Posts Tagged ‘sipp investments’

ROC explains Self Invested Pension Plans (SIPP’s)

June 4th, 2011 Posted by admin | Posted in News | Tags: , , , , ,

Overseas hotel rooms classed as Commercial PropertyRetirement planning can be complex and inflexible with a lack of control and personal choice. The required contributions to build a fund in order to provide the desired level of income in retirement can be unaffordable and the performance of traditional equity (stocks and shares based) funds provided by insurance companies hasn’t been great along with the volatility of those funds.

Although most people have heard of the term SIPP there has been much confusion about what can or cannot be invested in a Self Invested Pension Plan and who can benefit from such a scheme.

A SIPP essentially can help you take control of your existing and future pension provision. A SIPP can buy property. It can borrow up to 50% of its net assets in order to fund a property purchase regardless of the investor’s status. You can start a new plan and consolidate your existing pension arrangements in to a new SIPP. There are a number of specialist SIPP providers whom accept overseas property as an acceptable asset.

Not just any overseas property can be purchase with a SIPP – only “Hotel Based” property which, has been deemed by Her Majesties Revenue & Customs (HMRC) as commercial. SIPP investors are not allowed to use their property personally. The property is deemed a “pure investment” and not a holiday home or lifestyle purchase.

An investor using a SIPP can make further contributions ongoing into their SIPP and is entitled to full tax relief which means that if a 40% tax payer paid in £100,000 it could only cost him £60,000. It is also possible to increase the amount of funds available in a SIPP by borrowing up to a further 50% of the value of the SIPP. For example if a SIPP has funds of £200,000, it can borrow another £100,000 making available £300,000 to invest.

Since pension rules were simplified in April 2006 the benefits of SIPP’s have become accessible to the wider , further still since October 2008 when HMRC allowed contracted out/SERPS monies to be accessible unlocked an estimated £50million in pension funds to the UK public that otherwise remained locked in until retirement.

So what are the benefits of investing in property with a SIPP?

  • No requirement for cash investment, so no effect on your current expenditure
  • Tax Relief on eligible contributions at your highest rate, max 40%
  • No Capital Gains Tax on property investments within a SIPP
  • No Income Tax on property investments within a SIPP
  • No dividends to be taxed on property investments in a SIPP
  • Potential Inheritance Tax benefits
  • Pre-agreed limited liability lending
  • A SIPP can be syndicated so two or more people can pool their pension funds to invest in overseas property – ideal for a husband and wife or group investment.

Any type of pension can be transferred into a SIPP, for instance many people have several ‘frozen’ pensions from previous employment or businesses and/or personal pensions that they can transfer into a SIPP. Two or more people can create a group SIPP known as a Family Pension Trust (FPT) which could be ideal for husband and wife investment.

SIPPs are allowed to invest in the following.

  • Stocks and shares listed or dealt on an Inland Revenue recognised stock exchange, including AIM
  • Unit trusts, open ended investment companies (OEICs)
  • Warrants, covered warrants
  • Government stock and fixed interest stock 
  • Un-quoted shares
  • Commercial property
  • Overseas Hotel Rooms
  • Property funds

Initially, the Government was going to allow personal pension funds to invest in residential property and this created considerable interest from investors. However in December 2005, the Chancellor announced a U-turn and the government backtracked. This has lead to confusion on the subject and it is apparent that some people do not know that they can in fact hold overseas property (hotel rooms) within a SIPP.

Hotel rooms are classed as commercial property, whilst most people don’t have a fund big enough to buy commercial units such as an office building or a warehouse. Hotel rooms however offer a different option:-

Hotel units are usually categorized as SIPP compliant if they adhere to the following statements:

  1. The investment is clearly a hotel room.
  2. The buyer has no personal usage of their room or any other room. (Unless they pay normal market rates). 
  3. The investor gains no personal benefit other than from room rental back into their pension fund i.e. no income share from hotel bar or restaurant.
  4. The investment is in no way a residential property.
  5. The unit does not have a kitchen.

It is advisable to take advice from a financial adviser when considering purchasing through a SIPP. ROC can introduce you to an independent pension specialist for this purpose.

Purchasing property maybe something you have not previously considered but the ability to now access investments using pension funds could now be an option for you without the requirement for ANY further cash investment. To discuss our SIPP approved projects contact us.

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Tennis legend Pat Cash to open hotels in Caribbean

May 7th, 2010 Posted by admin | Posted in News | Tags: , , , , ,

ROC Investments is proud to announce that Harlequin Hotels & Resorts is proposing to build a Pat Cash Tennis Hotel at Buccament Bay, St Vincent & The GrenadinesLas Canas Beach Resort in Dominican Republic and The Marquis Estate, St Lucia. The Pat Cash Tennis Hotel will be designed to offer luxury accommodation for tennis fans in an environment that will reflect Pat Cash’s love of tennis featuring memorabilia from the years he has played tennis, including his Wimbledon win. The hotel will include a restaurant and boutique stocked with the latest tennis clothing and equipment.

The hotel will be situated within the main resort and will be the perfect place for guests to stay who wish to be coached at the Pat Cash Tennis Academy as well as offering extended stays for guests who wish to take longer courses of tuition to improve their tennis game. The facility will cater for youngsters who are showing particular talent in this sport as well as for teams who wish to be coached prior to the tennis season in their home country.

