Friday 22 March 2013

Beware fund platform exit charges

Competition between fund platforms continues to hot up, with some very good low cost deals available. But will you be penalised for moving away from a platform with uncompetitive charges?.

The good news is platforms must allow you to transfer your investments 'as is' (called 'in-specie' or 're-register') to another platform of your choice, provided the same funds are obviously available (more on that in a moment). The bad news that some charge an arm and a leg for doing so.


Ways to transfer


Let's start with the basics. There are two was to transfer your investments from one platform to another: either sell them, transfer cash then repurchase on the new platform, or transfer them across in-specie.


Sell & repurchase

While straightforward, you might incur dealing charges when selling and/or repurchasing the investments. Plus, your money could be out of the market for at least several days. Furthermore, if you realise gains outside of an ISA or pension they might be taxable.


When transferring an ISA or pension in this way make sure you let the new platform handle everything, otherwise you risk losing your ISA allowance or breaking pension rules.


In-specie

Even simpler still as your investments are moved across exactly as is. Since they're not sold there's no issue re: tax or being out of the market. However, the transfer can end up taking a few weeks and platforms usually charge a fee, per fund/share, if you want to move away from them.


Note: In-specie transfers are only possible when exactly the same fund version is available on the platform you're moving to. For example, if you hold Fund X 'A' units the 'A' units must be available on the new platform.


Exit charges


Two types of charge may apply. An account closure fee, which applies whichever of the two transfer methods you use, and a charge per fund/share for in-specie transfers. The charges for a range of popular platforms are listed below:













































































PlatformClose AccountTransfer In-Spicie (per fund/share)
DirectISASIPP
Alliance Trust SavingsNil£60£150£20
Barclays StockbrokersNil£60£90£30
BestinvestNil£60£150£25
Cavendish Online (FundsNetwork)NilNil£150Nil
Charles Stanley DirectNilNil£150£10
ClubfinanceNilNilN/A£10
Hargreaves LansdownNilNil£90£30
Interactive InvestorNilNil£360£15
rPlan (Cofunds)NilNilN/ANil
Share CentreNilNilNil£25
SippdealNilNil£90£20
TD Direct Investing£5£60£90£35
All charges include Vat at 20% were applicable

Are these fees a rip-off?


When you move away from a platform there is some admin work involved, so perhaps it's only fair they charge a nominal fee for the service. However, a quick look at the above table suggests some fees are far from nominal and perhaps more intended to discourage customers from leaving than cover costs.


For example, I've received emails from disgruntled Hargreaves Lansdown customers shocked at being charged hundreds of pounds to transfer their portfolios in-specie to cheaper competitors. The savings elsewhere were such that HL's charges were worth paying, but it's a bitter and arguably unfair pill to swallow. And TD Direct Investing is more expensive still.


In my view £10 per stock (i.e. fund or share) for in-specie transfers would be a fair price point. It should more or less cover admin costs and isn't too painful for investors. Although Cofunds and FundsNetwork (in this context rPlan and Cavendish Online) currently do it for free, suggesting that perhaps these charges should just be scrapped altogether, period.


A similar argument holds true for account closure fees. Interactive Investor easily scoops the wooden spoon here with a whopping £360 charge to close its SIPP.


Your views?


I'd be interested to hear your views or experience regarding these charges. Please share below.

Read this article at http://www.candidmoney.com/articles/268/beware-fund-platform-exit-charges

Wednesday 20 March 2013

Will paying son's university costs reduce future IHT bill?

Question
I am looking to reduce the IHT liability for my two children (both now over the age of 18) upon my death. My husband passed away a few years ago leaving a sizeable estate behind to me.

After our combined NRB, I anticipate a sizeable IHT liability remaining. I am looking at several ways of reducing the eventual IHT liability. But one area which I can find no information on and would appreciate your advice is as follows:

One of my sons is still in full time education. I note that HMRC allow me to provide maintenance for children over the age of 18 still in full time education - as I understand it, this falls outside of IHT and will not impact upon any other allowances.

Can I confirm the following:

What counts as maintenance?

