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Pension changes – who benefits?

By Spectrum IFA
This article is published on: 8th April 2014

Since my last article we’ve enjoyed absorbing the somewhat spectacular aftermath of the UK budget. Spectacular that is if you’re into pensions and all that stuff. I am, and I’m absolutely fascinated by what is going on at the moment in the world of pensions. Daphne is the technical expert on all of this of course , with many qualifications and huge experience in the field, and she gave us all the technical low down in her last article. I’d just like to add my thoughts on why this might be happening.

I do find it somewhat odd that George Osborne seems to have sent a clear message to HMR&C to prepare full a full blown retreat and reversal of the policies that they have pursued avidly over the past eight years. In case you are not aware, April 2006 was ‘A’ Day, when the whole pension industry was overhauled, and QROPS, already born, was really launched on the UK expatriate market. Saving for your retirement was of paramount importance, and woe betide any financial adviser who dared to try to help a client access their pension funds contrary to the terms approved by HMR&C.

I need to say here that I am completely anti pension busting. My strong view is that the UK State Pension is pitifully ill equipped to provide us with anything like a comfortable retirement. Those of you who are lucky enough, or who have been diligent enough to create a decent pension fund are to be congratulated and encouraged to continue in a similar vein. Pension busting advisers are not acting in the clients’ best interests. They are in fact acting completely in their own interest; looking to create income and commission where it is not due.

We are (mostly) living longer, and will need to fund longer periods of retirement. Accelerating the pace at which we spend our retirement savings is going to end in tears. It’s a bit like telling a child who is allowed to buy one bag of sweets a week that he or she can eat them all on day one. And now we have a new pension buster on the block, Mr George Osborne himself. The proposals outlined in the budget remind me very much of the government’s war on drugs and drug related crime. A drug ‘Tzar’ was appointed a few years ago who after a couple of years of beating his head against a brick wall decided that the best thing to do would be to legalise all class A drugs and make them freely available. I’m not sure if he suggested an suitable tax rate at the same time, but it wouldn’t have surprised me if he did. Fortunately public outcry defeated that move, but I’m not sure that the same will happen this time round. This is all about money in your pockets, and that is a powerful lobby.

What worries me most about these proposals is the reason behind them Please don’t think for one minute that kind Mr Osborne is looking to make life easier for us by removing restrictions on when and how we access our pensions. What he is actually looking to do is raise his tax yield. 55 years old? A couple of hundred grand in a pension pot? Why don’t you take it all out and splash it about a bit? Treat yourself to that holiday; that car; that boat. Help your children progress up the housing ladder, or help your grandchildren get on the ladder. Tax?, sure, you’ll have to pay high rate tax when you take it, but doesn’t nearly everyone pay high rate tax these days?

Surely there’s a problem here? Why would the government want to stoke up problems for themselves in the future? Surely they don’t want droves of hard up pensioners clamouring for state aid in their final decades because they’ve spent all their money. I’m afraid the answer might be that the government doesn’t really care. One thing we’ve missed in all of this is the other pension proposals that have been going through. A raise in the general level of state pension yes, but the complete erosion of many other benefits that have always come to the aid of pensioners who can’t cope. The message now is ‘Here is your £7,000 a year. Don’t come back asking for more, because there isn’t any.’

So if the benefits system is largely to be dismantled, surely it makes sense to the government to try to get its hands on as much of the pension savings that currently exist as they can? They wouldn’t do that, would they? I think the bottom line here is that we are seeing just how interested the government is becoming in our pension savings. QROPS allows you to move your pension fund out of UK jurisdiction; have more control, and eradicate all sorts of risks. I think we should be looking very carefully at protecting our futures.

Yes, you can retire before your 40th birthday

By Victoria Lewis
This article is published on: 7th April 2014

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What if you didn’t have to wait until you were in your mid-sixties to retire? What about 50, or even just as you hit your 40th birthday? Don’t laugh — with enough dedication, you could say goodbye to your full-time job years sooner than you think.

