How to Sort Out Your Pensions TODAY and Retire Early

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 июн 2024
  • Don’t assume your pensions are being managed correctly. The earlier you sort this out the earlier you can retire.
    👉🏻 Looking for help with Financial Planning?
    I am a Chartered Wealth Manager and Partner in a financial planning practice based in the UK. If you would like to find out more about working with us, please follow this link: go.novawm.com/getintouch
    Related Videos & Links:
    Understanding funds - • Vanguard Index Funds f...
    Risk Scores - • Vanguard Lifestrategy ...
    Find your pensions - www.gov.uk/find-pension-conta...
    DISCLAIMER:
    This channel is for education purposes only and does not constitute financial advice - James is not responsible for investment actions taken by viewers. Please seek out a regulated advisor if you require assistance (whilst James is a financial adviser, he does not provide advice through this RUclips Channel, which is not affiliated with his employer).
    James Shack™ property of James Shackell
    Copyright © James Shackell 2021. All rights reserved.
    The author asserts their moral right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this channel and any video published on it.
    0:00 Intro
    2:20 What & Why
    3:24 How much should you pay in
    4:59 Contribution Tips
    06:01 How to find them
    06:47 Problems with default funds
    08:07 Stick, twist or shuffle
    08:39 Walkthrough
    12:53 Transfer considerations
    14:18 Choose your beneficiaries

Комментарии • 502

  • @JamesShack
    @JamesShack  2 года назад +129

    Please ask me any questions you have about pensions, I’ll answers them below and hopefully this will become an even better resource for the people that watch it after you!

    • @johnanth
      @johnanth 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the video James. I am aware that you can typically (not always) merge pensions together, for example bring together those two pots with Aviva on request. I'm wondering if there is a direct benefit to doing this based on compounding etc? Maths isn't my strong suit sorry!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +1

      If there was a fixed fee involved in operating each pension then yes you would save money there. Other than that there is no mathematical benefit if combining, but as in the video one Aviva pension has good options and the other has bad ones.

    • @robmaxwell9054
      @robmaxwell9054 2 года назад

      Do you have a view on CAGR of a bog standard global equity tracker over the next 5, 10, 20 years?
      I'm forecasting 4% real returns as I don't want to be too optimistic, but equally that 4% annual gain should see me almost hit the LTA by the time I'm 55 ish, with the plan to stop contributing at 50 (using a S+S ISA as a glide to 55 and pension access).
      Second question - if you were approaching LTA with some years still left of working, would you stop pension contributions to push towards something else, or continue as you were?

    • @arnas387
      @arnas387 2 года назад +3

      If you are on the defined benefits pension, what are other recommended ways to help you to increase your contributions/reap the tax benefits?

    • @moderndroneman
      @moderndroneman 2 года назад +2

      Interested to hear your thoughts on overpaying in to a pension vs. using that same money for investing - particularly in to stocks and shares ISA. Maybe warrants a video of its own as lots of considerations but not entirely sure of pros and cons of each approach.

  • @jacquisnow9364
    @jacquisnow9364 Год назад +8

    Hi James, love the work you do! For the chart, it might be worth adding a stacked chart that splits the pension, ISA, State pension, etc, on top of eachother with different colours to help see trends. For example, when the workplace pension runs out and state pension kicks in. I'd be happy to send an example if needed. :)

  • @paulk2074
    @paulk2074 2 года назад +7

    Great video James, i sorted out my pensions earlier this year. Wasted so many years on a really poor fund, but glad it's all in order now.

  • @CP-vj6yn
    @CP-vj6yn 2 месяца назад

    Voted just for the find my pensions link! I keep meaning to do this!

  • @flippeddisc8289
    @flippeddisc8289 2 года назад +2

    Great video as always James….
    I recently thought I had tracked all my pensions…. In the 80’s I opted out of SERPs and assumed my deferred payments were placed in my occupational pension by my employer….
    I was wrong, a little detective work was an afternoon well spent. A few phone calls later I had tracked down a scheme containing £50k…time well spent…
    I urge everyone to check and then double check any old schemes they may have been in…
    Keep making the vids….Always great advice….

  • @lukasg6254
    @lukasg6254 2 года назад +3

    I would say this is the best video you made! Well done. Very informative, this is what I need. Thanks!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Luke’s, I’ll try do more like it!

  • @moderndroneman
    @moderndroneman 2 года назад +13

    100% the most informative RUclips subscription I have. Top quality videos, thanks James 👍

  • @helenmcconnell643
    @helenmcconnell643 2 года назад

    Thank you so much for putting this online. You are a godsend!

