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What is a
Portable
Savings
Plan?
Portable
Savings
plans are a
means for
people
working
abroad to
build up a
lump sum for
their
retirement
when their
employment
circumstances
will not
automatically
provide them
with a
pension.
This article
looks at who
such plans
are suitable
for and how
they work.
We will look
at the issue
of rogue
advisers and
the
questions
you should
ask when
considering
taking out a
portable
pension
plan.
Portable
Savings
plans are
pension
plans for
expatriates,
i.e. people
working
abroad. They
are suitable
for:
·
people whose
jobs do not
offer a
pension
·
people whose
jobs do
offer a
pension but
which will
be
inadequate
·
people who
will change
employer
and/or
country of
employment
from time to
time.
They may not
be suitable
for:
·
people who
are about to
become
resident
again in the
country of
their own
nationality
(‘about to’
meaning
within the
next year or
so)
·
people
approaching
retirement
(‘approaching’
meaning
within the
next three
to five
years).
They are
particular
suitable for
people in
their late
twenties and
early/mid
thirties who
have a
career path
in front of
them but
have not yet
made any
significant
investments
and do not
want to
spend much
time on
looking
after and
managing
their
investments.
They work
like this:
In signing
up for a
portable
savings plan
you agree to
a contract.
This will be
a minimum of
five years
but is best
aimed at
your
earliest
foreseeable
retirement
age. This
will
normally be
between 55
and 60. You
also agree a
monthly
amount to
put away.
The more you
put into the
plan, the
more there
will be for
your
retirement.
However, you
should not
take on an
obligation
you cannot
fulfill. All
plans have a
minimum
contribution
period,
ranging from
five to
thirty-six
months, in
which you
must make
the
contributions.
Beyond that
you are free
to
discontinue,
but
discontinuation
makes the
plan less
efficient
financially.
The
flexibility
to miss a
few
payments, if
you lose
your job or
decide to go
round the
world, is
there, but
in taking
out the plan
you should
not set the
contribution
level
unrealistically
high - your
income might
increase,
but then so
might your
responsibilities.
You should
choose a
level you
are
completely
comfortable
with. A
simple
method for
doing this
is to take
your annual
disposable
income (how
much you
have left
over after
you
accommodation
and living
expenses are
paid for,
including an
annual
holiday/trip
home) and
divide this
by two.
Allocate the
annual
amount into
twelve
monthly
portions:
you should
be
comfortable
with that
(and the
minimum is
US$150
monthly).
This sum is
best paid
off using a
credit card
- this is
convenient,
is cheaper
than using a
bank to make
transfers,
and after a
few months
you don’t
really
notice the
money going
out. Your
monthly
contribution
is then
invested
into a
series of
mutual
funds. Doing
things this
way gives
you four
advantages:
·
Access to
diversified
range of
funds. The
days of
opaque
mystery
funds and
lack of
choice are
long gone.
You can be
in range of
funds which
will sustain
overall
performance
and cushion
you from the
gyrations of
the markets.
Yes, you can
be in a wide
variety of
stock funds;
you can also
be in
high-grade
or
high-yield
bond funds,
in gold
stocks, in
resource
stocks, or
in property
income
funds.
Diversified
portfolios
do better in
the long
run.
·
Free
switching.
You can
change your
funds at any
time,
switching at
zero cost.
Diversification
matters, but
your
portfolio
can be
re-balanced
at any time.
·
Averaging.
Investing
monthly
gives a huge
advantage
over
lump-sum
investment.
If the price
of a fund
falls, you
buy more
units the
next month,
and so on,
until the
unit price
turns
around. As
you have a
large number
of units,
your gains
will be much
greater than
with a
simple
lump-sum
investment.
·
Compounding.
These plans
are
long-term,
part of the
financial
structuring
of your
life.
Anything
over ten
years
affords you
the power of
compound
interest
(dubbed by
Einstein
‘the eighth
wonder of
the world’).
A return of
9% doubles
your money
in eight
years and
quadruples
it in
sixteen.
Your money
makes money
and the
profits make
money too.
(This is why
these plans
are
particularly
suitable for
people in
their
twenties and
early
thirties.)
As
mentioned,
these plans
are
portable.
You can take
them to
where you
live next,
even if that
is the
country of
your own
nationality
(there will
be some
restrictions
for
residence in
the USA). As
they are
written
technically
as life
insurance
contracts
the
investments
are held by
an insurance
company with
whom you
have a
contract for
the value of
those
investments.
There are no
dividends or
distributions.
The whole
value sits
in your
plan. There
are no taxes
to diminish
the power of
compounding
and
therefore
the full
value of the
plan until
you take the
benefits at
the end of
the plan.
And don’t
forget - all
the money
you put in
is your
money.
Portable
savings
plans - a
means for
people
working
abroad to
build up a
lump sum for
their
retirement
when their
employment
circumstances
will not
automatically
provide them
with a
pension.
