Soldato
Moved my old pension into a fund that’s largely passively managed.
mid 40s... this is why I'm not opting out of my default fund and nor are the traders at my work... yes it's low in equities but it makes a killing from the private money market and properties.I dont have access to any Alternative Credit funds and limited property funds as well. But isn't that rather low on equities at 35%? How old are you?
Ha! Well who knows what will happen in 20ish years.Vote name change to controlledfuture
use Trustnet or Morningstart to rate the funds/rank performance - All the info is there already....I get you, but examining all of the funds is the only way I can rank their performance. There are a lot of similar funds - for example several versions of 50/50 equity or 70/30 equity. I will need to see how they perform against each other and what the differences are between them, and all of that info is on the factsheets.
Sounds fine - "lifestyling" is generally what happens when people "fire and forget" with the pension funds.... It reduces the "risk" by moving from equities to bonds/cash nearer retirement.Just logged into my current workplace pension plan and got confused. A lot. But basically it says the risk profile "automatically changes its investment mix over time from higher-risk to lower-risk investments and therefore the risk rating of each fund will vary over time from 6 (High) at the beginning of the investment cycle to 3 (Medium-Low) at the maturity date of that fund." I think I'm currently in the high risk one. It claims the performance of my plan did 11.5% Fund and 11.5% Benchmark over the last 12 months. However, my pot has grown 15% over the last 12 months.
Erm...is that good lads?
There is very rough rule of thumb that says you can drawdown 4% per annum for 30years.What I struggle with is when a pension says it's worth say 100k. What does that actually mean come retirement?
Pretty poor performance tbh by Aegon.Granted i have only been with them 4 years but in total me and the company have put in 12k but the transfer value of the pension is only 10K
Luckily it's not my main pension and will be transfered to that once i'm retired.
TryI'm sure iv posted in this thread or similar..don't really know about performance of pensions. I just login to my current legal and general and see the pot going up? No idea about projections, if I'm on target etc.
I had 2 previous workplace pensions which I combined in to this one now with legal and general.
And I hope for the best ? Anyone give me any pointers ?
Do I have enough In the pot at the moment for my age ? Probabably not? Have I lost some performance during what ever financial crisis we go through. Who knows
This is what I have done for one of my DC pots to ensure that it doesn't start to get shifted from Equities to Bonds when I hit 55. The 'pre-lifestyling' default asset mix for that pot (a Fidelity 'Futurewise' fund) isn't massively different to a globally diversified equities tracker, and the fees are very similar too.Maybe setting your retirement date to 75 in terms of lifestyling would be appropriate
If that’s a reference to the state pension, I think it’s unsustainable at the current level, esp with the triple lock. People like my elderly mother are bleeding the system, but that’s what happens when that cohort voteI'm on a DB pension so I basically just need to hope that enough people are alive to pay it by the time I retire
I transfer as much as I can from my workplace pension once a year to my Vanguard SIPP where it’s invested into the same index funds as my S&S ISA and Lifetime ISA. Some workplace pensions aren’t too bad on fees but some are awful so ymmv.