  • @AG-so4gl
    @AG-so4gl 2 года назад

    You articulate every well. Thankyou

  • @user-kz3wq4rx7w
    @user-kz3wq4rx7w 7 месяцев назад +15

    I started pensions for my children. I figured one day they will thank me, even if I won't be around to hear it. 50+ years of growth should give them a kick start!

    • @gonnahavemesomefun
      @gonnahavemesomefun 5 месяцев назад +6

      I did the same. It's amazing how quickly it grows. My boys are only early teens and already have £10k in their pensions. It's not huge, but it's money we don't miss, just £50 each month. They know about them and understand why I've done it. I've tried to educate them so they continue it as soon as they work. It's definately worth having those conversations even when they're young.

    • @purplemonkeydishwasher5269
      @purplemonkeydishwasher5269 3 месяца назад

      How does this work? Are they able to pull the money ar 18 or 21? Obviously if they wont need it great, but if they get to 25 and need to buy a house etc arent they better off getting out of the rent trap? ​@@gonnahavemesomefun

    • @darrenholden7447
      @darrenholden7447 2 месяца назад +2

      @@gonnahavemesomefunI’ve done this too and do my best to educate them. I figure by doing this and lightening the burden they may be able to afford houses!

  • @ryangroves5554
    @ryangroves5554 2 года назад

    Great advice James, I'll be sure to look into it asap!

  • @markw6309
    @markw6309 2 года назад

    Great video, enjoyed watching this.

  • @guyr7351
    @guyr7351 2 года назад +3

    Hi James just found your channel, as you say your a Financial planner not an advisor, People need to remember they will get a state pension which currently increases at a minimum of 2.5% pa, so our personal pensions are on top of this. Sadly there are those out there who have very little above the state pension or have only been in company schemes a few years.
    Having a plan and listing expenses that you will have when retired V expected income is the first stage, also when no longer working there is more opportunity to spend money so easy to burn through it too quickly.

  • @michaelwduffy
    @michaelwduffy 2 года назад

    Awesome video James !!!! Keep up the great work!!!

  • @user-nl2kt9jc9p
    @user-nl2kt9jc9p 2 года назад +8

    Hi James, I’m 21 and am just about to finish uni and start working - your channel has been extremely useful to me and because of you I have a much clearer idea of financial decisions I should be making, just wanted to say thank you for doing what you do!!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +2

      Hey no problem! Best of luck with your financial journey!

    • @marissakeynes2532
      @marissakeynes2532 2 месяца назад

      Ur one of the lucky clever few who are getting educated very early on pensions. U won't regret it. I wish I had that kind of information available when I was ur age.

  • @PieterMulder
    @PieterMulder 2 года назад +1

    Thank you thank you!! I actually thought I was pretty much on top of my pensions, but you spurred me on to check my annual charge on an old pension of mine and I never realised it was 1%!!!! So glad I checked that now and got it sorted.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      Epic result! Hopefully that will save you a lot over the years!

  • @gk_knight
    @gk_knight Год назад +1

    Incredibly helpful thank you so much. Liked and sub’d!

  • @lawrencer25
    @lawrencer25 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic video.
    Very very helpful.
    Thank you 👍👍👍👍🎉🥂

  • @george6977
    @george6977 10 месяцев назад

    👍 The find your pension link is useful.

  • @pataleno
    @pataleno 2 года назад +3

    I started a work pension almost 20 years ago and left in 2012. I carried on paying £300 a month into it after I left. I also joined new pensions with new jobs... I looked at my first proper work pension recently and it's almost £100k so very happy I carried on paying into it.

  • @kaopin14
    @kaopin14 Год назад

    Thanks to you, I just tracked down my pension and allocated it to all-equity rather than the generic target date fund.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  Год назад +2

      I’m glad you’re taking control. Just make sure you’re prepared for the short term volatility. Short term pain long term gain.

  • @seand8121
    @seand8121 2 года назад

    Hi James. I've just started watching your videos and you've managed to make pensions the most interesting watch in our house. Thanks for the very clear and easy to follow explanation.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      Haha, wow either my videos are insane or you're house is really dull... I mean it is Janaury so not much else to do!

  • @Hawks1980
    @Hawks1980 Год назад +12

    Reassuring video. I’m 42 and I have a Standard Life pension with approx £116000 in it. I’m invested in 2 funds at almost 100% Equity…a global fund (75%) and one that tracks the S&P 500 (25%). In happy to take a lot more risk (both funds are risk level 6) as I am still 20 - 25 years from retirement, and the most important thing for me is maximising the returns, even if the volatility can be high at times

    • @carolmaz8675
      @carolmaz8675 8 месяцев назад +4

      Live life and enjoy don’t just live for old age

  • @riverbluesky
    @riverbluesky 2 года назад

    Excellent video James!

