The longer retirement lasts, the greater the chance of cognitive decline or dependency. Yet many drawdown plans ignore this.
So, while de-risking can feel reassuring, in practice it can introduce its own risks. Caroline Simmons, chief investment ...
The Financial Services Compensation Scheme has increased the amount of money protected for customers if their bank fails by ...
Productivity in the UK is dwindling with a surge in sick days costing British businesses, the wider economy and the nation’s ...
Including pensions in an estate for inheritance tax purposes marks one of the most significant reforms since the transferable ...
It is in an employer’s best interests to have a healthy financial workforce because it gives them the most flexibility, ...
The £1.6bn Smithson investment trust is to exit the stock market and become an open-ended fund which could lead to clients ...
More than a third of women are heading towards poverty in retirement as career breaks, childcare responsibilities and the ...
On average UK adults aged 50 to 70 think they need £403,000 to feel secure about their retirement. Research by Just Group and ...
Tatton Asset Management’s latest results show a strong performance in the first half of 2025 with profits rising to 20 per ...
The traditional approach of de-risking as clients near retirement, gradually shifting from equities to bonds and cash, no longer reflects the realities of modern retirement. Since the introduction of ...
Divorce is a juncture where clients are asked to make important financial decisions that will have a decisive impact on their ...
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