I assume paying his university fees certainly counts, what about providing food and accommodation?

What limits are there on this and for how long?

For example, if I decide to buy him a flat to live in, will this qualify as maintenance - and what happens when he stops being a student?

Can I pay his rent to live in a flat?

Many thanks in advance for any advice you can provide on the matter!Answer
HMRC doesn't give a clear definition of maintenance, but in practice it means covering education costs and reasonable living expenses. So yes, university fees definitely count, as would rent and an allowance for food and general living costs.

You can make the maintenance payments for as long as your son is in full-time education and there's no explicit limit. But, as ever with HMRC, it boils down to what's considered reasonable (should they ever take a close look). For example, rent on typical student accommodation and a few hundred pounds a month to cover food, books, bills and other living expenses should be absolutely fine. But put him up in a penthouse apartment with a hefty expense account and HMRC may well object, deeming that some of the money should be treated as a gift (in which case you'd need to live for at least 7 years thereafter for it to fall outside of your estate).

Buying your son a flat wouldn't count as maintenance, assuming you are the owner it would remain in your estate. If you buy the flat for your son and he owns it then it would be treated as a gift, hence fall outside your estate after 7 years provided you're still alive. But you wouldn't be able to receive any benefit from the flat, for example living there in future without paying full market rent, otherwise HMRC would view it as a gift 'with reservation' and effectively void it.

If you pay rent and university fees it's best if you pay them directly. And for living costs perhaps pay a set amount each month into your son's bank account. Aside from keeping things simple, it also provides a good audit trail should HMRC ever want to take a closer look.

Another IHT allowance that might be relevant is gifts from normal expenditure immediately falling outside of your estate. This means regular gifts made out of your taxable income rather than capital. So, for example, if you have surplus pension/investment income you can afford to give away, this could be passed to your children without having to wait the usual 7 years for it to fall outside of your estate.

As I'm sure you're aware gifts totalling £3,000 a year fall outside your estate immediately, as do As many gifts of £250 per person you wish to make each tax year..

If you want to make large gifts and retain some control over when and how your children get access to the money or assets you can use trusts. But they make things more complex and don't get round the 7 year rule previously mentioned.

Best wishes and good luck with your planning.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/832/will-paying-sons-university-costs-reduce-future-iht-bill

Leaving Hargreaves Landown will slash costs - any catch?

Question
I have £500K in ISA and NonISA funds administered by Hargreaves Lansdown. It seems that the higher trail commission rebate at Cavendish is worth an extra £1600 pa.

This is a high price for the "benefit" of HL research, marketing and HL TV!

I will be transferring to Cavendish Online. Cavendish state they do not charge a platform fee or switching funds.
However I thought Cavendish used Funds Network which do seem to charge platform and switching fees. I'm left wondering whether I pay anything for these if I am with Cavendish?

I also want to know if Cavendish Online will pay trail rebate on my existing funds which I reregister to them as well as any new funds?
Answer
I agree, £1,600 is a high price for the HL 'benefits' you mention, so transferring may well be a prudent move.

However, you should be aware that Hargreaves Lansdown charges £30 (inc VAT) per fund or share if you want to move them 'as is' (technically called 'in-specie') to another platform - more than any other platform that I'm aware of. It's a bitter (and arguably unfair) pill to swallow, but nevertheless the potential savings elsewhere should still justify the transfer.

You can avoid this charge by selling your funds, transferring the money as cash and repurchasing funds on the new platform (for ISA investments make sure you complete a transfer form with the new platform and let them handle it, else you could lose your ISA benefits). However, this involves your money being out of the market for at least several days - from which you may profit or lose out due to market movements. And you could end up with a capital gains tax bill on the non ISA funds if sold at a profit.

Moving onto Cavendish Online, they use the Fidelity FundsNetwork platform and rebate all initial and trail commission, so a typical 1.5% annual fund charge will fall to about 1%.

FundsNetwork is paid a platform fee from the fund charge, probably about 0.25% of the 1% in the above example. And from this FundsNetwork pays Cavendish Online 0.05%, i.e. £50 a year per £100,000 invested.

