“New pensions minister: key priorities for Emma Reynolds”

Jul 16, 2024 | Pensions

An independent (financial adviser’s) view

Of all the various varieties of pension, the State one alone has remained unchanged; in principle, that is. When it was introduced in 1909, the minimum age was 70 (and 95% of the population didn’t make it that far), and you’d be means-tested to get your five bob a week. The minimum age is heading back towards 70, and should be 82 for parity. As for the rest: final salary pensions, dating back to Victorian railway companies, gone; retirement annuities, gone; executive pensions, gone; stakeholder pensions; gone; the inclination of most of the population to save without compulsion, never really been there. And the reason for the demise of pensions? Government tinkering and tax raids. So, as has oft been said, what we need is continuity and some settled thinking, please, Ms Reynolds MP. What are we likely to get? Sadly, I suspect, more tinkering and taxing. But what do I know?

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“Cash ISA allowance could be cut this month”

“Cash ISA allowance could be cut this month”

Our mantra has long been ’straightforward advice that you can understand’. That can mean trying to simplify the many complex products and options with which the world of finance tries to befuddle its target audience.

“Will the Bank of England Cut UK Interest Rates Again in 2025?”

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It’s easy to forget that five years ago the Bank of England Base Rate was at an all-time low of 0.1%, and only rose above 1% with the arrival of Liz Truss later in 2022. Something of which we often have to remind those who, when looking at how their investments have fared over the same period after yet another Trump Tweet has pushed markets in one direction or another, tell us ‘we could have been getting 4% a year if we’d left it all in the bank’.