Personal Pension  

Guide to helping mid-lifers plan for retirement

  • Describe what mid-lifers need to consider when saving for retirement.
  • List how advisers can help mid-lifers prioritise their pension and what tools providers can offer to help.
  • Identify how women can ensure they are financially prepared for retirement given the pensions gap.
CPD
Approx.60min
Guide to helping mid-lifers plan for retirement

Introduction

Those Britons aged between 45 and 65 - the mid-lifers - need to be thinking about their retirement.

Often referred to as ‘the squeezed middle’, this age group has lots of calls on their earnings and savings though, which means planning for their later years can end up way down their list of priorities.

But advisers can play a role in helping this demographic see the value in planning for retirement.

The features in this guide will consider, with mid-lifers rarely knowing the exact details of their retirement or what to expect, what should advisers ask to assist them in their planning? 

It will also look at what providers are offering to assist intermediaries catering for clients in the mid-life phase, and how advisers are in a key position to help this age group reassess their financial priorities.

Finally, the guide will cover, with women much less prepared for retirement than men due to a range of factors, what can advisers do? 

This guide is worth an indicative 60 minutes of CPD.

Contributors to this guide: Barry Davidson, head of financial planning at Thorntons Investments; Jessica List, pension technical manager at Curtis Banks; Fiona Tait, technical director at Intelligent Pensions; Mark Stewart, director of Sheards Wealth Management; Paul Latham, managing director of Octopus Investments; Neil Hugh, head of strategy and development at Standard Life; Niral Parekh, head of UK retail asset and wealth management at Capco; Keith Richards, chief executive of the Personal Finance Society; Emma Douglas, head of DC at LGIM; Jason Witcombe, chartered financial planner at Progeny Wealth; Tony Vail, chief investment officer at Wealth Wizards; Jon Dean, head of retirement strategy at Altus Consulting; Anthony Carty, group financial planning and business development director at the Clifton Asset Management Group; Lynda Whitney, partner at Aon; Dr Matthew Connell, director of policy and public affairs at the Chartered Insurance Institute; Paul McNamara, chief executive of Evalue; Samantha Seaton, chief executive of MoneyHub; Tsitsi Mutiti, investment manager at Charles Stanley; Julie Mitchell, wealth planner at Independent Women; Rebecca Robertson, director and IFA at Evolution Financial Planning; PLSA; London Institute of Banking and Finance; Standard Life; Legal & General Investment Management; Pensions Policy Institute; Scottish Widows.

Joe McGrath and Liz Pfeuti are freelance financial journalists at Rhotic Media

In this guide

CPD
Approx.60min

Please answer the six multiple choice questions below in order to bank your CPD. Multiple attempts are available until all questions are correctly answered.

  1. According to a poll by the London Institute of Banking and Finance, more than a third of those surveyed had realised what?

  2. Standard Life beings sending five-yearly pre-retirement communications to its customers from what age?

  3. Mr Dean says pension products remain what?

  4. Mr Witcombe says his clients in their middle age face having to what?

  5. As savers reach their 40s, women have an average of how much in savings and investments, according to a Scottish Widows report?

  6. Ms Mitchell says millennial women want three things. Which one of the below is not in her list?

Nearly There…

You have successfully answered all the questions correctly, well done!

You should now know…

  • Describe what mid-lifers need to consider when saving for retirement.
  • List how advisers can help mid-lifers prioritise their pension and what tools providers can offer to help.
  • Identify how women can ensure they are financially prepared for retirement given the pensions gap.

I completed this CPD in

To bank your CPD please complete the form below.

Were the stated learning objectives met?

Why weren't they met?

What did you learn from undertaking this CPD exercise?

Why did you undertake this piece of learning?

Any comments about this article or FTAdviser's CPD in general?

Banked!

Congratulations, you have successfully completed and banked this piece of CPD

Already Banked!

You have already banked for this article.

To bank your CPD you must sign in or

Register

One or more questions have been incorrectly answered,
 please review your answers and try again.

Please complete all the above text fields to bank your CPD.

More Pensions CPDSee my completed CPDSee all CPD