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QROPS Pension Transfer Value Is Up 25%

The average value of QROPS pension transfers rose by a quarter last year to top £100k per transfer. That’s according to HMRC figures released last week:

The Calculation

  • In the tax year 2014-2015, there were 20,100 transfers with a total value of £1.76bn. The average value (i.e. mean) of each transfer was therefore £1.76bn/20,100 = £87.5k.
  • In the tax year 2015-2016, there were 13,700 transfers with a total value of £1.5bn. The average value (i.e. mean) of each transfer was therefore £1.5bn/13,700 = £109.5k.
  • A rise in mean value per QROPS transfer from £87.5k in 2014/15 to £109.5k in 2015/16 represents a rise of 25%.
 

QROPS market value– mature at £1.5bn in 2016

The total value of QROPS transfers “written” (which is the term the pros use) dropped by 15% between 2014/15 and 2015/16 to stand at £1.5bn. Some analysts have suggested that this 15% fall in total value represents a natural levelling out in a sector which has experienced explosive growth in the past but is now maturing. Either way, £1.5bn of QROPS transfers going through last year represents a great deal of UK consumer’s cash; it’s not as if the market is on its last legs, that’s for sure.  

QROPS market volume – the three reasons behind the fall last year

The total volume of QROPS transfers written dropped by 32% last year. This decline in activity did not come as a surprise to the industry. Three events are generally agreed to have been influential:
  • July 2015: Australian QROPS slashed Until June 2015, Australia hosted over 3000 QROPS, making it the biggest QROPS centre in the world. And then, in one fell swoop, the number of Australian QROPS that HMRC was prepared to tolerate was reduced to one. Just a single scheme! Dramatic, but not unexpected: Australian pension schemes were known not to be in line with the new UK Pension Freedoms, so action on the HMRC’s ROPS list was likely. Why? Because Australian schemes allow for pay-outs before the age of 55 (in the case of “serious financial hardship”) and this fails the HMRC’s “pension age test”. (There were 361 Australian ROPs on the HMRC list updated in December 2016)
  • April 2015: “Advice Safeguard” introduced Any transfer out of a final salary schemes valued at over £30k would from this point require financial advice from a UK-based FCA-regulated advisor. (It now looks likely that the law will be changed further to allow expats to employ local advisors). This measure was understood to have put consumers off.
  • April 2015: Ban on transferring UK government worker pensions Those in unfunded defined contribution schemes were no longer permitted to transfer their pension out. This measure affected workers in the UK Armed Forces, schools, police force, NHS, fire fighting service and civil service. Anecdotally, some UK accountants insist that this was the ONLY reason why QROPS transfers fell off last year.

Verdict

  So we’ve seen a drop in QROPS transfer volume of 30% and an increase in value of 25% in the space of a single year. There’s a good argument for saying it’s volatile business as usual in the QROPS sector; nothing to see here! The outlook for the sector remains strong.When there’s £1.5bn worth of business being done in a year, it’s clearly not a sector that’s on its last legs. And it is certainly reassuring that the fall in volume was no mystery (with the three likely factors outlined above). When it comes to which schemes are safe to transfer into, ongoing confusion over ROPS versus QROPS is likely to continue. The HMRC has this month updated the list of Recognised Overseas Pension Schemes (ROPS). This is what used to be called informally “The QROPS List” until the HMRC suddenly stopped using the term QROPS altogether (although the “Q”, i,e. the reference to “Qualified” remains intact in the webpage address). At the top of this list, the HMRC write that, “HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) can’t guarantee these are recognised overseas pension schemes (ROPS) or that any transfers to them will be free of UK tax.” Consumers aiming to move their pension out of the country still face uncertainty because a question is still, some say, going begging.If the HMRC can’t guarantee ‘these are recognised overseas pension schemes (ROPS)’ then who is supposed to do so, when the entire scheme is in HMRC hands? Well, let’s not get carried away. As with many sectors of personal finance, business that looks intractable from the outside is routinely achieved within the world of QROPS, so things probably aren’t as ambiguous as they (continue to) seem when it comes to the HMRC’s official position on its own scheme of categorisation. You’d just hope that they’d make it a little easier for the consumer! And with wide-ranging changes to QROPS legislation laid out this month by the Government in the consultation Finance Bill, consumers at any part of the QROPS process need to stay alert.

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