3) When you reach your scheme’s normal retirement age, you will be paid compensation based on the 90% level subject to a cap, as described above.

With all of the above, payments relating to pensionable service from 5 April 1997 will then rise in line with inflation each year, subject to a maximum of 2.5% a year. Payments relating to service before that date will not increase.

What it doesn’t offer:

Flexible drawdown, self-management or the ability to transfer.

For all of you that are members of a company pension scheme, if you haven’t done so already, it is time to find out if the pension scheme is fully funded; that means it has enough money to cover its pension liabilities or if it is in deficit. If it is in deficit you need to know by how much, what the company plans are to rectify this and, most importantly, how stable/safe the company you work or used to work for is. Is there a real possibility that the company could fail?  If so, I would seriously consider transferring your pension out of the scheme if you are able to.

This communication is for informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute, and should not be construed as, investment advice, investment recommendations or investment research. You should seek advice from a professional adviser before embarking on any financial planning activity. Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the information contained in this communication is correct, we are not responsible for any errors or omissions.

Other News

Auto-Enrolment increases number of savers, but are they saving enough?

Piggy bankStatistics from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) have shown that a record number of savers are now members of workplace pension schemes.

The figures show that the proportion of employees who are contributing to a company pension has risen significantly in the five years since Auto-Enrolment (AE) began.

AE was introduced in 2012 and makes it compulsory for employers to automatically enrol all eligible employees into a pension scheme unless the employee actively opts out. An employee is eligible for AE if they are aged between 22 and the state pension age and have a salary of more than £10,000.

In 2012, prior to AE, 47 per cent of UK employees were enrolled on a company pension scheme. This figure has now risen to 73 per cent in 2017. In other words, there are over 9.5 million more people saving for their retirement than there were five years ago, and it’s mainly thanks to AE.

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Surge in Britons becoming EU citizens

PassportFrom pension transfers into beneficial QROPS to careful tax planning, expats have a lot to consider so that they can be financially confident and live their life abroad to the fullest.

But with Brexit looming, there are other considerations afoot. For example, should expats keep their British citizenship or apply for nationality in their new expat homeland? And according to new statistics, it appears that the Brexit referendum result has had a significant effect on the number of Britons gaining citizenship elsewhere in the EU.

Figures from Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency, show a substantial surge in the number of Britons acquiring citizenship in other EU countries between 2015 (2,478) and 2016, when the number more than doubled to 6,555 – that’s an increase of 165 percent. The figures include both those who chose to adopt dual citizenship, so that they kept their British citizenship, as well as those who renounced it.

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