LEVERAGING
ON THE MULTI FUND STRUCTURE- A VIABLE INVESTMENT FOR A HAPPY RETIREMENT-ODUNZE
REGINALD C
Images credited to Daily Express
The
National Pension Commission recently came up with the multi fund structure, a
structure that will tackle the investments need of contributors according to
their risk appetite and I quote “The National Pension Commission (“PenCom”)
recently Amended Regulation on Investment of Pension Fund Assets for the
Pension Industry. The new investment guideline introduces a multi-fund
structure, which would replace the “one size fits all” structure that puts all
active contributors into one Retirement Savings Account (“RSA”) Fund without
consideration for age or risk profile of such contributors”
The Multi-Fund structure is a framework that aims to align the age and risk
profile of RSA holders by dividing the RSA Fund into four distinct Funds. The
current RSA Fund will be sub-divided into three separate Funds, while the RSA
Retirees Fund would be the 4th Fund.
A clear
picture of this noted that fund 1 will be exposed up to 75% of variable income
instruments, fund 2 up to 55% , fund 3 up to 25% and fund 4 up to 20%. Variable
income instruments are investments that
generate income or returns that cannot
be ascertained from the date the
investments were made, not only that the prices of such instruments fluctuate
daily, these instruments include ordinary shares, collective investment
schemes(CIS), these include mutual fund, Real Estate Investment Trust , Infrastructure
Funds and Private Equity Funds . Such investment can generate high returns on
the long run but could be risky as
result of uncertainty and unexpected fluctuations in market prices and returns.
So what
this portends, it all means that all things being equal there is the possibility
of sustained increased in pension pot folios,
investment and a return on investment at the long. Will it give our retirees, a
happy retirement ?
Dona
Rosato in her article captioned “5 Secrets to a Happy Retirement” noted that
Towers Watson happiness
survey found
that retirees who rely mostly on investments had the highest financial anxiety.
Almost a third of retirees who get less than 25% of their income from a pension
or annuity were worried about their financial future; of those who receive 50%
or more of their income from such a predictable source, just under a quarter expressed
the same anxiety”
Continuing
Rosato noted that “More money makes you happier. Once you amass a comfortable
nest egg, though, the effect weakens, says financial planner Wes Moss. For his
recent book, You Can
Retire Sooner Than You Think:The 5 Money Secrets of the Happiest Retirees,
Moss surveyed 1,400 retirees in 46 states. The happiest ones had the highest
net worths, but Moss found that money’s power to boost your mood diminished
after $550,000”
According
to an article in Yahoo Finance
captioned “7 ways to Retire happy” Mandi Woodruff opined that In a new book, “You Can Retire
Sooner Than You Think,” Atlanta-based investment advisor Wes
Moss,
offers an alternative to the traditional line of thinking. Rather than focus on
a dollar amount to reach for, Moss decided to figure out what retirees needed
to be truly happy in retirement”
“I wanted to go beyond simple income numbers,” Moss says. “I wondered what it really takes to get somebody to a point where they truly feel they have a cushion and they are also enjoying life.”
“In 2012, Moss conducted an online survey of more than 1,200 workers who had either already retired or were fewer than 10 years away from retirement. He asked them questions about what type of cars they drove, where they shopped, how much their homes were worth, and, of course, how much they had saved for retirement. But he also asked about their passion projects, how often they went on vacation, what types of volunteering they enjoyed, whether or not they were satisfied with their lives, and how much time they put into their retirement planning before calling it quits. (Moss did not ask participants about overall debt levels like student loans and credit cards, but did include questions about their mortgage debt).”
What he found was that more money doesn’t equate to more happiness. The happiest retirees didn’t all drive BMWs or take 12 European cruises a year, either.”
“I wanted to go beyond simple income numbers,” Moss says. “I wondered what it really takes to get somebody to a point where they truly feel they have a cushion and they are also enjoying life.”
“In 2012, Moss conducted an online survey of more than 1,200 workers who had either already retired or were fewer than 10 years away from retirement. He asked them questions about what type of cars they drove, where they shopped, how much their homes were worth, and, of course, how much they had saved for retirement. But he also asked about their passion projects, how often they went on vacation, what types of volunteering they enjoyed, whether or not they were satisfied with their lives, and how much time they put into their retirement planning before calling it quits. (Moss did not ask participants about overall debt levels like student loans and credit cards, but did include questions about their mortgage debt).”
What he found was that more money doesn’t equate to more happiness. The happiest retirees didn’t all drive BMWs or take 12 European cruises a year, either.”
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