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I would recommend that everyone takes time to read the Green Paper called 'strengthening the incentive to save' – a consultation on pension tax relief.

I guess by now I shouldn’t be surprised at anything that emerges from the regulator on the subject of Sipps. There have been numerous well documented failures in the advice regime governing Sipps that it’s hard to believe that worse could follow.

The Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) has recently issued its annual Fiscal Sustainability Report. This report looks at how government spending and revenues may evolve over the next 50 years and how this will impact on public sector net debt.

And so as the dust settles on April’s seismic changes to the pensions regime what can the Sipp market expect from a new Government and new Pensions Minister.

At the time of writing the new pensions landscape is less than four weeks away. And yet quite remarkably no-one seems able to predict with any confidence just how pension savers will respond.

2015 is a watershed for me. It heralds the end of one journey and the start of another. It's difficult to be precise but sometime around 6 April will probably mark the transition point.

For someone who's been involved with the Sipp market since its inception 2014 by any measure was an extraordinary year – and a year of considerable contrasts.

I don't know about you but I'm becoming rather disillusioned with the SIPP market and the bad news stories that seem to be more regular and more alarming.

 

I have been calling for reform of the regulatory framework for SIPPs almost from the time that SIPPs were first regulated in 2007. 
Writing this blog on the last day of 2013 provides an ideal opportunity to reflect on what happened to the Sipp market during 2013 – and to look forward to 2014.
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