So FundsNework and Cavendish Online are making money, but it's incorporated into the fund charge. There are currently no extra charges for switching funds or if you want to move to another platform in future, i.e. what you see is what you get. And yes, you can enjoy trail commission rebates on existing funds as well as new investments.

Given the size of your portfolio, you might also want to consider Alliance Trust Savings and Interactive Investor, who usually offer lower annual fund charges than Cavendish Online and charge a fixed annual platform fee rather than a percentage (more favourable for larger portfolios). Unlike Cavendish Online they charge dealing fees for funds, but they might still prove cheaper overall.

If you haven't already please do try out my www.comparefundplatforms.com website, it will give you a much clearer idea of how costs stack up for the more competitive platforms. Unfortunately Hargreaves Lansdown refuses to send me the necessary fund charge/rebate data, so it's not possible to include them. My guess is they don't want their customers finding out they're not as cheap as they like everyone to think.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/831/leaving-hargreaves-landown-will-slash-costs-any-catch

Tuesday 19 March 2013

Are fund prices affected by demand?

Question
I know that the price of shares increases and decreases according to the supply and demand so if more investors are buying a share the price increases. Is this the same for OEICs?

Or is the buying price dependent on the performance of the fund and not on whether more people are buying it or selling?

Thank you very much for assisting in this query.Answer
The simple answer is no, it isn't the same for Oeics, although demand could still potentially affect the price of units - I'll come onto this in a moment.

The reason share prices are so sensitive to investor demand is that companies have a fixed amount of shares in issue. So if you want to buy shares in company X you'll have to pay the price that someone else is willing to sell at. If there are more potential buyers than sellers this will likely push up price to the point sufficient shareholders are tempted to sell and meet buyer demand. And if more sellers, the price will likely fall until sufficient buyers are tempted to once again balance demand and supply.

Funds (including Oeics) are different because fund managers can simply create new units or cancel existing ones to satisfy investors wishing to buy or sell. So the price is set by the value of the underlying investments held in the fund - not the market for that fund.

However, there are still instances when very high demand for a fund or a lot of existing investors wishing to sell can affect price to an extent.

Let's suppose there are way more investors wishing to sell than buy units in Fund X. The fund manager will have no option but to cancel units and correspondingly sell underlying investments in the fund. If the manager must sell a significant quantity of shares this might reduce the price he/she can get for them on the stock market, in turn reducing the fund's price.

Furthermore, in the above example the fund will incur dealing charges when selling the underlying investments. In a unit trust the fund recoups these by reducing the sell price a little to reflect the cost (technically called widening the bid-offer spread), but as Oeics can only have a single buy/sell price the additional cost is recouped via a 'dilution levy' on those investors selling units. Note: the fund manager doesn't benefit from these manoeuvres, they're implemented to protect the remaining investors in the fund from losing out.

The above also applies when fund managers need to create a large number of new units to satisfy demand - i.e. the buying price will rise to reflect the cost of a dilution levy may be used for Oeics.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/830/are-fund-prices-affected-by-demand

How to invest my pension when approaching retirement?

Question
I have a pension plan made up of several funds, a mixture of equity and bonds. I am in my late 50s and prefer to remain cautious in case the stock market crashes.
If you wanted to de-risk your own pension plan, how would you do this in your pension portfolio? ( You cannot just take out the money as cash).

What type of funds would you personally switch to yourself in today's market if you wanted to de-risk?Answer
It largely depends on the extent you wish to de-risk.

The 'safest' option is to move fully into cash, but as you'll likely earn very little interest your pension pot would most probably shrink in real terms as it won't keep pace with inflation.

Fixed interest, i.e. gilts and corporate bonds, tend to be the next choice if you're comfortable with some risk, but less than investing in stock markets. Of course, there are no guarantees and you could still lose money, but worth considering provided you invest at the safer end of the market (i.e. bonds issued by robust governments and blue chip companies).