“We all dream of retiring early with a fantastic pension and no money worries,” said Victoria Lewis, a financial adviser with the Spectrum IFA Group in Paris, France. You just have to put the right plan in place.

Click here to read the whole article on BBC.com

A successful start – Le Tour de Finance, Italy

By Gareth Horsfall
This article is published on: 3rd April 2014

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe Tour de Finance Forum (Italy) events in 2014 got off to a flying start with 2 events in Umbertide and Bagni di Lucca, respectively. Both events were well attended with approximately 30 attendees.

The events were a change from the norm, using the Forum style rather than powerpoint and structured presentations. Thank fully, the change of format worked incredibly well and both particpants and speakers alike gave credit to the new format.

The speakers on the day were Judith Ruddock (Studio del Gaizo Picchioni), Andrew Lawford (SEB Life International), Rob Walker (Jupiter Asset Management) and Peter Loveday (Currencies Direct) covering topics such as the latest rules on residency in Italy and tax returns, to tax efficient investment structures and will the Euro and Europe survive.

All in all the new format was more engaging and the content delivered in an easy to understand and manageable style.

We will be looking to hold further Tour de Finance Forum events in the autumn of 2014, in the Lucca and surrounding area and Le Marche.

We hope to see you there!

Proposed UK Pension Changes

By Spectrum IFA
This article is published on: 30th March 2014

The UK Budget for 2014 took the financial services industry by surprise. As details of the proposals were unveiled, it became obvious that we were hearing some of the best kept secrets (for a long time) of a government’s plans. Banking secrecy may be dead, but the UK government had managed to build a wall of secrecy around itself before the budget was made public.

So after “A-Day Pensions Simplification” in 2006, now we have another major reform proposed for “Freedom and Choice in Pensions”. I have seen a few reforms during my working life and as I get closer to pension age myself, I am thinking that this might be the last time that I have to get to grips with yet another. But who am I fooling except myself. Pensions is a political football that the politicians will kick around and of course, keep moving the goalposts.

To understand the reform, you need to understand the two main different types of pensions. The first is the defined benefit pension (DBP), where your employer basically promises to pay you a certain amount of pension, which is calculated by reference to your service and your earnings. DBPs are a rare breed now, as employers have found this type of arrangement too costly to maintain. This is because the liability for financing the scheme falls upon the employer (after anything that the individual is required to contribute) and if there is any shortfall in assets to meet the liabilities – perhaps because of poor investment returns –  the employer must put more money into the scheme.

The second type of pension is what is known as a money purchase plan (MPP). You put money into an MPP, perhaps your employer does/did also, as well as the government in the form of tax rebates and in the past, national insurance contribution rebates. Maybe your ‘MPP’ was not through an employer at all and you just set up something directly yourself with an insurance company. They are several different types of MPP arrangements, but they all result in the same basic outcome, i.e. the amount of the pension that you get depends on the value of your ‘pension pot’ at retirement and so the investment risk rests with you. There is no promise from anyone and therefore, no certainty of what you might receive.

The proposed reform is all about the MPP, although there is nothing to stop a person from transferring their private DBP to a MPP (at least for the time being), if they have left the service of the former employer. But why would someone do this and take over the investment risk of their pension from the former employer? Well there are some very limited situations, but I will not go into them here. The more normal position is that people would not voluntarily transfer their DBP to a MPP unless perhaps, there was a case of serious underfunding of the DBP.

Without getting into too much of the technical detail, the bottom line of the reform is that people will have more choice about how and when they can take their benefits from a MPP. For example, from April 2015, people over the age 55 will be able to take all of the MPP pension pot as a cash sum. Actually, this possibility has already been available for some time in certain situations and the reform basically relaxes some of the requirements that have to be met to do this. The minimum age will progressively change from age 55 to 57 by 2028 and then be linked to future State Pension Age increases.

