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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: 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.

  • Tilley: Is the age 75 trigger date now irrelevant?

    Age 75 has been an important milestone in pension rules since A day in 2006. It was the latest age at which a compulsory annuity purchase was required (prior to Pensions Freedoms). It's arguably it’s long been an arbitrary line in the sand, noting that life expectancy has been on the increase for the last 20 years, but this trigger age has remained unchanged.

Latest News
The number of Fidelity’s customers using Pension Wise before contacting the company has risen to 20%.

A pension advisory business has reported 11 possible pension scam companies that are appearing in Google ads or search results.

Fines worth just under £170,000 were handed out to firms for auto-enrolment failings in the 12 months from April 2014.

There were ten whistleblowing complaints about the Sipp sector in 2014/15, the FCA has revealed.

Money troubles are what soon-to-be retirees fear most – more so than their health - a poll suggested.

The proportion of Sipp related complaints which were upheld by the Financial Ombudsman Service in the first quarter this financial year was lower than the trend over the last two years.

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