Pensions  

Charting the later life journey

This article is part of
Blended retirement income options: Cottoning on to the 'new norm'

Charting the later life journey

Before pension freedoms, retirement options were black or white. The advice was either to purchase an annuity or invest in drawdown. Now we have pension freedoms it is no longer such a binary choice and good retirement planning should involve a combination of options.

I have been advising clients and writing about retirement options long enough to be realistic about the opportunities for fine-tuning retirement advice from a single-product solution to a multi-solution approach. It is much easier to talk about, than recommend, more than one solution. So, this begs the question: what is the best way to advise a client throughout their retirement journey?

I think the key to unlocking the multi-solution approach is to recognise the various twists and turns the retirement journey takes. Although every client will be unique, there are enough similarities to map out a typical customer’s path into later life.

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There are four stages to the typical journey; before retirement, at retirement, during retirement and later retirement. At each stage there are technical and behavioural issues to consider. Most advisers are good with either technical or behavioural aspects, but few are good at both. This means advisers who want to provide the best advice need to brush up on both areas.

I will look at each of these stages and suggest solutions that may be appropriate depending on circumstances. Before we look at these stages it is worth reminding ourselves that it is often difficult to define a retirement date because more and more people are adopting a fluid transition from full-time work to full-time retirement over several years.

Take someone who decides to take their tax-free cash at age 60, but not take income until 65 because they are working part-time or on projects. There is a five-year gap when they are partially retired. Good advice will take this transition period into account. In my experience, this period of partial retirement can stretch for 10 years or more, which is further evidence that the old black-and-white model is outdated.

 

Before retirement

In the countdown to retirement, emphasis is on the investment strategy, which might mean finding the right glide path. There are some product solutions ideally placed to help manage the de-risking process. In some situations, unit-linked guarantees might have a role to play.

If tax-free cash is taken but no income, there could be a role for fixed-term income plans if investment risk needs to be eliminated.

 

At retirement

This is point where the full range of retirement income options come into play. Post pension freedoms, the trend seems to be towards drawdown in early retirement, but other solutions should not be ignored. The choice of product solutions should take account of not only client objectives, but also a view about the future trends in financial markets.

Generally speaking, at the point of retirement, many clients favour the flexibility of drawdown over the guarantee of an annuity. There is no doubt that the generous pension death benefits and advantageous tax treatment before the age of 75 swing the balance in favour of keeping pension pots in a flexible wrapper.