For UK resident taxpayers, 25% of this pension pot would be paid tax-free and the balance would be subject to income tax at their marginal rate (the highest tax rate being 45%). As an illustration, assuming that the person had no other taxable income in the year and they took the 25% tax-free lump sum, on a fund of £50,000 the tax on the total fund would work out to be 11%, for a fund of £100,000 it would be 19.63%, for £150,000 it would be 24.75%, for £250,000 it would be 28.2% and for £500,000 it would be 30.98%.

The government suggests that by making available the option to take the full pension pot as a cash sum, this has taken away the need for someone to purchase annuity. This, of course, is referring to a ‘lifetime annuity’, whereby someone gives the insurance company a pot of money in return for a guarantee that the insurance company will pay an annuity to them for the rest of their life. In fact, the requirement to purchase a lifetime annuity had already been abolished in 2011 for Self-Invested Pension Plans (SIPPs), which is one of the types of MPP.

Over the last few years, life-time annuities have not been very popular because the low interest rate environment has had a negative effect on the amount of annuity that someone is able to buy with their pension pot. Therefore, the SIPP has proved to be a popular alternative choice, since the pension pot remains invested and the pension investor can draw an income from the fund. The amount that can be drawn from a SIPP is linked to UK long-term gilt yields, as are insurance company annuities, which implies that there is little difference between the two options.

In fact, the SIPP is more flexible and the amount that can be drawdown can be varied between minimum and maximum amount. In addition, on the person’s death, the remaining fund does not die with the person, unlike a lifetime annuity. So what would make someone chose a lifetime annuity over a SIPP?

Principally, it comes down to attitude to investment risk. If someone is very ‘cautious’ and cannot stand the idea of any volatility in their pension fund and also wants the certainty of a defined amount of income for life, then that person would chose a lifetime annuity, despite the new freedom and choice that they are being offered.

On the other hand, if someone is comfortable with some investment risk and is attracted by the idea of their pension pot passing down to their children, then they are more likely to go down the SIPP route. If they have left the UK, then they may consider transferring the MPP benefits to a Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme (QROPS). In effect, a QROPS operates just like a SIPP, but there is some extra flexibility and more potential to mitigate currency risk – very useful if you need your income in a currency other than Sterling – and the fund can pass to your dependants on your death without the UK 55% tax charge.

Generally, the UK pension reform is a welcome improvement, which will provide flexibility that will allow people to make their own choices regarding ‘when to take’ and ‘how to use’ their pension funds, according to their own individual circumstances. For those wishing to make the transition from full employment to full retirement over a number of years – which has become more important due to the increase in the State Pension Age – the reforms will be of enormous benefit. Indirectly, the reforms also have the potential to reduce youth unemployment in the UK, as younger people replace those who are able to retire earlier because it may now be financial viable for them to do so.

However, as in every case of financial planning, everyone’s situation is unique. Therefore, caution will be needed to ensure that people make the right choices, since the decision that they make at retirement will affect them for the rest of their lives. It would be disastrous if the reforms created a scenario that people might unwisely take “too much”, “too early”, out of their pension pots and every effort should be made by those involved in the advice process to avoid that risk.

It follows that it will be essential that people take professional advice, which not only considers the pension assets but also takes into account the person’s total wealth and objectives. Sadly, the government’s proposal that individuals should receive “free”, “face to face”, “impartial advice” as “pensions guidance” is unlikely to be sufficient for this purpose and creates the risk of misleading the person to believe that they do not need any other advice.

 What does it mean for UK non-residents?

The terms of any Double Taxation Treaty (DTT) between the UK and the person’s country of residence will define which country has the right to tax the pension payments of the type that we are discussing here. Usually, it will be the person’s country of residence and not the UK, when the payments are made. Therefore, providing that person has been granted relief from UK income tax – after making application under the terms of the DTT – in theory, they should be able to receive their MPP pension pot without the deduction of UK tax.

However, the practical difficulty will be how the administrator of the MPP will be able to pay the benefit without deducting tax. No doubt HMRC will put in place a prescribed set of rules for calculating and deducting the UK income tax from these ‘cash payments’, for application by pension scheme administrators, as is the case that already exists for these types of payments. If the administrator cannot make the payment gross, this means that you would need to claim the UK tax back from HMRC and HMRC might want evidence that you have declared the amount in your country of residence.