If you plan to buy an annuity then gilts can also make sense from the point of view that insurers use gilts to back their annuities. If you invest in gilts now and the price plummets over the next 5 years your pension fund will drop in value, but this may be offset (to some extent) by higher annuity rates because the gilts used to back your annuity have become cheaper to buy.

You might also consider protected pension funds offered by the likes of MetLife. I'm not a big fan as the cost of protection tends to be quite high, but they can suit individuals who want to retain stock market exposure while limiting their downside. For more info see my answer to this http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/427/metlife-guaranteed-products-any-good previous question.

If I were around 7 years away from retiring (wishful thinking!), concerned by markets and planning to buy an annuity at retirement I'd probably hold about a quarter of the fund in cash, half in gilts/high quality corporate bonds and the balance split between equity income funds that invest in well established cash rich companies and absolute return funds that I think might actually stand a chance of working. As retirement approaches I'd probably shift the balance more towards cash and gilts. Were the stock market outlook not so uncertain I'd probably start with less in cash and more in equity income and absolute return funds.

Another option might be for your keep your pension invested post retirement and draw an income instead of buying an annuity. In this case you can probably adopt a longer investment horizon which might leave you feeling more comfortable with a less cautious investment strategy.

Please bear in mind I can't provide advice to your specific situation, but hopefully the above general pointers will prove helpful.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/829/how-to-invest-my-pension-when-approaching-retirement

Am I FSA protected if my IFA moves to Ireland?

Question
I have had the same IFA, a one-man band, for the last 10 years who works via a larger IFA company for reasons of compliance, etc. Over the years I have been pleased with the advice given

As a consequence of RDR the owner of the large company has purchased a S Irish IFA Company which has a Dublin office as well as a local office here. My IFA tells me that the Central Bank of Ireland will now become their regulator with very much reduced bureaucracy compared to the FSA and there is not a need for IFA's to have a Level 4 qualification. The result being that fees have not increased since RDR.

Apparently several British IFA's are seeking regulation via the Central Bank of Ireland for the reasons given above.

The bottom line: where does this leave me if I need the services/advice from the regulator? Does the central Bank of Ireland have any 'clout' here or would they work in conjunction with the FSA in the event of problems?Answer
To answer your question, in the event of any problems your dealings would be with the Irish regulator, not the FSA. This also means you won't benefit from the protection potentially afforded by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) and Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) in respect to the advice given, although the Irish regulator might have equivalents (it's not something I've looked into).

In my opinion there's significantly more potential downside than upside to using an IFA operating in this way.

What your IFA appears to be doing is using the EU 'passporting' system to provide financial services from one EU state into another. While this can be a very sound system in the right context - for example it means a UK adviser could give Spanish expats FSA authorised advice with the protection that brings - your IFA is using it more as a loophole to try and make their lives easier by avoiding FSA regulation.

One fundamental issue is whether your IFA continues to have a UK office or advisers permanently based in the UK. If they do then my understanding is that they must adhere to the FSA's (Conduct of Business) rules in any case, so I can't see what benefit they'd get out of passporting in from Ireland.

Another is what services they gain authorisation to passport. In general they can apply under MiFID (Markets in Financial Instruments Directive) which broadly covers investments and/or IMD (Insurance Mediation Directive) which broadly covers insurance based products. If the IFA doesn't have both they'd arguably be restricted as to what they could advise on hence less than independent.

Personally I wouldn't deal with a financial adviser trying to use this loophole. Aside from the potential complications mentioned above, if they had any integrity they simply wouldn't bother doing this. Attaining Level 4 qualifications (at worst a mix of multiple choice and short written tests) is not exactly difficult for a competent adviser, so I'm very wary of any advisers looking to duck this rule.

And while it's true the FSA seems to have little grasp on cost and is hardly a pleasure to deal with, it's still possible to run a profitable IFA charging fair fees under the new FSA regime. Advisers just need to work smartly, efficiently and avoid being greedy.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/828/am-i-fsa-protected-if-my-ifa-moves-to-ireland

Best platform for funds and shares?

