From The Daily Mail:
"More than £120billion has been added to the potential value of the next generation’s pensions in the last month following the stock market turmoil.
The National Association of Pension Funds released figures last night showing the true benefit to future savers of the crisis that has shifted share prices closer to their true value. The savings – worth between 6 and 7 per cent of money paid into pension funds in future – equate to a discount for future savers equivalent to £2,000 for every man, woman and child in Britain, or £4,800 for every family.
But the benefits will be far higher for many who have not yet contributed into work and personal pensions. The figures cover the increase in value of defined benefit schemes, defined contribution pensions and personal pensions. They are based on the performance of all world stock markets between July 8 and August 8...
"Not even in the global financial crisis did we see such extraordinary buying opportunities," said Justin Gallagher, a trader at Royal Bank of Scotland.
Joanne Segars, chief executive of the National Association of Pension Funds, said: "Pension funds will be invested in a variety of assets. While we have estimated that the total value of assets in pension schemes has been reduced by 6-7 per cent over the last month, current and future savers should remember that what they are buying is the stream of future dividends and capital gains. Dividends are fairly steady over time, so current and future savers have just been offered a huge discount; and instead of being forced to subsidise the Baby Boomers' capital gains, today's savers will be able to realise those gains themselves when they retire."
I'm Sure It's Due To An Increase Of Something In The Area...
51 minutes ago
3 comments:
So NAPF believe that share prices and dividends will remain constant for 40-50 years (i.e. same as today's values).
But then Joanne Segars talks of capital gains. On what?
I am confused.
VFTS, the future dividends and share price will be £x. We do not know what £x will be, but so what? It will be the same regardless of this year's fluctuations in share prices.
So if the share was 100p yesterday and 90p today and I buy it from you today, you've lost 10p and my future gain will be 10p higher. Share prices are NOT real money, the dividends and profits are real money.
"Pension funds will be invested in a variety of assets"
How true. At the bottom of the market they switch to bonds, and then afetr share prices have recovered, they're back into equities.
Such sophisticated strategy is what we pay the fund managers for.
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