On a final point, there are already tax rules in place in the UK regarding non-residents and ‘flexible drawdown’. The proposed reform is, in effect, ‘flexible drawdown without the Minimum Income Requirement’ (at least from 2015) and so it is reasonable to assume that at least the same tax rules will apply. If so, this could have implications – either when taking the payment or when returning to the UK – if you have not had a sufficient period of UK non-residence. Again, it would be wise to seek advice before making an expensive mistake.

The above outline is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute advice or a recommendation from The Spectrum IFA Group to take any particular action on the subject of investment of financial assets or the mitigation of taxes.

 

UK Pensions – Budget Announcement April 2014

By Chris Burke
This article is published on: 29th March 2014

The UK Budget this week delivered unexpected and immediate changes to UK pensions as well as the publication of a consultation document.

Whist we will need to wait for details of the actual legislation, we would like to give you a brief summary of the main changes announced.

1. Flexible Drawdown

 With effect from April 2015, anyone will be able to take advantage of flexible drawdown, without the need to have (as is currently the case) a minimum guaranteed pension of £20,000 per annum. From 27th March the minimum pension required for flexible drawdown is reduced to £12,000

Currently there is a tax charge of 55%. This will be reduced to the individual’s marginal rate of tax. While this could be as low as 20%, with a 40% tax rate at just under £32,000 and 50% at £150,000, there will still be a high tax charge to pay. It should also be borne in mind that if the pension fund is taken, and not spent, any amount left over on death will fall into the client’s estate for IHT purposes and potentially taxed at a further 40% (or the prevailing IHT rate at the time).

2. Charge on death.

 This is currently 55%, and is viewed as potentially too high. HMRC intend to consult with stakeholders on this, but with income tax at the marginal rate and IHT at 40%, it would seem unlikely that this rate will fall substantially.

3. GAD rates will be increased from 120% to 150% from 27th March.

 The Gad rate is the amount the government decide you can take from your UK pension. Previously you could take 120% of what percentage they agreed, that has now risen to 150%.

4. Triviality

 That is, where the whole amount that can be taken as a lump sum i.e. small pensions. This amount has been increased to £10,000 per pension pot, and the total can include up to three pensions of £10,000 giving a combined maximum triviality payment of £30,000.

5. Transfers from public sector schemes

 Due to the above changes, the UK Government’s view is that this will have an effect on the number of people looking to move from final salary schemes to defined contribution schemes. As public sector schemes are underfunded, their view, taken from the briefing note, is as follows:

“ However, the government recognises that greater flexibility could lead to more people seeking to transfer from defined benefit to defined contribution schemes. For public service defined benefit schemes, this could represent a significant cost to the taxpayer, as these schemes are largely unfunded.

 Consequently, “government intends to introduce legislation to remove the option to transfer for those in public sector schemes, except in very limited circumstances. “

 This means that they will be seeking to disallow transfers from UK public sector schemes.

6. Government are also consulting with industry on whether to introduce restrictions on transfers from other final salary schemes.

 A copy of this consultation document can be found here https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/293079/freedom_and_choice_in_pensions_web.pdf

 While the main focus of reporting seems to be around the ability to take the pension fund as cash, in reality this has always been the case via flexible drawdown, so the only change being considered in this consultation is the removal of the requirement to have a guaranteed income.

 With income tax being paid at marginal rate, this would potentially increase the tax actually paid on the pension fund eg. A fund of £200,000 for a 60 year old could provide an income of around £12,000 at current GAD rates. This would (using UK tax rates) have a tax bill of £400 (20% on £2,000) and a net income of £11,600. Taking the amount as a lump sum would mean a tax bill of £73,623 and a net payment of £126,377, or just under 11 years’ worth of net income that could have been taken from the pension. Plus, if the amount was invested, tax would also be due on any income or gains produced. As well as the amount being within the client’s estate for IHT if UK domicile – whereas in a pension (QROPS or UK scheme) the fund will grow free of tax and will be outside the estate for IHT.

