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My options at retirement

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Cornwall-based Worldwide Financial Planning continues his discussion on retirement

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning(Image: © Richard Trainor)

I’ve covered the key psychological plans for retirement and what income you may need in retirement, so here, in my third column covering retirement, I’ll look at some of the options available to those with a personal pension.

In years gone by, as you neared retirement you had only one option which was to prepare yourself to buy an annuity - as much flexibility as uncooked spaghetti. You had built up a fund, and, at retirement age, you were at the mercy of the financial markets moving your fund’s value around, because you then had to buy an income with that amount of money. A fall in the last two years before retirement of, say, 20% meant you would then buy an income of 20% less for the rest of your retirement days. Spaghetti.

Further still, if annuity rates fell during those two years, you could be hit with a double whammy of a lower fund and a lower rate. Say rates had dropped by 10%, your retirement income would then sit at 30% less. Of course, the reverse is also true, but gambling at retirement age isn’t normally most people’s bag of crisps.

So we might move our funds out of the market over the last five years and into more protected funds (cash and bonds for example) so we could lock in values. For some, that meant missing out on stock market gains.

And so, the government created flexibilities.

Today, a retiree can:

  • Leave their whole fund invested until a later date
  • Buy an annuity
  • Take lump sums
  • Put their money into drawdown

Because of these options, it isn’t therefore so urgent to start moving your funds into safe or protected funds, as there are options other than – ‘you have to buy an annuity’ .

Indeed, if you were doing anything other than an annuity, the capital will remain invested, potentially benefitting from any upward growth in the markets.