Question
Which platforms are suitable and least costly to use when opening an ISA which would include a mix of unit trusts/OEICs, investment trusts and ETF/ETCs?Answer
The answer really depends on the funds selected, amounts involved and how frequently you'll trade - hence I built the www.comparefundplatforms.com website to make meaningful comparison nice and straightforward. Please do give it a try.

But in very general terms Alliance Trust Savings and Interactive Investor tend to come out cheapest in your scenario for portfolios of around £40,000+. Charles Stanley Direct may well cost less on smaller amounts and possibly on larger amounts too, depending on how often you'll switch funds - unlike the other two Charles Stanley Direct doesn't charge for fund switches.

If you plan to trade very frequently, for example 40+ times a year then Clubfinance might prove competitive - their platform fee is quite high but dealing is only 50p per trade.

Bestinvest can also be competitive in some scenarios and has decent tools and research. And Sippdeal can prove cost effective provided you use the institutional versions of funds on their platform.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/827/best-platform-for-funds-and-shares

Should I swap shares for a fund?

Question
I have a number of shares in a trading account which is being transferred into interactiive Investor platform. Most of the shares are in Blue chip dividend paying companies eg Vodafone, Astra, Centrica, Tesco, I was looking at UK equity funds and noticed that a number of them have more or less the same shareholdings as I have in the trading account.

I wonder if you could give me pros and cons of having individual shares or sell them and buy a good UK equity fund?Answer
Of course. The main advantages of using funds are convenience, diversification and fund manager expertise.

It's convenient as you don't have to bother monitoring your shares and decide when and what to buy and sell. A fund manager does this for you and if they're good they might make you more money overall versus doing it yourself. Funds also typically hold around 50 or more shares, reducing the impact of any one company, and provide easy access to overseas markets which can be tricky to trade yourself.

A less obvious potential benefit is tax efficiency, provided the shares are held outside of an ISA and the sums are large. Every you time you sell shares and make a profit it's subject to capital gains tax (if total net gains over the tax year exceed your annual allowance, £10,600 for 2012/13). Share trades within a fund don't suffer this tax, it instead applies when you sell the fund itself at a profit. Obviously, this is less relevant if you seldom trade.

On the downside, you'll have to pay the fund manager, which could cost around 0.75% or more a year, and they might turn out to be not very good (many aren't) - making you less money than had you just carried on holding your shares. Plus it's rare for a fund manager to disclose all their investments, you'll usually just be shown the largest 10 holdings (updated monthly), so a fair amount of trust in their approach and abilities is required.

You could consider a lower cost tracker fund (costing around 0.3% a year) which simply tries to mirror a stock market index such as the FTSE 100. This will contain the blue chip shares you mention and avoids the risk of a fund manager's 'expertise' actually destroying value. The main thing to bear in mind is that most indices (including the FTSE) are weighted, that means the larger companies and sectors dominate the index hence your investment too - the 10 largest FTSE 100 companies usually account for around half the Index.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/826/should-i-swap-shares-for-a-fund

Was I mis-sold mortgage protection insurance?

Question
I had an endowment mortgage with Nationwide Building Society and the Mortgage Protection Insurance was with Standard Life.

I decided to change to the HSBC still using the same Mortgage Protection policy with Standard Life. Whilst I was with the financial adviser sorting out paperwork he advised me that I needed to take out a Mortgage Protection Policy with them and I am now wondering why I needed to have two Mortgage Protection Policies.

The house is now paid for but I am still wondering 'Why I needed to pay twice'?Answer

You have almost undoubtedly been mis-sold mortgage payment protection insurance (MPPI) by HSBC, if not by whoever sold you the Standard Life policy too.

MPPI is not compulsory, so the HSBC adviser who said you need to take out MPPI with them to get the mortgage was not telling the truth. This in itself counts as mis-selling, not to mention the fact you already had a policy and he/she made no effort to ascertain whether you actually needed or wanted such cover in the first place.

You should definitely complain as based on the information you've provided it seems likely HSBC should be liable to refund all the MPPI premiums you've paid them.