 No doubt there will be more focus on the above over the next few days, but if you would like to discuss any of the above in more detail, please don’t hesitate to contact me.

 (Source Momentum Pensions April 2014)

The Spectrum IFA Group Expands in Holland and Belgium

By Spectrum IFA
This article is published on: 26th March 2014

The Spectrum IFA Group are delighted to announce that David Elkan has joined the office in Holland.

David has worked in Financial Services for the past 26 years covering all aspects of financial planning and investment advice. Initially working within a large offshore brokerage in South East Asia, David then setup his own business in 2002 advising expat clients worldwide.

Commenting on this recent appointment, The Spectrum IFA Group’s CEO, Michael Lodhi commented “We are delighted to welcome David into the team to advice clients in Holland and Belgium. His appointment underpins The Spectrum IFA Group’s commitment to extend our range of services and advisers in Europe and to provide expatriates with a wide range of specialist financial advice”.

The group has been rapidly expanding within Europe over the past few years and this is the third new appointment for The Spectrum IFA Group within the month of March. Michael continues to say, “It is clear that our services are badly needed by the expatriate community in Europe and we are committed to providing this much needed professional advice”.

Lifetime Allowance changes and ‘Fixed Protection 2014

By Chris Burke
This article is published on: 18th March 2014

This year the Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) are lowering the UK Pensions Lifetime Allowance amount. This is the maximum allowance the HMRC grant to each individual to hold as a UK pension without incurring any extra tax charges. Previously, UK residents receive tax relief on the contributions made into a pension up to £1.8 million in 2010/2011 before it was reduced to £1.5 million in 2012. The HMRC has changed this twice over the last 8 years bringing the allowance down each time, from £1.8 million in 2010/2011 to £1.5 million 2012. The government agency is enforcing a further reduction to £1.25 million this coming year.

Any amount above the lifetime allowance is liable to 55% taxation when withdrawn as a lump sum, or 25% taxation when withdrawn as a pension.

It is important that those affected by this change apply for ‘Fixed Protection’ before 6th April 2014. A successful application allows the pensioner to maintain their lifetime allowance of £1.5 million as opposed to a reduced £1.25 million commencing from 6th April 2014.

A successful application for Fixed Protection in essence allows a pensioner to withdraw savings worth up to £1.5 million without paying the lifetime allowance charge which will soon affect all pensioners with more than £1.25 million across their schemes.

Firstly note – you cannot apply for ‘fixed protection’ 2014 if you already have ‘primary’, ‘enhanced’ or ‘fixed’ protection.

Secondly, you will lose fixed protection 2014 if:

a) You join a new pension scheme – unless you’re transferring pension savings from one of your existing schemes into the new scheme.
b) You build up new benefits in a defined benefits or cash balance pension pot above a set amount – enquire for further details.
c) You start saving in a new pension pot either under an existing pension scheme or a new pension scheme.
d) You have a contribution paid to any of your money purchase pension pots.

Links:
Apply for Fixed Protection 2014 at: http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/pensionschemes/fp14online.htm
Calculate if Lifetime Allowance affects you at: http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/tools/lifetimeallowance/index.htm

The Spectrum IFA Group Expands in Tuscany, Italy

By Spectrum IFA
This article is published on: 12th March 2014

The Spectrum IFA Group are delighted to announce that Peter Francis has joined the Italian team in the Lucca area.

Peter has worked in Financial Services for 25 years covering all aspects of financial planning and investment advice. Initially working within a large bank brokerage and then moving on to advising expats in Cyprus, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore.

Commenting on this recent appointment, The Spectrum IFA Group’s manager in Italy, Gareth Horsfall comments that “ We are delighted to welcome Peter into the Italian team and his appointment high lights The Spectrum IFA Group’s commitment to extend our range of services and advisers in Italy and to provide expatriates with a wide range of specialist financial advice.

