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UK Pensioners Won't Have To Buy Annuities Says Chancellor

19th Mar 2014 15:20

LONDON (Alliance News) - Shares in UK annuity providers plummeted Wednesday after Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne did away with compulsory annuities, giving people far more control over how they manage their pensions as they plan for retirement.

Legal & General Group PLC saw its shares plummet by 13.4% to 199.66 pence in the aftermath of the news, while fellow FTSE 100 life giant Aviva's shares fell by 6.1% to 485.30. Specialist annuities provider Partnership Assurance Group PLC, which had earlier seen some pressure on its share price after it reported a slowdown in new business sales, saw its shares plummet by 57.2% to 136.69 pence on the FTSE 250. Just Retirement Group PLC was down 40.9% at 158.00 pence.

Association of British Insurers Director General Otto Thoresen said the changes represent a challenge for "everyone involved in helping people secure their retirement income".

"These are important reforms and it is crucial for savers to get them right. It is right for people to be offered a range of options to generate retirement income, and it is crucial to ensure that customers have the information they need to make the right choice for their circumstances. The guaranteed lifetime income provided by an annuity can play an important part in discussions with customers considering their options," Thoresen said in a statement.

Delivering his fifth budget statement, Osborne unveiled the massive change alongside a host of other measures designed to help savers, such as the merging of stocks and shares individual savings accounts and increasing the annual limit to GBP15,000 from July 1.

"People who have worked hard and saved hard all their lives, and done the right thing, should be trusted with their own finances," Osborne said.

From April 2015, the government will change the tax rules to allow people to access their defined contribution pension savings as they wish from the point of retirement. The government has also published a consultation on how to implement the changes.

Drawdown of pension income under the new, more flexible arrangements will be taxed at marginal income tax rates rather than the current rate of 55% for full withdrawals.

Under the changes, people will be able to take all their pension savings as a lump sum, draw them down over time, or buy an annuity.

Osborne also unveiled changes that will come in to effect from March 27, 2014 as a first step to the wider reforms. The Chancellor said the amount of guaranteed income people need in retirement to access their savings flexibly will be reduced to GBP12,000, from GBP20,000, while the total pension savings that can be taken as a lump sum, are also to be increased by GBP12,000 to GBP30,000.

The capped drawdown withdrawal limit will be increased to 150% from 120% of an equivalent annuity, and the maximum size of a small pension pot which can be taken as a lump sum, regardless of total pension wealth, will be increased by GBP8,000 GBP10,000. The number of personal pots that can be taken under the rules is to be increased to three from two.

Osborne also said National Savings & Investments will launch a new bond to people aged 65 and over, that will offer superior interest rates to those that have come to be expected in the environment of all-time low interest rates.

He also raised the cap on premium bonds by GBP10,000 to GBP40,000.

PwC UK Insurance Leader Jonathan Howe told Alliance News that the life insurers will still play a major role in savings, and that other investment products will be created to fill the gap.

"The needs of individuals in retirement have changed hugely in the past few years and we know there's going to be much more change as people live longer, so greater flexibility around how individuals can use their access is very welcome to them," Howe said in a telephone interview.

"There will be a key role for insurers and other investment houses to provide information and guidance as part of their services," Howe said, adding that there will be an effect on the products offered by insurers heavily involved in providing annuities.

Howe said that life insurers have been in talks with the government for some time, indicating there was an awareness that reform is needed.

"I suspect the security offered by an annuity will still be very attractive to a large amount of the market. The question is what sorts of products will be available," Howe said.

"What these new products will look will depend to a large extent to how these rules look when they're finalised," Howe said.

By Samuel Agini; [email protected]; @samuelagini

Copyright © 2014 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.


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