Originally posted by ASB
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Having looked around the web for info. on self-directed annuities, I am unable to locate the information for any products, not even the two I found there a year or two ago when I last looked. Merchant Investors, for example, now publish bugger-all information online, you now have to go to through an IFA just to find out what products they offer. So in practise, for someone whose objection to an annuity is not being able to control their investments after the annuity stage is entered, I can't prove my case at the moment.
I seem to recall that the Prudential product (which allowed investment in funds but not individual shares) had a product charge of something like 0.75% a year, in addition to any fund management charges, so we could use that as a basis for discussion. For someone who is a basic-rate payer when contributing, this extra charge in the annuity stage might be enough to more than offset the bigger tax benefits available from a pension compared to an ISA.In fact, doing a crude calculation, I think it does. The extra tax-relief on a pension that comes from the 25% lump sum is worth 5% of the final capital (25% of 20% basic rate tax.) For the Prudential product, assuming an annuity bought at 75, 15 year life expectancy, 75% of capital invested, the extra charges total 15*0.75%*75%=8.4%. So for a basic-rate contributor who wants to self-invest after age 75, I'll concede for the time being that the ISA route is better. This is only true based on currently available products and their associated charges though. I would hope by 30 years time when it will matter to me, that more competitive self-invested annuity products will be available.
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