You can contact Peter directly here

Are you a Spanish tax-resident for tax purposes

By Chris Burke
This article is published on: 5th March 2014

If you are currently living in Spain, you would assume that you would also be a Spanish tax resident. That is not always the case. The underlining rule is that if you live more that 183 days of the calendar year in Spain then you are deemed to be tax resident also. Although this is usually the deciding factor there are exemptions to the rule. If the ‘centre of your interests’ is arguably in the United Kingdom, Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) could reason that you are responsible for tax there, not Spain.
 
Where is your ‘centre of interests’? Well, you could quite conceivably spend most of your time in Spain whilst still having a house in the UK, a business or job based in the UK, children in school in the UK and/or a spouse in the UK. If all these were the case then you would almost certainly be UK resident for tax purposes. You would also be liable to tax in Spain (in theory) if you spend more than 183 days here. In practice there is however a ‘double tax treaty’ in existence between the UK and Spain which ensures you do not have to pay tax twice as a result.
 
If you currently reside in Spain and the majority of your ‘centre’s of interest’ are (in Spain) then you will be deemed as a tax resident by the Hacienda (the Spanish tax authorities) and liable to pay taxes on your assets world-wide.

The Tour de Finance Forum 2014 – Italy

By Gareth Horsfall
This article is published on: 4th March 2014

The Tour de Finance 2014 is back, but this time I have given it a twist!.

 

LTDF-Italy_invitation_2014_emailEvery year we bring a group of financial experts on the road in Italy to talk directly to expats about the financial considerations and concerns that they are facing.

In 2014 we are returning to Bagni di Lucca and Umbertide based on the interest shown and attendance in 2013.

We will be returning on the:

26TH MARCH 2014 Umbertide at Ristorante Pomarancio 

27th MARCH 2014 Bagni di Lucca at La Cantina delle Pianacce

Start time: 10.30am for coffee and sweets until approx 1pm with a FREE buffet lunch, wine and an opportunity to meet your fellow expats.

(I would like to add that due to increased demand for our services, we are receiving requests from all over Italy and so we want to extend the Tour de Finance into other parts of the country. So we will not be returning to these same locations for at least 1 year as the Tour de Finance is planning to expand to others areas of Italy in the autumn 2014.)

BUT, this time the format will change!

We are doing away with the Powerpoint presentations and structured presentations!

After reflecting on your feedback from previous events, I have decided to change the format to a FORUM style event. I want to avoid presenting all the information that ‘we think you should know’ and actually try and deliver the information that you want to know. Typical questions that I often hear from people include:

  • What are the likely implications of the recent implementation and then withdrawal of a 20% witholding tax on profit from investments held overseas, for Italian residents?
  • Are there opportunities to reduce my Inheritance tax liabilities in Italy?
  • What risk is there of losing all my money when I invest and how can I avoid this completely?
  • Are there any tax allowances/credits available to me as a resident in Italy?

So I, Gareth Horsfall (Spectrum IFA group (Italy) will pose questions to the panel for approx 30 minutes, followed by a refreshment break and then a further 30 minutes for questions from the audience.

It really is an opportunity to put the experts ‘on the spot’

The Panel of experts will include:

  • Judith Ruddock: Studio Del Gaizo Picchioni. Cross border tax specialists and commercialisti.
  • Andrew Lawford: SEB Life International. He will be facing questions about tax efficient savings vehicles for Italy and ways to potentially reduce your Inheritance tax liabilties.
  • Rob Walker: Jupiter Asset management, Private Clients. He will be free to take questions on world markets, from the current state of emerging markets to how to generate income from your money.
  • Peter Loveday: Currencies Direct . He will be taking questions on how to save money on International currency transfers and how they work.

I hope you will register your attendance. And I hope that the FORUM event will avoid all the boredom of powerpoint presentations and make the morning much more interactive for you.

If you would like to register for this event then you can do so by sending your full contact details to
info@spectrum-ifa.com or call Gareth Horsfall on 0039 333 6492356.