How can the average pension pot only be worth £35K?
I'm early forties and already have about 150K with at least 25 years still to work and contribute.
Are they not including final salary pensions in that figure or is it case of not using mean but mode or median average?
How can the average pension pot only be worth £35K?
I'm early forties and already have about 150K with at least 25 years still to work and contribute.
Are they not including final salary pensions in that figure or is it case of not using mean but mode or median average?
How can the average pension pot only be worth £35K?
I'm early forties and already have about 150K with at least 25 years still to work and contribute.
Are they not including final salary pensions in that figure or is it case of not using mean but mode or median average?
Most people have several pots from differing employments during their work lifetime
There are numerous unit trusts that consistently return 10%+ per annum over 5, 10 and more years. With a decent sized pension pot you can draw an income equivalent to that which you'd get from an annuity without eating into the starting capital..
Yes it all sounds so easy.
There are numerous unit trusts that consistently return 10%+ per annum over 5, 10 and more years. With a decent sized pension pot you can draw an income equivalent to that which you'd get from an annuity without eating into the starting capital.
Good to see a government giving people the option to spend / invest their money as they choose fit. Will live in a nanny state in too many ways and whole industries have been built around it to suck their slice off.
Perhaps with the provisio that you don't put all your eggs in the same basket and phase your money into the market ...its looking a bit toppy at the mo ..but cash is earning zilch...but always seek professional advice not from amateurs like me.
Depends where you're looking. P/E ratios in the US are at a historically high level but the US continues to churn out great employment and earnings data. The UK P/E ratios are pretty much at historical averages.
True,,,but then there are political uncertainties coming up in UK...although I guess it depends what part of the UK market up look at ...100 is made up of multinationals....I still stick to my point about diversification and phasing in so that you do your best to avoid a 'top'