  • @BeautifulNaturalDramatic
    @BeautifulNaturalDramatic 2 года назад

    Thanks for this information 👍

  • @cps4144
    @cps4144 2 года назад

    Very interesting video, I thought I knew most things about pensions but today was a school day!

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      There’s so much to know about pensions… it’s booody boring!

    • @cps4144
      @cps4144 2 года назад

      @@JamesShack hi James, I hope you don't mind me asking but is there an age limit on when you can start a pension and can you re-confirm that a nominated pension beneficiary can "inherit" someone's pension on their passing free of IHT?

  • @paulinemounier4121
    @paulinemounier4121 Год назад +4

    Hi James! Thank you so much for your work, it really helps!
    I have a question, what if you’re self-employed?
    I am planning on transferring my pension (while I was employed) to Vanguard. Do I have to open a Personal Pension and transfer my old pension there? And then starting to invest in that Personal Pension from my self-employment?
    Thanks,
    Pauline

  • @clair233
    @clair233 10 месяцев назад

    really informative, tysm.

  • @Ro53mary
    @Ro53mary 2 года назад +5

    Yey! Glad to see another video from your channel. I started my investment journey into the Vanguard 80% Equity Lifestrategy today after procrastinating for months. Next step is opening up a SIPP :)

    • @19grand
      @19grand 2 года назад

      I'm still in the procrastinating phase.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +1

      All in time!

  • @Alban.Bytyqi
    @Alban.Bytyqi 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for your generous share of knowledge. Have you ever considered standard life as a provider

  • @hothothot63
    @hothothot63 Год назад

    James, thank you so much for your informative accessible videos. When you refer to default pensions, with NHS are there any options?

  • @Callmesi
    @Callmesi 2 года назад +1

    This is an important video. I have 3 pension pots and have no handle on them really. One of them is an nhs pension but I’ve no contact or policy number for it.
    Thanks for posting

    • @Equitybonds24
      @Equitybonds24 17 дней назад

      NHS pension is likely a final salary scheme. If so there won't be a pot of money which you control.

  • @davidlloyd3116
    @davidlloyd3116 2 года назад +4

    What I found annoying was my company kept moving our pension provider, so it started with Fidelity, then Zurich, then Standard Life, then Scottish Widows. We had no control over this. This was in the private sector (American pharmaceutical company). Ok, I’m happy with the amount invested, and always paid in the maximum that the company matched. Retired now at 56, but not taking any pension yet.

  • @martdingley
    @martdingley 2 года назад

    I love that you went grey especially for the video James 🤣

  • @maewest68
    @maewest68 2 года назад

    This is such a good video. I did this three weeks ago, it took 5 days total to switch 4 pensions into a Vanguard SIPP, I was amazed how fast they did it. I had 2 Legal&Generals, 1 Aegon and a Scottish Widows. The investments were ... not what I would choose for myself, like my ISA. And you're 100% right about the Life admin, took me weeks, had to send letters to my old employers to find out what bloody pension I had...

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      Yes it’s a nightmare! But ones it’s all aligned the actual transfer happens very quickly.

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад

      The whole situation regarding pensions and a much more flexible work environment now is something younger workers need to keep on top of.
      I am 4 years away from state retirement age, and long gone is the company for life work scenario. I have worked for 9 companies 11 if you count acquisitions, my brother only two years older worked for 1 and retired early 50’s via redundancy

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад

      As part of the life admin, you should check the defined contribution schemes who you have nominated as beneficiaries. As I am in a second marriage the default of it all goes to the wife does not suit me. My calculations on growth/income over retirement sees a potential healthy sum still at 90 if I live that long ignoring property value/ downsizing etc. so some of the projected funds I want to leave to my children as well as my wife.

  • @CDShepherd
    @CDShepherd 2 года назад +5

    This is amazing content. I never knew I had such control over my pension investments. I'm 30+ years from retirement so I've gone into my accounts and chosen more adventurous portfolios. Thank you!

  • @christianmcivor6015
    @christianmcivor6015 Год назад +7

    24 here only worked professionally for two years. Got two separate pensions but going to set aside later this week to group them and open a SIPP and invest it in the FTSE Global all cap. Thanks for the video James!

    • @ivermektin6874
      @ivermektin6874 5 месяцев назад

      Ah yes, the FTSE, no gains in 20 years. Good luck.

    • @studuckson
      @studuckson 5 месяцев назад

      @@ivermektin6874 it's not the FTSE100, it's a world wide fund with over 7000 companies....maybe look it up?

