NEWS WRAP – Financial Advice Reassurance in the time of Coronavirus
The financial services industry is responding to the coronavirus crisis as firms try to come to grips with extreme market volatility, speculation of recession, and general health and welfare concerns.
NEWS WRAP – HNWIs in Spain Braced for Budget
Last year produced a great deal of polarity and fragmentation in Spanish politics; with elections in April and November unable to resolve the uncertainty, and both polls ending with inconclusive results and no majority in government.
However, January 2020 has delivered significant but not necessarily welcome news for expats in Spain; parliament has agreed the formation of a coalition government. The alliance of two-left-wing parties is a landmark event that signals positivity for the country, but HNWI expats may not necessarily be jumping for joy.
BLACKTOWER VIEW – Keith Littlewood in Murcia and Costa Cálida
Keith Littlewood is Blacktower Financial Management's Regional Manager covering Murcia and Costa Cálida. As an international financial adviser of around thirty years' experience and an expat of more than five years in Spain, Keith is ideally-placed to help expats negotiate the process of becoming an expat and can help them understand just what it means to be a fiscal resident in the country.
AROUND THE BRANCHES – Gibraltar Prepares to Leave the EU
This week, in our latest Around the Branches piece, we take a look at Gibraltar's plans for Brexit and how Spanish parliamentary developments are affecting ongoing negotiations.
NEWS WRAP – Regulated Advice Crucial to Expats in Spain
Increasing numbers of British expats in Spain are looking for advice and direction in relation to their Post-Brexit futures, the Guardian reports*, with many expressing their disappointment at the level of communication offered by British and Spanish officials.
This impression is supported by the findings of Karen O'Reilly, a sociology professor at Loughborough University, who recently published the results of an 18-month long research project which documents the considerable levels of "uncertainty and worry" among expats.**
NEWS WRAP – Shadow Foreign Secretary’s Plan for Public Sector Pensions
Labour MP for Islington South and Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry has published an article for Politics Home in which she calls for greater pensions freedoms for public sector workers.*
Written as part of her failed leadership campaign, the article named five major policy areas she felt the party needs to address in the future: climate crisis, the NHS, Social Care, affordable housing, and pensions.
In fact, the article was largely concerned with the issue of public sector pensions as Ms Thornberry warned that the country faced a "ticking time-bomb" in respect of the sums which will become payable in future decades. She quoted a 2017 estimate which suggested that public sector pension liabilities had a £1.7 trillion shortfall. She said that the public currently spends around £40 billion a year meeting this gap.
NEWS WRAP – Interest Rate Debate – Trust in Growth or Manage Risk?
The latest Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) survey describes widespread growth across the UK economy, with notable upturns in the services and manufacturing sectors.
The PMI records and aggregates the strength of various sectors of the economy and is often used to predict likely changes to interest rates. The fact that data for January indicated the most significant growth in 16 months, led many pundits to speculate on the unlikelihood of an interest rate cut by the Bank of England. And they were right.
The picture of growth was supported by numerous data channels. For example, figures from Rightmove revealed a 2.3 per cent month-on-month upturn on UK house prices in January, the largest ever recorded for the month, and this assisted the annual house price rise figure to 2.7%, the largest increase since 2017.*
NEWS WRAP – Lost Pensions Worth £37 Billion
Many British retirement savers could retire two years earlier than they realise, according to a new piece of research from pensions advice firm Profile Pensions*.
This, says the firm, is because one in four over 55s have lost track of their pension funds, a fact that helps to account for a significant proportion of the UK's approximately 1.6 million unclaimed pension pots. It is estimated that these funds have a combined value of around £37 billion.
The situation is even worse for younger retirement savers, with three in ten 25-34 year-olds saying they have lost track of a pension. One in ten respondents were not sure whether they would be able to account for all their pensions.