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Cavendish Online for Pensions?

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    #21
    Originally posted by Colourful Contractor View Post
    Does an average 1.25% AMC through HL seem like good value on a SIPP?

    As others have pointed out, the charges can really eat into the investment over time.
    What charges?

    From the page below-

    HL Charges page.

    Annual charge-
    0% on cash and over 2,000 funds.
    Admittedly, there are the annual fund charges underlying this, but you pay those whatever way you hold the unit trusts. HL make no additional charges.
    Public Service Posting by the BBC - Bloggs Bulls**t Corp.
    Officially CUK certified - Thick as f**k.

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      #22
      Originally posted by Fred Bloggs View Post
      Admittedly, there are the annual fund charges underlying this, but you pay those whatever way you hold the unit trusts. HL make no additional charges.
      No, the phrase I've highlighed in the quote is wrong, that was the exact point of my earlier post comparing charges. Hold exactly the same fund with different people and the annual management charge can be different. In the case of my example, on a £100,000 investment held for 30 years you pay £69,000 more with Hargreaves than you do with Alliance. That £69,000 saving is the cumulative advantage of paying 0.5% less in annual charges.

      Fund managers pay kickbacks (initial commission and trail commission) out of their charges to companies like Hargreaves, Sippdeal, etc. who put business their way. Some providers (such as Hargreaves) pay some of this back to the customer by reducing the initial and/or annual charges. Alliance (I think) promise to not to keep any annual commission for themselves. (It's far more important to reduce annual than initial costs, since in the long term annual charges compound, but Hargreaves mainly reduces initial, I think.)

      Note that the use of the term "kickbacks" by me is deliberately non-standard and perjorative: the industry term is "commission."

      The point of using Cavendish online for certain one-off purchases (such as opening a pension account with an insurer) is to get these kickbacks eliminated, since Cavendish promise to take nothing except their fixed administrative fee. They will either get you lower charges or pay you the cash they receive.

      The "kickbacks" system is why Sippdeal and Hargreaves can claim to charge no fee for running Sipps. They make their money from the fund managers when people invest in funds. I get a free ride with Sippdeal, because I take advantage of their free account but then invest in things that don't pay kickbacks. Hargreaves discourages people like me by charging an annual fee to people who don't invest in funds that pay kickbacks. If you look at Hargreaves charging structure, you easily deduce their annual fee is in fact £200 plus VAT, and you pay it even if it doesn't explicitly appear on your statement, in the form of the higher management charges out of which kickbacks are paid. Unfortunately the extent of the damage is not limited to that, as my example showed, the higher charges to the managers will ultimately cost you tens of thousands and conceivably more than a 100,000 pounds in completely unnecessary extra charges in the long term.
      Last edited by IR35 Avoider; 4 August 2009, 14:53.

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by pmeswani View Post
        I stand corrected. It's in a PDF document. However, I prefer H&L's way of showing information about Funds. At least I can view the history of a fund's performance before I invest in it.
        Ignoring for the moment that performance history is completely irrelevant, since that's a separate argument, what information does Hargreaves provide that isn't on free sites like www.trustnet.com?

        Is that information worth paying hundreds or thousands of pounds a year in extra charges for?

        If Hargreaves does provide unique information, (though I doubt it,) why not open a Hargreaves account with next nothing in it, get the information for free, and actually hold your investments elsewhere?

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by Colourful Contractor View Post
          Does an average 1.25% AMC through HL seem like good value on a SIPP?

          As others have pointed out, the charges can really eat into the investment over time.
          Once you've decided what funds to invest in, you can easily look up on Hargreaves or Alliance or Sippdeal site to see who is generally cheapest. (It's possible that one might be cheap for some funds and not others, but I doubt it. I suspect Alliance will always come out cheapest, if you calculate the actual cost over a number of years.)

          A more fundamental question you need to ask is how much you should be willing to pay fund managers. My answer to this question makes me automatically rule out nearly everyone on the lists published by Hargreaves, Sippdeal or Alliance. I suggest you read a good investment book like "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" or "The Four Pillars of Investing." to get some basic grounding in the issues.

          There is no alternative to acquiring your own undestanding of investing, since the interests of the "experts" (fund managers or advisors) you might think you can pay to make decisions for you are not only not aligned with doing what's best for you, sometimes they're in direct opposition.

          Investing is an interesting but very perverse field of knowledge: it's the only one where paying experts to help you is almost certain to make you worse off than if you hadn't.

          Essentially, in investing, you "get what you don't pay for." In other words, the only effect of paying for someone to stand between you and the underlying assets and take a fee, is for your returns to decrease by the amount of their fee. I don't have the energy to argue this in full in this forum, though in almost any investing forum nearly everyone will mostly agree with this, and nearly every major investing book will tell you the same thing. ("A Random Walk" was first published in 1973, and is in something like its nineth edition now.)