    • @watson946
      @watson946 4 месяца назад

      ​@@ivermektin6874 he didn't say ftse100

    • @KelticStingray
      @KelticStingray 4 месяца назад

      ​@@ivermektin6874FTSE =/= FTSE global all cap

    • @Cassp0nk
      @Cassp0nk 2 месяца назад

      You’d be better to do msci world and s&p500. Thanks me in 50 years!

  • @LukeDiogo
    @LukeDiogo 6 месяцев назад +283

    After a terrible 2022, shell-shocked financial backers have a lot to think about and losses to recover from. An expansion report and a wealth of other data did little to alter assumptions that the Central bank would likely keep raising interest rates regardless of whether the economy slows down. This implies that portfolios will experience more losses during the first quarter of 2023. I'm currently at a crossroads deciding whether to exchange my $250k security/stock portfolio; how might the continuous market volatility work to my advantage?

    • @LehmannAlicia
      @LehmannAlicia 6 месяцев назад

      Concentrate on two main objectives. First and foremost, keep yourself safe by knowing when to sell stocks to reduce losses and maximize gains. Second, prepare yourself to gain from a market turnaround. I advise you to seek the advice of a representative or financial counselor

    • @LukeDiogo
      @LukeDiogo 6 месяцев назад

      @@LehmannAlicia In fact, ever since Coronavirus, I've been in regular communication with financial examiners. Nowadays, buying moving stocks is quite easy; the trick is knowing when to buy and when to sell. The section and leave orders for my portfolio are made by my counsel. accumulated more than $550,000 from a $150,000 savings that was initially stale.

    • @LehmannAlicia
      @LehmannAlicia 6 месяцев назад

      @@LukeDiogo Please provide the information for your investment advisor here. I really need it now.

    • @LukeDiogo
      @LukeDiogo 6 месяцев назад

      @@LehmannAlicia She is KRISTIN GAIL CUNNINGHAM , my consultant. Since then, she has devoted section and leave attention to safeguards that I have been keeping an eye out for. You can locate information about the chief online, on the off chance that you're interested. I made no regrets about substantially adhering to their exchange strategy.

    • @LehmannAlicia
      @LehmannAlicia 6 месяцев назад

      @@LukeDiogo sincerely thank you I looked her up on the internet and was awestruck by how qualified she was; I contacted her since I need all the help I can get with canning. I've just scheduled a call.

  • @garethdwright91
    @garethdwright91 2 года назад

    Nice one, Jambo Commando!

  • @paulthorpe766
    @paulthorpe766 2 года назад +1

    13.30 good advice as many times you loose the death in service for a spouse transfering to another pension provider while you are still working.

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад

      Very well pointed out as sometimes this is via a company insurance policy other times as you say linked to pension system. I have worked for companies where death in service ranged from 3-7 times your salary.

  • @fellafella1000
    @fellafella1000 2 года назад

    I've done pretty well coming out the default, my risk adverse colleagues unfortunately not

  • @ianbroadley1670
    @ianbroadley1670 7 месяцев назад

    Hi James, very interesting video, thank you. Can I ask whether you deal with transferring pensions to Australia? As you eluded to and like most, I have moved employer and have lost track of what I have and where it sits. Compounded by the time differences it’s difficult to find. Thanks

  • @patrickchiam1194
    @patrickchiam1194 3 месяца назад +1

    Great Video! Can you do a video on NHS pension please?

  • @Bari_Khan_CEng_CMarEng
    @Bari_Khan_CEng_CMarEng 2 года назад

    Great video

  • @jamiewinstanley1881
    @jamiewinstanley1881 2 года назад

    awesome video. I had my funds with aviva in a mixed investment and im in my 20s so going for risk 5 makes more sense! new subscriber loving your work!

  • @MrThisView
    @MrThisView 3 месяца назад

    Pension magic - that's all I can say James and about how you do this :)

  • @seancurran8108
    @seancurran8108 2 года назад +8

    I was in the aviva standard pension allocation for a long time before I got interested in looking at my investments myself. Big mistake. Once I started choosing my own funds over the last 10 years i have had a 1.5% better return per year for less risk (I plotted the sharpe ratio) and I am still with Aviva, just choosing my own funds. So I very much agree with your comments.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +2

      Yes! Most people just assume it’s being managed well, but it’s often not.

  • @fernleighdevelopments9107
    @fernleighdevelopments9107 2 месяца назад

    Hi James
    I’ve been watching your videos so many thanks for the content and explanation.. I have a private pension with prudential which I’ve not paid into for some years its value is around £55,000 I’m 55 in 18 months. I have a vanguard account which I pay into monthly mainly into S&P 500 and overseas index funds which is seeing good returns, do you think I should transfer my pension into my vanguard funds or just stick out the last 18 months with the prudential… I appreciate lots of other factors might come into this but initially wanted to try to explain. Many thanks Aaron

  • @AdamSmith-de5oh
    @AdamSmith-de5oh 2 года назад

    It's important to note you also get state pension which is 9,350, so on you original example they'd get 17,350 a year which if they already paid off their mortgage is probably enough for most people, discounting inflation of course...

