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  • James Jones-Tinsley: Aiming for an advice-guidance sweetspot

    As Nikhil Rathi is reappointed as CEO of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for another five years, the FCA has set out its strategic direction for 2025/26, with important implications for financial advisers.

  • Lisa Webster: Over-taxation of pensions remains an issue

    HMRC’s January pension schemes newsletter announced changes to tax codes for pensions, and a few headlines followed proclaiming HMRC had finally fixed the over-taxation issue. It would be fantastic if that was the case, but despite nearly 10 years of getting it wrong, the problem isn’t resolved yet.

  • Lisa Webster: Divorce impact on lump sums raises question

    The lifetime allowance may have been consigned to the annals of history but the various forms of protection are still relevant in the new world, especially when it comes to the amount of pension commencement lump sum (PCLS) that can be taken.

  • Martin Tilley: How education can tackle pension scams

    The dark reality of pension scams is that we don’t really know how common they are. Fraud is a crime which tends to have low reporting events and with pension scams, it’s no different. The emotional toll can be as large as the financial, with some people being too embarrassed to report that they have been the victim of a scam.

  • Lisa Webster: Maximising protected tax-free cash

    While 2024 ended with a lot of doom and gloom in the pension world following the big announcement on inheritance tax (IHT), there was some good news that may have slipped under the radar of some advisers.

Latest News
A financial adviser is gearing up for a gruelling charity trek which will see him walking from John O’Groats to Lands’ End and scaling the three highest peaks for charity.

The Pensions Regulator (TPR) has warned schemes they must produce a chair's statement which is compliant with the law, after fines against two were upheld in court.

Around 350,000 UK expats living in the Gulf have been warned they could be breaking the Lifetime Allowance (LTA) limit for pensions tax relief.


The alert came from Abu Dhabi-based IFA Hoxton Capital Management.

Chris Ball, managing partner of the firm says that with many expats in the UAE working in sectors that traditionally have offered generous pension schemes back in the UK – for example, energy, construction and aviation – they are more likely to be affected by the LTA limit. 
 
People working for oil and gas companies could be the most at risk, he says.

Mr Ball said: “Just under a third of the people we speak to know what LTA is.

“Those who know what it is are typically aware of where they stand.

“However, we frequently speak to people in the oil and gas sector who have breached the LTA, some of whom have breached it by substantial margins.”
 
The Lifetime Allowance places a limit on the level of benefit that can be drawn from a pension scheme without incurring additional tax penalties.

This applies to money taken either as a lump sum or as ongoing income during retirement.

The current lifetime allowance is £1,055,000 though the figure could rise in line with inflation.
 
Mr Ball added: “If an expat finds that they are already in breach of LTA relief, our advice is for them to check if they are eligible for protection.

“If they haven’t paid in to their pension since 6 April 2016 they can apply to increase their LTA limit.

“Failing this, if they are within the European Union, transferring their pension to a Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme (QROPS) could have potential benefits.”
 
“If, however, an expat is not yet in breach but feels that they could become so, our advice is to stop paying in if they haven’t already done so, and again, if it is a viable option, to look at a QROPS to crystallise the benefits before they are in breach of the LTA.”

Baillie Gifford, the Edinburgh-based investment management partnership, is to transfer its investment trust savings scheme, including its ISA, Share Plan and Children’s Savings Plan, to Hargreaves Lansdown. 

The firm says that after an “extensive review of its investment trust savings scheme and the service it currently offers to investors, Baillie Gifford concluded that the long-term interests of plan holders are best served by a transfer of their investments to a specialist investment platform”.

More than 21,000 plan holders representing £1.3bn in funds under management are set to be transferred to the Hargreaves Lansdown platform.

Baillie Gifford selected Hargreaves Lansdown following what it called “a robust and detailed process which focused on quality of service, cost, breadth of proposition and experience of managing account transitions”.

Hargreaves Lansdown offers a wide choice of investment products, Baillie Gifford said, including SIPPs, ISAs and investment accounts and all Baillie Gifford managed investment trusts are available on the platform.



Plan holders are being contacted with further details of the transfer and their options.

During the transition period existing ISA, Share Plan and Children’s Savings Plan investors will be able to add to their respective plans.



Baillie Gifford has agreed with Hargreaves Lansdown the current charging level across all plans will not change for a period of three years from the agreed transition date.

The Baillie Gifford scheme has closed to new investors.



James Budden, director of retail marketing & distribution, Baillie Gifford, said: “The increasing variety, capability and cost effectiveness of investment platforms in the wider savings market has led us to decide plan holders of our investment trust savings scheme are best served by a specialist platform.

“We selected Hargreaves Lansdown for a number of reasons, including its ability to offer efficient access to our entire investment trust range through a broad selection of savings products.”
 
Chris Hill, CEO, Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “As one of the largest supporters of investment trusts we are pleased to welcome Baillie Gifford clients to Hargreaves Lansdown.”
FCA figures have shown a fall in the number of complaints about regulated firms.

The Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI) has raised concerns with the FCA at the decision to increase the Financial Ombudsman Service’s (FOS) compensation limit from £150,000 to £350,000, as it may have “serious unintended consequences for its member SMEs”.

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