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Hargreaves Lansdown hits landmark 2m clients
Investment platform and SIPP provider Hargreaves Lansdown has notched up its milestone 2 millionth client and has also seen record assets under management, according to its 2025 Annual Report.
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Failed SIPP firm clients updated ahead of legal judgment
Clients of failed SIPP provider Hartley Pensions Limited - who have had funds ring-fenced - have been given an update from joint administrators UHY Hacker Young ahead of a legal judgment expected in late October.
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JPMorgan to replace Nutmeg with new investment platform
JPMorgan is to launch a retail wealth management and investment business with its own DIY investment platform next month.
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5 year gap between dream retirement age and expectation
While people dream about retiring at 62 they do not expect to be able to retire until they hit 67, according to new research.
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Sales of escalating annuities surge
Sales of escalating Guaranteed Income for Life annuities that have some inflation protection, accounted for a fifth of all sales in 2024/25 and have increased by 17% year-on-year.
Case made for pensions dashboard, says Work and Pensions Committee
In its report on pension scams the Committee argued that a default impartial guidance appointment immediately prior to accessing a pension pot “would result in better consumer outcomes,” and the Government is moving towards that position in the Financial Claims and Guidance Bill, currently awaiting report stage in the Commons.
But MPs also demanded greater engagement earlier in life “to ensure people have pension pots worth seeking guidance on.”
The Committee called for a two-pronged package to create “informed and confident savers … more likely to shop around and take sound financial decisions about their retirement … equipped to exert that competitive pressure.”
Under the recommendations, a standard drawdown pension would include:
- the introduction of a new default decumulation pathway to support the disengaged - and protect their savings - including through NEST
- a new system of transparent and accessible information.
It was recommended that the Government should allow NEST to provide de-cumulation products from April 2019, including a new default drawdown pathway.
In keeping with the spirit of pension freedoms, savers would remain entitled to move their money wherever they wished.
Furthermore, a system of default decumulation pathways “will protect consumers who do not engage with their pension saving - but the ‘real prize’ is a properly functioning pension freedom market which offers suitable and good value pensions for more people.”
The Committee also said the case “has been made” for a single, publicly-hosted pensions dashboard, covering state, defined contribution and defined benefit pensions, funded by the industry levy, and in place by April 2019.
Rt Hon Frank Field MP, Chair of the Committee, said: “Automatic enrolment has been a runaway success, bringing millions of people on board in saving for their retirement. We want to expand that success story so that everyone, no matter how they are saving, has a simple, suitable, default pension option, with a low, capped fee. From that solid base, those who want to choose other options would retain complete freedom to do so. They would be armed with a new range of clear, transparent information in making their choices.”