  • @anthonycross6262
    @anthonycross6262 2 года назад

    Thank you 🙏 great advice and there is light for the over 50s who has you said have multiple pensions

  • @creatingbalancefinance
    @creatingbalancefinance 2 года назад +4

    Such an informative video. I opened my SIPP a couple of years ago and I’m so pleased I did, it was a bit of a faff but was totally worth it.

  • @cwatson87183
    @cwatson87183 5 месяцев назад

    Hi James amazing video as always. With a defined contribution pension you said that the government top this up by 25%. Whereabouts do they do they do this? Is this a completely separate contribution from the National Insurance contribution?

  • @Joshuagilchrist55
    @Joshuagilchrist55 2 месяца назад +1

    Can you do a video in the NHS pension?

  • @ProphetChuck8471
    @ProphetChuck8471 2 года назад

    This was pretty helpful, thanks!

  • @johnleslie1196
    @johnleslie1196 Год назад

    Hi James, Just came across your youtube channel today and I think I hate you and love you at the same time.
    Many thanks for the info.

  • @stevescottuk
    @stevescottuk 2 года назад

    James, I've watched and lot of your videos. They have very good considered information and are well constructed, thank you for taking the trouble to put them together. My SIPP pension consists of 70% in commercial properties (10) for the rental income and the rest in shares. There are other people out there with a similar portfolios. The parameter for making decisions on these type of pensions is rather different, a video on these types of pensions pros/cons how to decide what to do would be very useful to me and many others.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      Hi Steve, yes that is a particularly niche example. Did this start out as your SIPP buying your own business premises?

    • @stevescottuk
      @stevescottuk 2 года назад

      I should have said, I own a percentage of 10 commercial properties between 10 and 1%. A company runs the SIPP they decide which ones to buy they are up to around a 100 now. As participent of the SIPP we decide which ones to invest in based in part on the likely rental return, a mortgage option is often available to buy a bigger share using the rental income to pay down the mortgage. My company does not manage the SIPP. Rental returns in my portfolio of properties vary in returns from 5% to 13% based on the original amount invested. Not taking into account changes in value of the property.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      @@stevescottuk Interesting, what’s the name of this company managing the SIPP ?

    • @stevescottuk
      @stevescottuk 2 года назад

      There also do LLP for the same properties. I expect you know, the idea is the rental income becomes the pension payments plus some drawdown from the GIA. The properties become inheritable.

  • @bensmithy4279
    @bensmithy4279 2 года назад

    That black and white thingy behind you actually looks like Samara from THE RING movie. The fact that it's fuzzy makes it even more creepy.

  • @jamesj2120
    @jamesj2120 2 года назад

    Great presentation - thank you

  • @eddieblundell2457
    @eddieblundell2457 2 года назад +2

    Hi james, i have an old workplace pension with nest and also a personal pension what was legal and general and now reassure, ive now gone self employed im 55 next july is there any point me transfering my nest to reassure ?? (If i can do that)...any advice would be great

  • @marcusnelson3520
    @marcusnelson3520 Год назад

    Recent subscriber.
    Great content. Are you able to suggest what people generally go for in their pension portfolios for 30+ year time horizons?
    100% stocks with what coverage of markets and small, mid caps, countries etc.
    I wonder if you could do a video reviewing what people with 30 years + generally do if high risk tolerance? Or perhaps with varying levels of risk tolerance.
    Thanks

  • @jacc88888
    @jacc88888 8 месяцев назад +2

    Very helpful video. Without being too much of a doom-monger, there seems to be a shift of economic power happening in the last few years from the West to the rapidly growing economies of Asian countries and Brazil. Do you think pension companies and financial advisors will start shifting their focus to investing more in these economies? Am asking because it seems most UK pension companies seem to focus on investing the majority of their money in Western economy funds. I’m concerned that if I put a lot more money into my private pension that it will tank long term if there is a (quite likely ) financial crisis in the West. Any thoughts?

  • @user-yn6gg5yf3t
    @user-yn6gg5yf3t 2 месяца назад

    Hi James, you said to ideally keep the annual management fee under 0.5%. Do you have a similar rule of thumb for the total fees of a pension? i.e. including the fund charges (assuming it's invested in passive funds). I'm trying to figure out if my pension with a total fee of 0.75% is reasonable.