Whether or not the Standard Life policy was mis-sold to you depends on a number of factors - primarily whether you were made aware the policy was optional and whether it was suitable for your needs. If you were made aware it's optional and wanted to protect your mortgage payments against you suffering from accident, sickness or unemployment then chances are you probably don't have a claim - although even then if you were self-employed, unemployed or retired at the time the policy might have been unsuitable hence mis-sold.

To make your complaint and compensation claim you should first contact the company that sold you the policy. If they don't provide a satisfactory response and/or compensation you can refer your complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS). However, rather than detail the process in full here I'd suggest taking a look at the moneysavingexpert website's thorough guide here - which includes template letters.

Good luck getting justice.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/825/was-i-mis-sold-mortgage-protection-insurance

Monday 18 March 2013

Is the married couple's pension fair?

Question
I was entitled and received a pension in my own right of approx £30 pw. On my husband's retirement my pension was just made up to a married woman's pension. Is it right that someone who has paid in for a number of years ends up with exactly the same as someone who has not paid in at all?Answer
I suppose the answer depends on how sympathetic you are to women (or men) taking time out from work to raise their family and/or do things other than work.

At present a women who hasn't built up a sufficient National Insurance (NI) contribution record to receive a full basic state pension at retirement can instead opt to claim on their husband's (or ex husband's) NI contribution record. However, they can only do when their husband reaches state pension age and their pension will be limited to 60% of their husband's basic state pension. Based on the 2012/134 basic state pension of £107.45 per week this means a pension of £64.40 - which is why the married couple's state pension is £171.85 (these two numbers added together).

Women who reached their state pension age before 6 April 2010 will automatically have received Home Responsibilities Protection for each complete tax year since 1978 they had been receiving Child Benefit for a child under 16 (basically to compensate for staying at home to raise their family). This was changed from 6 April 2010 to credit for each year they received Child Benefit for a child under 12 years of age.

I fully support credits when raising a family instead of working (in my limited experience it's far harder than work!). The 60% entitlement is arguably a bit outdated in this day and age, but then as more women work and build full qualifying Ni records it's less relevant in any case.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/823/is-the-married-couples-pension-fair

Good cash rates for expat?

Question
I am an expat but have been gifted some money and as a NON-Resident and NON-UK taxpayers, wonder where I could invest in pounds in the UK, probably in fixed interest for the next 3 years?
Thank you for your wonderful serviceAnswer
Banks and building societies have really tightened their belts in recent years to the point I don't know of any that allow non UK residents to open accounts, aside from a handful of 'international' accounts that pay little or no interest.

However, there are offshore savings accounts (that accept Sterling despoits) offering reasonable fixed rates - Moneyfacts has a list here.

For example, at the time of writing Permanent Bank International (Isle of Man) is paying 2.15% fixed for 3 years and Nationwide International (Isle of Man) 1.8% over the same period. Both are covered by the Isle of Man Depositor's Protection Scheme (up to £50,000 per person per institution).

By comparison, 'best buy' 3 year fixed rates in UK accounts are currently around 2.5% - so the offshore accounts are not as competitive. Nevertheless it might still be a worthwhile option in your position.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/822/good-cash-rates-for-expat

Eligible for working tax credit?

Question
My daughter is a director of a limited company trading as a small coffee shop, not making a profit. She has been drawing a salary of £500 per month. An article in Sunday Telegraph indicates she may be eligible for some sort of working tax credits. Is this correct in these circumstances please?Answer
I'm afraid I'm no expert on the tax credit system - it's fiendishly complex. However, looking at the rules your daughter may well be eligible for the Working Tax Credit, potentially worth up to £1,920 a year.

Eligibility depends on the number of hours of paid work per week and amount earned, with the limits for both dependent on whether or not your daughter is single and whether she has children. And, if she has children, the minimum income level can also depend on whether your daughter is paying for approved childcare.

Rather than run through the various criteria in full here, it'd be simpler for your daughter to use the HMRC .tool here to find out which tax credits she's entitled to and, if so, how much.

Hopefully she'll be eligible for some help while she builds her bueinsess.

Read this Q and A at http://www.candidmoney.com/askjustin/820/eligible-for-working-tax-credit