Such plans
may form the
backbone of
an
individual’s
forward
planning, as
they confer
a number of
benefits:
·
access to a
diversified
fund range
·
free
switching
between
funds
·
the ability
to average a
fund (so
that a
market fall
can be
profitable)
·
the power of
compounding
·
tax
sheltering
·
international
portability.
However at
the same
time some
members of
the
expatriate
community
have
suffered
problems
with such
plans. This
article
looks at two
clumps of
typical
reasons for
these
problems.
Firstly, a
pension plan
is a
contract. If
you take one
out you
should
expect to
fulfill its
terms, which
involve
putting in a
pre-agreed
amount of
money away
on a regular
basis for a
pre-agreed
number of
years.
(Remember,
by the way,
that this is
still your
money!)
Such plans
have
flexibility,
as they are
designed for
normal
working
people, who
may from
time to time
lose their
jobs, or
decide on a
change of
career, or
take further
educational
courses
full-time –
the plans
can cope
with
periodic
interruptions.
But the more
contributions
that are
missed, the
less
efficient a
plan will
be. It is
highly
inefficient
and
therefore
inadvisable
to take out
a long-term
plan and
contribute
only for the
minimum
period. You
should be
making as
many
contributions
as you can,
but should
not be
worried if
life
circumstances
require you
to cease
contributions
temporarily.
You should
also make
sure that
you set the
amount you
contribute
at a level
you can
easily
afford –
allowing for
realistic
increases in
your
economic
responsibilities
or
relocation
to a
lower-paying
environment.
Addressing
your plan in
this way
will save
you from
over-extending
yourself and
allow you to
reap its
benefits.
Therefore it
is a good
idea to
beware
high-pressure
sales people
who will
assure you
that the
more you put
into the
plan the
better, and
that you
should go
for maximum
plan length
(irrespective
of your
circumstances)
as ‘all you
have to pay
in is the
first twelve
or eighteen
months’.
Typically
these people
come from
companies
that have
not been in
town all
that long,
or have
changed
their name
in the not
too recent
past. And
they
assuredly do
not have
your best
interests in
mind.
Whereas your
planning
should be
based on a
thorough
discussion
of your
circumstances,
goals and
responsibilities,
not on the
dictates of
the
salesperson.
The second
set of
reasons why
people get
into trouble
with these
plans is
unrealistic
expectations
about
returns in
the short
term and the
inability to
cope with
bad markets.
In the life
of a typical
pension plan
– say, 20 or
25 years –
there will
be a wide
range of
market
conditions,
unforeseeable
except in
their
variability.
Some of
these years
will be poor
for a range
of asset
classes, and
the value of
a plan can
fall in such
years,
especially
if heavily
exposed to
the stock
markets
(where in
general the
greatest
gains in
value are to
be had). A
plan largely
invested in
stocks
during the
period
2000-2002
will have
done very
poorly. It
would have
rebounded
steeply
2003-2004.
However,
inexperienced
investors at
the end of
2002 may
have decided
they were
throwing
good money
after bad
and ceased
contributions
for that
reason (a
mistake, as
they were
cutting
themselves
out of the
averaging
effect), or
even decided
to encash
the plan.
These plans
have high
penalties
for early
encashment,
especially
towards the
beginning of
the plan.
There is
nothing
untoward
about this
as a pension
plan should
be there for
your
retirement;
it is not a
short-term
savings
vehicle and
should not
be seen as
your source
of instant
cash. If you
had a
corporate
pension in
the country
of your own
nationality
you would
not in most
cases be
able to
touch the
money in it
until you
retired.
Portable
plans are
more
flexible,
but the
early
encashment
penalty is
an advisable
deterrent.
Over time
they make
money, but
they need
time to make
that money.
The
knee-jerk
reaction of
encashment
because of
(temporarily)
poor
performance
is how
people lose
money
big-time in
these plans.
Given these
negatives,
is it
sensible to
take out
such a plan?
The answer
is
overwhelmingly
‘Yes’, but
keep in mind
these
dangers:
that you may
take on a
plan that is
longer than
you expected
or need and
into which
you are
contributing
too much;
and that
short-term
poor
performance
may scare
you into the
penalties of
early
encashment.
The morals
here are
caution,
patience,
and a
modicum of
education.
These plans
are very
much worth
having,
provided you
know what to
expect, and
the plan
fits your
life
situation.
Suggestions
before
starting
such a plan:
·
review your
circumstances
and think
forward as
much as you
can
·
read the
policy
documentation,
especially
the plan
rules, and
make sure
you have
discussed
them with
your adviser
and
understand
them
·
do not make
a decision
as a result
of
high-pressure
sales
·
investigate
the company
you are
taking the
plan out
through
·
realize that
markets do
not deliver
investment
nirvana
instantly,
and that a
diversified
portfolio
will see you
better in
the long run
than a
portfolio
chasing
quick gains
In addition,
shop around
for the
special
offer that
sometimes
come with
these plans
for limited
periods –
with one
currently
available
offer you
can get as
much as 7%
added to all
the money
you put into
your plan. |