  • @markloader5280
    @markloader5280 2 года назад +1

    Thank you James. I also have a workplace pension with Aviva. Seems difficult to track how its grown although i can see the absolute value. I know i invest 12% inc Employer contributions. I tracked down and transferred all my old pensions to a SIPP early in 2020 and went all in on TSLA which i am very happy to let run with 20 years to early retirement. I just wish there was more options for my workplace pension. Balancing between low growth targets and high fees is not very exciting.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      Workplace pensions can be tricky. Employers choose restrictive plans so people don’t mess things up, but they end up being too restrictive for people that want more choice.

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад +1

      Mark, I am with Aviva in one pension an ex company pension, and find their web site really useful I am sure you can re-allocate funds into different more aggressive funds if you want to and not just go with the status quo managed investment strategy

  • @kenjix3c
    @kenjix3c 2 месяца назад

    Can I add multiple people as inheritors of my pension? Also thanks for the enlightenment, this is very informative

  • @derekmcgregor7459
    @derekmcgregor7459 Год назад

    James my workplace pension is Now Pensions and their returns aren't very good. They only have a retirement fund and a diversified groqth fund. My employer refuses to change my contributions towards a better provider.
    Is it worth opting out and putting my contributions into a SIPP or am I better staying with now for employer/govt contributions?

  • @antonybutler2407
    @antonybutler2407 Год назад +1

    What about fund choices within your workplace pension? Are you better switching from default?

  • @justin.trading
    @justin.trading Год назад

    Which Interactive Investor fund / shares / tracker should I invest in if I need access to it in 3 years time when I am 55

  • @killeremma
    @killeremma Год назад

    if someone leaves you their pension do the same rules apply - or can you use it as money or does it have to be left until I reach retirement age?

  • @sweeneyuk567
    @sweeneyuk567 2 года назад +1

    I’ve got serious fomo. Was never advised on finance and as such didn’t join my firms pension until many yrs after🤬. I know am playing serious catch up. What I can’t work out is should I increase pension contributions or open a lifestyle Vanguard isa fund? I want to invest heavily for next 20yrs and am looking at the higher risk funds. How do I determine if my pension is a better place than a vanguard fund? Also whats a better bet vanguard actively managed or indexed? Emerging market fund a global sustainability fund? I desperately need to nail this as I have money to invest but time & inflation is chipping away at it and I’ve sat on my hands for past 2 yrs not knowing what to do. Please Help 🤯

  • @leepinto8967
    @leepinto8967 2 года назад

    Hi James. So glad I came across your chanel. Very helpful!!! I just finished with my old job and now I intend to transfer my old pension with Royal London to Vanguard. How does it work? Do I need to open a pension account with Vanguard first? Do I need to ask Royal London to add all my investments into one Vanguard on their side before transferring? Can I do it myself if initial we had a pension company organising all for the employer? Maybe basic questions but I am still a bit confused.
    Thank you :)

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +1

      Hi Lee, You trigger it all from the vanguard side. Open a SIPP there, then follow the steps for a pension transfer. They will handle it all.

  • @pumulorra7219
    @pumulorra7219 3 месяца назад

    Hi do you know if the NHS do this please?

  • @MD-cx5dg
    @MD-cx5dg 2 года назад

    Some great advice ! 👍🏼

  • @goofygoober3407
    @goofygoober3407 5 месяцев назад

    "I have a pension from the USS which is a defined benefit scheme. I have accumulated a total of £12,000 in my pension pot, which will provide me with an annual income of £1,030 when I retire. I left the USS after switching jobs. I am unsure if I should keep my USS pension, transfer it to my current pension provider L&G, or move it to a SIPP with Vanguard. Can you advise me on what would be the best option?"

  • @Goady1000
    @Goady1000 2 года назад

    Only question I have is, my workplace chooses the fund for me and it means zero fees, if I change/ alter then I have to pay quite high % fee
    Do you recommend the £1 route? I get no benefits other than 4% each contrib

  • @adp3965
    @adp3965 7 дней назад

    Hi James, I currently have ~£180k in a pension cash fund paying ~5.5%. I like the certainty of this guaranteed basic retirement, able to eat should SHTF big time in this uncertain world. I use the interest, ~£900pm and transfer this to my mix of global/overseas funds every month, on top of my £3k/month contributions/employer contributions giving ~£4k/pm total ie a boost of 30% each month, 100% invested in global funds. I’m about 15yrs from retirement and 20yrs from drawing my private pension. I know on average you expect 9% historically from markets but is this silly? My biggest fear is saving and being sensible then being left with nothing.

  • @Matt463634
    @Matt463634 2 года назад +1

    I've got an Aegon pension in which the underlying investment has a built in derisking function which doesn't sound ideal...

