February 2022

US. Retirement savings hit record rates despite great resignation

Despite the ups and downs of the labor market, one thing has held steady: employees’ commitment to funding their retirement accounts. Fidelity revealed record rates of retirement savings during 2021 in their latest trend report. Their data showed that the average 401(k) account balance was a record high of $130,700, and 40% of savers actually increased their account contributions last year. Read also United States: Shareholder Activism Or Divestment? The Massachusetts Pension Fund Chooses Activism “Investors continued to stay focused on the...

Nigeria: LASG Pays Over N1 Billion to 222 Retirees’ RSA, Promises to Clear Backlog of Pensions

The Director-General of Lagos State Pension Commission (LASPEC), Mr. Babalola Obilana has said that the Lagos State Government has paid the sum of N1.04 billion to its retired workers. Obinala, who disclosed this at the 91st Batch Retirement Bond Certificate presentation Ceremony held in Lagos revealed that the state has cleared its pension contributions of 2018 - 2020 retirees under the contributory pension scheme. He assured the retirees that their contributions have been paid into their RSA. According to him, "despite the...

January 2022

UK. MPs criticise ‘shameful’ underpaying of state pensions

The long-term underpayment of thousands of state pensioners, mainly widows, divorcees and women who rely on their husband’s pension contributions for some of their pension, is a “shameful shambles”, according to the public spending watchdog. About 134,000 people have had their state pension underpaid to the tune of £1bn, according to a Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) estimate. The vast majority of those affected are women who should have had their pension topped up when their husband retired even if...

November 2021

US. IRI Expert Weighs in On Morningstar Update to 4% Rule

A recent paper from Morningstar Research that questions the decades-old “4% rule” for safely withdrawing funds from retirement accounts—and says 3.3% is the new 4%—has raised plenty of eyebrows in the retirement planning community. One of the latest to comment about it is Frank O’Connor, Vice President, Research and Outreach for the Insured Retirement Institute (IRI), who notes the research also found that including protected income via annuities can help retirees meet their income needs. “Outliving retirement savings is a major...

Australia. Global Managers Circle as Retiring Boomers Cash In Billions

Almost two million Australians will soon start drawing down A$300 billion ($218 billion) in savings as they leave the workforce, and that’s providing opportunities for domestic, and increasingly overseas, asset managers as retirement costs soar at the quickest pace in seven years. Read also UK. How will the new pension transfer restrictions work? “The decumulation problem is the trickiest problem in finance to solve because everyone’s going to have a different set of needs and requirements and aspirations in retirement,” Richard...

The State of Retirement Income: Safe Withdrawal Rates 

What’s a safe withdrawal rate for retirees? We estimate 3.3%. However, there are various factors that could affect this percentage, resulting in the retiree withdrawing a significantly higher amount. This report explores ways that retirees can make their savings last longer without compromising their standard of living. Source @Morningstar

UK. DC schemes urged to offer more pension choices at retirement

Only 11 per cent of defined contribution (DC) pension schemes offer members a full suite of options to access funds at retirement, despite this delivering the best outcome for members, research from XPS Pensions Group has found. XPS's DC Member Outcomes Report revealed that members with access to a full range of flexibilities at retirement, including access to flexible drawdown, a cash lump sum or an annuity, are more likely to make choices that allow them to maximise the funds...

Experts say the 4% rule, a popular retirement income strategy, is outdated

Market conditions are pressuring the 4% rule, a popular rule of thumb for retirees to determine how much money they can live on each year without fear of running out later. Withdrawing money from one’s nest egg is among the most complex financial exercises for households. There are many unknowns — the length of retirement, one’s spending needs (health costs, for example) and investment returns, to name a few. The 4% rule is meant to yield a consistent stream of annual...

September 2021

UK. Pensions department faces ‘serious questions’ over non-payments

By Kevin Peachey A saga over unpaid state pensions means the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) should face "serious questions" about its work, a leading MP has said. Thousands of people reaching the state pension age of 66 have applied for their state pension, but have not received any money. The backlog has been blamed on pandemic workload and staffing issues. Stephen Timms, who chairs the Work and Pensions select committee, said the issue would be raised with ministers. "There are clearly serious...

July 2021

Jamaica. Dead or alive? Pension payments continue

The Accountant General's Department (AcGD) is struggling to ascertain if some of its high-risk pensioners — aged 90 and over — are actually alive as it continues to make monthly payments to them. Accountant General Anya Jones says efforts to verify whether these pensioners are alive have been hampered by the novel coronavirus pandemic as officers of the department are sometimes barred from entering the homes of these individuals.The department has been paying out millions to pensioners, either without verification,...