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Some terminology explained

By www.thebull.com.au/


Allocated pension

What does it mean?

An allocated pension is a product purchased by retirees to convert their super savings into a regular income. Retirees use allocated pensions to pay themselves an income over a time period roughly equivalent to their life expectancy. Pension payments can be made monthly, quarterly, half yearly and yearly and are deposited directly into a retiree's bank account.

Comment.

Allocated pensions are by far the most popular product around for retirees looking to live off their super savings in retirement.

So why are allocated pensions so popular? Why don't retirees just withdraw their funds out of super and dump the lot into a term deposit or savings account, or even use their super to buy other investments such as an investment property or shares?

The major reason here is tax. Allocated pensions save you tax compared to most other strategies in retirement. That's because any investment earnings in an allocated pension - interest, dividends, capital gains - are tax free (age 60 and above). In comparison, interest made on a term deposit or rent received on an investment property held outside the super environment are subject to tax at the retiree's marginal tax rate. 

When a retiree buys an allocated pension to house their super savings they don't have to say goodbye to the money forever. At any time, you can opt to withdraw all, or part, of your money from an allocated pension by simply filling in a couple of forms (check to see if there are any restrictions on the number of lump sum withdrawals allowed each year). You may use the money to buy a business or property, or to go on an overseas trip. Some retirees assist their children to buy a house. The allocated pension offers this needed flexibility. 

So how much does an allocated pension pay? Well, that depends on how much you have to start with, and how old you are. The Government sets minimum limits, which are calculated when the pension is established and recalculated at the beginning of each financial year.

You can change the amount and frequency of your pension payments whenever you need to, but you can't turn an allocated pension on or off like a tap. Once started, you must receive at least the minimum payment each year. The pension ceases when the account balance hits zero.

Allocated pensions aren't just cash accounts. Retirees have a raft of investment choices at their fingertips including Aussie and international shares, managed funds, listed property, fixed interest and cash. The aim of an allocated pension is to not simply eat into your capital, but to actually make money in retirement as well. Retirees drawdown a combination of capital and investment earnings to live on. Cleary, the more money you make on your investments, the longer your retirement money will last - and the more holidays you can enjoy.

Allocated pensions are not just popular with retirees (those who are permanently retired and have reached preservation age). Pre-retirees, over age 55, looking to boost their super before retiring completely often buy allocated pensions in order to undertake the transition to retirement strategy.

Inflation

What does it mean?

Inflation, otherwise known as Consumer Price Inflation (CPI), is a rise in the level of prices of goods and services, which reduces consumers' purchasing power.

Comment.

Inflation is the true enemy of building wealth and investors should put measures in place to protect against inflation's corrosive downside.

"Inflation" can be defined as "the state of affairs when the value of money falls and the prices of goods and services increase, other things being equal".

Interest rates move up and down from time to time - partly because of market forces but, especially in the case of short term rates, mainly because of action by the Reserve Bank of Australia. The reason given by the RBA for increasing rates is to slow down the economy, in the hope that making borrowing more expensive will reduce the demand for labour and other resources, from both home purchasers and businesses.

However, this rationale overlooks two things - that higher interest rates are themselves a direct inflationary factor and that such rates also enable the recipients of higher interest payments (including retired persons) to increase their spending. This latter is inflationary because it increases the demand for goods and services without correspondingly increasing their supply.

Inflation is very relevant to investors. Its effect can best be illustrated by an analogy. If the Federal Government were to go to all owners of five-room houses and compulsorily acquire one of their rooms without compensation, then there would probably be a revolution.

Again, if the Government were one night to confiscate 20 per cent of all deposits in savings institutions - or to impose an equivalent special one-off tax - then the political outcry would be unbearable.

But that is precisely what the Government does to savings during a period of inflation, except that it does it more surreptitiously, by keeping the number of dollars constant while reducing their unit value, rather than the other way around, and by doing this in small gradual stages rather than in one dramatic fell swoop.

Investment in securities denominated in dollars is thus a sure recipe for disaster in times of high inflation and really poses a much larger hazard than most people seem to realise.

The risk here is different in character from the other risks inherent in equity situations, but the chance of loss - as the reduction in asset values is a virtual certainty - is in a sense much greater.

Nor, despite a popular belief to the contrary, can investors avoid erosion of their savings by making deposits on an "at call" basis rather than for longer terms. Either way, after 365 days a year's inflation will have been at work.

This situation affecting a unit of currency should be contrasted with the position of other units in common use. The length represented by one metre and the mass represented by one kilogram do not change each year.

The RBA uses monetary policy in an endeavour to keep inflation within a target range of between 2 and 3 per cent. This sounds reasonable enough over a short period, but such rates can be quite devastating over a lifetime. To illustrate, in the 40 years to 31 December 2007 the Consumer Price Index (CPI) has increased from 15.8 to 160.1. This means that in that period the purchasing power of the Australian currency has fallen by over 90 per cent.

A hypothetical investor with a portfolio which yielded no income but the total value of which moved up exactly in line with the CPI would more or less preserve the purchasing power of his or her savings. However, such an investor would have had no reward for the sacrifice made by not spending the money or the risks which any investment entails. Ideally, therefore, investors need to outperform the CPI - after allowing for income tax - and to do so by a reasonable margin each year. Otherwise they are effectively going backwards.

Wage movements would provide another yardstick by which inflation could be measured. In a sense this standard would be more relevant to investors, as the moral case for maintaining the purchasing power of capital is at least as strong as that for maintaining the purchasing power of labour.

Over long periods wages have moved up to a greater extent than prices, partly because of the industrial muscle of trade unions and partly because productivity gains have been passed on to the workers rather than to the suppliers of capital and know-how which made such gains possible in the first place.

Investment in ordinary shares is often recommended as a means of preserving purchasing power (as well as a means of benefiting from Australia's economic growth).

Unfortunately, there is no great correlation between the prices of goods and services and share values in the short term - as current investors are seeing every day. Nevertheless, in the long run the value of shares across the board (and of other equity investments, such as property) tends to move in the right direction, while the value of cash and fixed interest investments does not.

By http://www.compareshares.com.au/ - for more articles and information like this click here.
www.thebull.com.au is Australia's pre-eminent news and investing site for investors and traders, covering shares, superannuation, property, financial planning strategies and more.

 

 

 



21st-January-2011