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад +1

      It’s not bad if your young right now, because it should be in a high % of equities but the problems happen when it starts to derisk when you don’t want it too. But that won’t happen until 15 years from retirement.

  • @sunshinedream98
    @sunshinedream98 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hi James great video thanks for your great work!
    I have a question, I have a pension with royal London my fees are around 0.5% to royal London and 0.5% to my advisor( The guy that recommended RL to me and set it up for me). I’ve had the pension for about 8 years now and I’m at about £90,000 I worry about my portfolio choice (it’s currently cautious level 2) I’ve emailed my Pensions advisor with many questions about my investments choice but some times get no reply or a very late reply and the reply always seems very generic “markets go up markets go down”,kind of thing never really advising me on changes to be made or even not to worry the investment choice I currently have is right for me.
    Add to this I think it’s Royal London that basically do everything I chose GP2 eight years ago and I think all RL do is rebalancing of my GP2 , I’m not sure what my advisor is doing for his 0.5%.
    I may be wrong but fear I’m not really getting anything from my advisor for his 0.5%. Maybe he’s doing stuff I just don’t see, am I being unfair?

    • @lurst
      @lurst 5 месяцев назад

      I'm just a guy on the internet, but, why are you paying your advisor 0.5% for only having picked your pension? I'd just fire them.
      If you're interested enough to be watching youtube videos, sounds like you don't need one.

  • @amerasinghamkarunananthan711
    @amerasinghamkarunananthan711 2 года назад

    Hi James, I have draw down pension with Aviva & all funds invested in Vanguard life strategy 40. I’m 70 & withdrawn tax free lumsum already. Can I transfer my a/c from Aviva to Vanguard to mitigate on going charges @ both platforms?

  • @lynnemuda7881
    @lynnemuda7881 10 месяцев назад

    Hello James
    I like your videos how can I get in touch with you for some guidance with my pensions I am at a complete loss whst to do

  • @johnstanford1324
    @johnstanford1324 2 года назад

    Hello, I basically have two options with some veriations in between with my pension one is a large pension and small lump sum the other is a smaller pension with much larger lump some one your garenteed a good pension for your life but the other gives a resonable pension but the opotunity to invest

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад

      Many of us with defined benefits schemes have this, and the standard illustration typically shows nil tax free biggest pension and 25% tax free smaller pension.
      One thing to consider is that if you have a full state pension then most of what you get from any other pension scheme will be liable to tax bar about £3K year currently. So in my view I would always take the maximum tax free from a DB scheme.
      If you have money in a defined contribution scheme and flexible draw down you could take the tax free sum in smaller chunks leaving more money in the pit to keep growing.

  • @arunmenon6513
    @arunmenon6513 2 года назад +1

    Great 👍

  • @philippenielsen9936
    @philippenielsen9936 2 года назад +1

    Hi James, thanks for yet another great piece of content.
    Could you let me know what you think of pension aggregators such as PensionBee?
    I also have some pensions in France: worth bringing those over to the UK?

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      I think pension be is great value if you have lots of pensions to combine. They have to put in a lot of work to get them across. They’re more expensive in the long run but 0.75% really isn’t too bad.
      The thing to remember is that they don’t give you any advice, and you may end up moving a pension and loosing certain benefits. They don’t tell you whether you should or should not move.
      I can’t say much about foreign pensions, I don’t know the area well.

  • @maxsheridan2833
    @maxsheridan2833 2 года назад

    A trail of pensions in your wake. I know the feeling.

  • @gentsai5159
    @gentsai5159 2 года назад

    Hi James, great video. Do you advise on how to manage pension or would you set up a portfolio in a consultation? I have a few pensions but one is in HL SIPP.

  • @george6977
    @george6977 10 месяцев назад

    I bought added years to get the full State Pension.
    I have 15/80ths of a Civil Service pension as I took voluntary redundancy. If I can buy added years in this one is it sensible?

  • @justin.trading
    @justin.trading 2 года назад

    Fund choices for a good portfolio on interactive investor please

  • @TROZJAN
    @TROZJAN 17 дней назад

    I do added voluntary contributions where I pay £100 in a fortnight but only costs me £70 least I hope do that much overtime can tell as been like 8 month since had normal pay

  • @adrianedwards6911
    @adrianedwards6911 Месяц назад

    I seem to switch jobs quite often. So I always opt out. Should I be paying into work place pensions. Even though I’m always switching jobs ?

  • @markfinch7227
    @markfinch7227 2 года назад

    Hi James, I am looking to retire in 2 years at the age of 60. The problem is I moved to Australia in 2007 and left 2 pensions in the UK. What is the best way to maximise my income in retirement.