          Comment


            #25
            Thanks IR35 Avoider, that clarifies what you're saying. I agree with you that a firm who rebates ALL annual fees ongoing will be cheaper overall. As you say, HL rebates everything from the upfront charges. I wouldn't buy unit trusts if I had to pay the 5 to 6% upfront fees. I also agree that there is nothing unique on HL's website except for their own in house views which, IMO, are influenced very much by who is paying them to say things. That bit of HL is very far from transparent actually.
            Public Service Posting by the BBC - Bloggs Bulls**t Corp.
            Officially CUK certified - Thick as f**k.

            Comment


              #26
              Thanks for everyone's views, they have given me a good basis for enquiring into different options.

              I have decided to go with a HL SIPP, very different from my initial choice of Aviva stakeholder through a discounter.

              I like the flexibility and breadth of funds this offers, whilst being able to easily monitor performance. This is important to me and i have realised that it doesn't have to be as daunting as I first imagined. I am going to make initial ltd co payments asap (need to get in before year end) and hold in cash till I work out where I want to invest.

              Certainly I would not use an IFA, the advice offered by the two I have spoken to has been dire and largely based around their returns as far as I can tell.

              Comment


                #27
                Hmmm, I've been looking at the Cavendish unit trust SIPP offering, they use the "Fidelity funds supermarket" to manage the funds purchased within the SIPP. Given that there are three folks wanting their ongoing cut out of your SIPP cake (Cavendish, Fidelity and the unit trust managers you choose (Neptune, Invesco Perpetual, Rathbones, Artemis etc...)) I cannot see how the Cavendish SIPP can compete on costs with HL. For lowest ongoing costs I suspect Alliance are the cheapest SIPP. But I find HL suits me just fine right now and I think that the OP will do just fine at HL.
                Public Service Posting by the BBC - Bloggs Bulls**t Corp.
                Officially CUK certified - Thick as f**k.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by IR35 Avoider View Post
                  No, the phrase I've highlighed in the quote is wrong, that was the exact point of my earlier post comparing charges. Hold exactly the same fund with different people and the annual management charge can be different. In the case of my example, on a £100,000 investment held for 30 years you pay £69,000 more with Hargreaves than you do with Alliance. That £69,000 saving is the cumulative advantage of paying 0.5% less in annual charges.

                  Fund managers pay kickbacks (initial commission and trail commission) out of their charges to companies like Hargreaves, Sippdeal, etc. who put business their way. Some providers (such as Hargreaves) pay some of this back to the customer by reducing the initial and/or annual charges. Alliance (I think) promise to not to keep any annual commission for themselves. (It's far more important to reduce annual than initial costs, since in the long term annual charges compound, but Hargreaves mainly reduces initial, I think.)

                  Note that the use of the term "kickbacks" by me is deliberately non-standard and perjorative: the industry term is "commission."

                  The point of using Cavendish online for certain one-off purchases (such as opening a pension account with an insurer) is to get these kickbacks eliminated, since Cavendish promise to take nothing except their fixed administrative fee. They will either get you lower charges or pay you the cash they receive.

                  The "kickbacks" system is why Sippdeal and Hargreaves can claim to charge no fee for running Sipps. They make their money from the fund managers when people invest in funds. I get a free ride with Sippdeal, because I take advantage of their free account but then invest in things that don't pay kickbacks. Hargreaves discourages people like me by charging an annual fee to people who don't invest in funds that pay kickbacks. If you look at Hargreaves charging structure, you easily deduce their annual fee is in fact £200 plus VAT, and you pay it even if it doesn't explicitly appear on your statement, in the form of the higher management charges out of which kickbacks are paid. Unfortunately the extent of the damage is not limited to that, as my example showed, the higher charges to the managers will ultimately cost you tens of thousands and conceivably more than a 100,000 pounds in completely unnecessary extra charges in the long term.
                  If memory serves me correctly... doesn't BOS have a hand in sippdeal?
                  If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by IR35 Avoider View Post
                    Ignoring for the moment that performance history is completely irrelevant, since that's a separate argument, what information does Hargreaves provide that isn't on free sites like www.trustnet.com?

                    Is that information worth paying hundreds or thousands of pounds a year in extra charges for?

                    If Hargreaves does provide unique information, (though I doubt it,) why not open a Hargreaves account with next nothing in it, get the information for free, and actually hold your investments elsewhere?
                    Take it easy IR35 Avoider. No need to get wound up. Some people prefer Hargreaves than other providers. Just because they cost a bit more, it doesn't mean they are as bad as you are making out. Also, one does not need to register with Hargreaves to get the same level of information that provided by trustnet. As I said... take it easy.
                    If your company is the best place to work in, for a mere £500 p/d, you can advertise here.

                    Comment

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