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Pensions: when should I start one?

December 3rd, 2008 by jamie | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Money Management, Pensions, Saving

A pension is a financial device, effectively a savings mechanism, which in theory is designed to pay for your retirement years. You pay into a fund during the years you earn, which builds the fund up to a level which is then released per month once you have retired and will continue to pay until you die.

And once you start a pension, the actuaries will have worked out for you on a regular basis what is required to keep the fund up to the level of pay-out you are expecting in your retirement. As many pension funds are big investors in stock markets, then pension funds, as a collective, can go up and down like a yo-yo. In principle, a long term investment, like a pension, should show substantial growth over the period of the pension policy’s life. And as for fund managers, stock markets do give better returns than simply collecting interest on a daily basis from a more reserved saving funds vehicle. But therein lies the rub. When markets collapse, so can the value of pension funds, so you might be thinking that retirement is looking very rosy indeed, and then find out that you might not be as well of as you thought.

So, a pension is a quite simple idea, but as with many financial tools in the modern world, it’s anything but straightforward. It used to be that most employees in the private sector would join a company pension. And the employee and employer would both make contributions to a fund. Then businesses decided that running pension funds was firstly rather expensive and secondly, a too time-consuming task. Thus the private pension was thrust into the lime light and people were told to make their own provisions.

Nowadays most companies either do not run their own pension schemes, or have closed their existing schemes to new employees, much to the chagrin of the workers and unions.

Even in the public sector, in which employees were compensated with lower wages than the private sector with extremely good pension provisions, the Government is now mooting the idea that things will have to change.

Basically, as we all live longer and people fight off diseases that would once kill at an earlier age, providing a pension is a very expensive business.

So, mostly, preparing for your retirement is up to you. And a basic principle of a pension is that the earlier you can afford to start one, the better, as it is cheaper to establish a useful fund over a long period of time.

It’s been estimated that if a man in his mid-twenties were to contribute £100 a month up until a retirement age of 60, his annual pension could be in the region of £1,000 per month. But if that same man started at 40, he would have to contribute nearer £300 and for a 50-year-old, £1,000 a month. So, it follows, the earlier you get started, the better.

As to how much, that usually depends on your personal circumstances and how much you can afford. In many early working careers there’s little money to spare and other things keep intruding, such as marriage and children. And this is why a popular way of saving for your retirement is to build a pension fund to make the final payment on an interest-only mortgage. This method is now more popular than endowments. 

But you can see from the above calculation of £100 a month returning £1,000 a month from a mid 20-year-old, you have to look at your wage packet, or salary slip, and think if you can mange that, as well as afford all the other things you want to do.

But don’t put it off; most people make retirement and you will need some provision for your later life.


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Curry’s not so hot as sales plummet

December 2nd, 2008 by jamie | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Recession

Christmas high street trading is looking tough for many top names as shoppers opt to keep their cash in their pockets.

On the back of news that Woolworth’s and MFI have called in the administrators and sales are down at the John Lewis chain, the PC World and Curry’s super group revealed sales have fallen through the floor.

Brand owner DSG International reported a half-year loss of £29.8m, compared with a profit of £52.4m in the same period last year.

The company said that sales in stores open longer than a year were down 7% during the period.

Clinton Cards also reported a sharp fall in sales with like-for-like sales – which strips out the impact of store openings and closures – fell 6% in the 16 weeks to 16 November.

Sales are also down 7.1% at its Clinton branded stores, and 2.5% lower at the company’s Birthdays outlets.

The firm has opened 12 new stores since August, but closed 21. It now has 1,042 outlets across the UK, comprising 697 Clinton stores and 345 Birthdays shops.

Market trading in the City closed with the FTSE at 4153, 18.56 points down for the day.

US President elect Barack Obama has promised help is on the way for the country’s beleaguered economy ‘from day one’ he is in office. 

Wall Street responded to his remarks and the appointment of more economic advisors with approval. The DOW closed up 247 at 8726.

Meanwhile, car giants Ford, GM and Chrysler have been told to pull their act together and come back to Washington with a viable financial plan if they want $25 billion in state aid.

On the financial markets, the Pound closed at £1.53 against the US dollar and £1.88 against the Euro.


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Tips to beat the credit crunch – Part Two

October 21st, 2008 by admin | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Global Credit Crisis, Money Management, Saving

Learn to cook

Buying raw ingredients and preparing them yourself will substantially lower the cost of feeding a family. There are some terrific websites out there….my favourite one is www.allrecipes.com. It has millions of recipes for almost every dish under the sun. The best thing about it is that you can prepare your weekly food plan and it will auto generate your shopping list for you. All the recipes are graded by other users and you can keep all your favourite recipes in one place…and submit your own recipes for grading by other users.

Walk and cycle short journeys

Instead of driving to the shop, why not walk? Its great exercise gets you out into the fresh air and you’ll come back feeling invigorated and pretty good about having done it. If you live a little distance from the shops, buy a bike and give those quads and hamstrings a blast and get that heart rate up. Good for your body and your pocket.

Clear out your home of junk.

You would not believe what people will pay for at car boot sales and on eBay. Not only can you clear out all your CDs if you have an IPod, you can get rid of just about anything using these 2 markets. Use them…you might like them.

Buy as much as you can at car boot sales and on eBay

You will find unbeatable bargains from people who are clearing their houses out, just like you. Browse through eBay for any length of time and you will find some unbelievable deals.

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Liquidity, Central Banks and the fly trap

October 13th, 2008 by admin | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Global Credit Crisis

Who would be a central banker? Their choices today are awful. The problem facing the financial system come from one common place….credit and the excesses of easy credit with a corresponding decline in the punishment for getting it wrong. The problem stems from having too much money chasing too few assets. The result was that asset prices were bid up to ridiculous levels, investors were prepared to accept more and more risk to get returns and the system fed upon itself. All sorts of exotic sounding things sprang up…Derivatives, Credit default swaps, subprime junk…a literal explosion in the amount of liabilities out there…liabilities built on liabilities built on liabilities…all interconnected, held in increasingly complex webs built by PhD Mathematicians. It all looked great on paper.

The problem now is that those who took such huge risks are being bailed out with OUR money. They aren’t being allowed to fail. Sure, if they are allowed to fail, some jobs will be lost. Some millionaires will go bankrupt, some centuries old institutions that departed from sensible money and risk management, seduced by advanced mathematical models they didn’t understand that promised vast returns, will sadly disappear from our markets and life. It’s bad, but its not all that bad.

In saving these companies form their folly, the price we pay will be even greater. We will have to cover their losses. These losses can’t be recovered from taxation. That burden is already far too high. Instead, they will be covered through debasement of the currency. When we take away the cost of failure and reward excess risk taking with ordinary, hard working citizen’s savings, pensions and standard of living, I think it’s a price too high to pay. Let them fail.


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