  • @RepairApp
    @RepairApp 23 дня назад

    I have a lifetime value allowance question: if I'm approaching the LVA and take out the 25% tax free amount. Does it reset and allow me to then start adding again and build it back up to the LVA. Or is it only one time you can hit the max and it remembers?

  • @withwilk7473
    @withwilk7473 2 года назад

    I transfer my Nest workplace pension out annually into my SIPP with Vanguard. I put it all into the 80% Life Strategy fund which is pretty diversified and only charges 0.22%

    • @2306chris23
      @2306chris23 2 года назад

      Nest claim they do not allow partial transfer

    • @withwilk7473
      @withwilk7473 2 года назад

      @@2306chris23 I transfer out in full

    • @steve0680657
      @steve0680657 2 года назад

      @@2306chris23 with B&CE they don't allow partial transfers, but I called them first and had customer service put a note on the account saying "Don't close account" before doing a full transfer.
      The account remained open and the next employer contribution went in fine.
      I'm sure I cheated death somehow doing this.

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      I’m interested in this - can you expand on how this works? I want to help clients do partial transfers out of nest.

    • @steve0680657
      @steve0680657 2 года назад

      @@JamesShack It's fairly self-explanatory although I couldn't gaurantee it will work. Simply contact Nest customer services and ask that a note be put on the client's account to "remain open after transfer out to continue receiving employer contributions", and with the recipient provider request a full pension transfer. I believe the majority, including Nest, will use the Origo pension transfer system.
      In a worst case scenario the note could be overlooked, however Nest would quickly create a new account at the request of the client's employer.
      It's messy but if you want the ability to access a greater range of funds or equities it might be your only option.

  • @seraho
    @seraho 2 года назад +1

    Wow, thanks James. I had no idea you can do partial transfer! My workplace pension is so expensive. They even charge me for contributions made 😫

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  2 года назад

      What ?! Who is that with ?

    • @seraho
      @seraho 2 года назад +1

      @@JamesShack Nest. They charge 1.8% on contributions.

    • @guyr7351
      @guyr7351 2 года назад

      @@seraho I am with a nest scheme with new employer they also don’t count the first £500 of salary ref the amount to take my % contribution
      So my 3% is not 3% of my full salary, just seems weird to me. I am only in the nest to get the employer contribution I won’t be I. It long enough to have much impact

  • @nicobass1966
    @nicobass1966 Год назад

    Thanks and great update. Your microphone is very much bass and not clear, unless it's me but others sound fine, cheers Nick

  • @OctoBud
    @OctoBud Год назад

    I've got a Nest pension for my work has about £10k in it, tempted to stop payments for a month, take out the money and put it into a Sipp and then resume my pension again. I'd loose out on a months contributions for work but think long term, i'd rather just whack in it to the S&P. Am I mad or does this kinda make sense?

  • @leepinto8967
    @leepinto8967 2 года назад

    Hi James, have you got a video or more information about how to transfer a cash ISA into Vanguard share ISA?
    Thank you!!

    • @sid35gb
      @sid35gb 5 месяцев назад

      Cash it out and take that cash to open your vanguard ISA then when the money is cleared select the investments you want and invest 😊

  • @timbennett6644
    @timbennett6644 Год назад +3

    Interesting video. I am a registered nurse. 23 years NHS superannuated pension. The past 11 years I have worked offshore in the oil industry and as your video describes I have multiple pensions. Every 3 years or so our contract provider changes and I end up having a new pension scheme. I am 53. I have considered consolidating everything into one pension, except for the nhs pension. But it’s a mine field and I keep getting conflicting advice. Can you advise please. Thank you.

    • @ironmantooltime
      @ironmantooltime 6 месяцев назад

      Do it, its likely your current scheme will discount the fee, so your old funds will be charging you an additional half percent or so. Merge them all into where you're making your current contribution.

  • @alexandergriffiths3615
    @alexandergriffiths3615 2 года назад

    A few of my older friends have recommended paying into multiple pensions. Is that a good idea or should I have one focused pension?

  • @killeremma
    @killeremma Год назад

    How many pensions are you allowed? I know there is a 1m max, but can you do that twice if you want?

  • @sidneypotter6284
    @sidneypotter6284 2 года назад

    What’s your opinion of MJ DeMarco’s outlook?

  • @sharktc
    @sharktc 7 месяцев назад

    Hi James ,
    Thank you for the video can we also transfer our current active pension and our employer will contribute to the new one we choose or our employer will just contribute to the one that we are enrolled on now?
    Thank you

    • @JamesShack
      @JamesShack  7 месяцев назад

      Often you can do a partial transfer, so you leave £100 in your workplace pension and your employer will keep paying into it. But transfer out the bulk of it and then sweep across the rest every year or so.