Investors will be able to purchase suites within the Pat Cash Hotel Suites using a Self Invested Personal Pension (SIPP)

More information: Contact ROC Investments about Pat Cash Hotel Suites, prices and sales information, by emailing invest@rocinvestments.co.uk or calling +44(0) 1902 722 930

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SIPP rules and regulations explained

September 7th, 2009 Posted by admin | Posted in News | Tags: , , ,

David Seaton, joint managing director at Rowanmoor Pensions, describes the parameters of the SIPP rules 

Since the launch of self-invested personal pensions (SIPPs) by the then chancellor Nigel Lawson in his 1989 Budget, there have been numerous alterations when it comes to the rules and regulations. For example, many will recall the change made within the Finance Act 2004 that saw a new tax regime introduced with effect from 6 April 2006 (‘A-Day’). In 2007, another major change, the requirement for the operator of a SIPP to be regulated by the Financial Services Authority (FSA), was introduced.

Most SIPPs are established under a trust, with the trustee company controlled by the operator. Each member has a separate plan within the trust and has the right to direct the trustee to invest and disinvest their fund according to their wishes. This flexibility gives the member control over how the pension fund is managed and is why SIPPs have become one of the most popular forms of pensions.

Is it in or out?
In redesigning the pension rules, the government did not define acceptable and unacceptable investments; instead it defined certain investments as being ‘unauthorised payments’ and made them subject to tax charges. For all intents and purposes, any investment that gives rise to an unauthorised payment is therefore effectively unacceptable.

The list of those investments that aren’t permitted into a SIPP is also quite short and consists of loans to members or people or companies connected to them, tangible moveable property (with the exception of tradable gold) and residential property.

This leaves a huge list of possibilities, including investment funds, quoted and unquoted equities, pooled funds, cash deposits, commercial property and intangible property (i.e. copyrights, royalties, patents or carbon offsets). However, many SIPP operators have gone much further in what they will allow into their product plans. Indeed, the main differentiator between SIPP providers is what they will and will not accept within their SIPP.

At the simple end of the market, the list of acceptable investments is limited to unit trusts and other pooled investments. A little further up the scale, the operator will allow investments quoted on a world stock market. At this level, some operators will even restrict where cash may be held, by requesting that all cash be held in their own nominated account, whereby they will receive commission from the bank.

Some SIPP operators will permit investment in commercial property, with or without a mortgage, which is restricted by the Finance Act 2004 to 50 per cent of the net assets of the scheme at the time the mortgage is executed. Few, however, will permit offshore property.

To be able to invest in the more exciting offshore property ideas in the market a client must seek out a specialist SIPP operator. Such opportunities include hotel rooms in the Caribbean or Cape Verde (which, provided they are part of a commercial hotel, are not regarded as residential property), a vineyard rented back to a connected company and even the mooring for a boat in a marina that is rented back to the member. However, certain offshore jurisdictions like France and Spain do not recognise the legal entity of a trust and buying in these countries is often very difficult, if not impossible. Property taxes are invariably different, with annual taxation being payable on the property. Similarly, there can be huge issues in respect to inheritance tax rules on the death of the member, making buying property in these regions unviable. 

Many SIPP operators will also be hesitant in accepting other more ‘exciting’ assets such as unquoted equities, which can be troublesome, nor will they accept intangible assets such as patents and copyrights. Members contemplating investing part of their SIPP in any of these more esoteric assets must understand that by their nature they are difficult to value, therefore any information with regard to benefits from the operator cannot be prepared until proper valuations have been obtained. This can be time consuming and costly.

Every penny counts
Costs between operators vary considerably, as do the permitted assets available. Be aware of the free SIPP, there is no such thing. As a rule, if there are no set-up or ongoing administration fees applied, the costs are recouped elsewhere. For example, there may be no initial charges, but all investments must be made via a nominated bank account, which can receive perhaps 0.5 per cent commission, or made and held through the operator’s nominated investment platform, where initial commissions and up to 0.75 per cent trail commission can be taken annually. A £500,000 SIPP could therefore earn them £3,750 – hardly free. 

Investing in the more esoteric investments will naturally increase the costs. Property needs to be managed and there will be solicitors’ fees to pay as well. At the top end of the scale, with a number of complex assets, it could cost around £1,500 a year. However, for a £500,000 SIPP, this only represents a charge of 0.3 per cent. When compared with the more expensive bespoke SIPPs, which allow investment in most assets and cost around £300 to set up and around £500 a year in management fees, the ‘free’ SIPPs can seem very expensive and suddenly not quite so attractive. 

Nevertheless, the low-cost SIPP should not be written off. Using a simple, low-cost SIPP to initially build funds to a value of perhaps £100,000, before transferring to a bespoke SIPP, can be an option.

Contributions are acceptable either from the member’s employer or from the member themselves. Employer contributions are paid gross and are usually accepted as a business expense for tax purposes. The member contributes net of basic rate tax. The operator collects the basic rate tax back from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and the member can claim higher rate tax relief through their annual tax return if applicable. A member may make unlimited contributions but will only receive tax relief on 100 per cent of his net relevant earnings up to the annual allowance, which is currently £245,000 or, if the member has no earnings, £3,600. For those who are described by the government as high earners, i.e. paid tax on total income of £150,000 or more in this or one of the previous two tax years, the government is restricting the annual allowance next year as part of complicated anti-forestalling measures.

Providing an income
Benefits may be taken from age 55 (50 until 5 April 2010), and provided the lifetime allowance, currently £1.75 million (from all registered pension arrangements), has not been exceeded, 25 per cent of the fund may be taken tax free as a pension commencement lump sum. The remainder is then used to provide an income subject to income tax.

An income may be taken from the fund by way of purchasing an annuity from a life assurance company or through income drawdown, now known as unsecured pension, until the age of 75. At 75, drawdown may continue under an alternatively secured pension (ASP) or, within some SIPPs, a scheme pension. Most investors with funds in excess of £200,000 opt for drawdown in the early years, considering annuity purchase after age 70. Funds of less than £200,000 are not usually suitable for drawdown since the fees can make such a plan less viable.

If death occurs before taking any benefits, the entire fund, up to the lifetime allowance, is available for beneficiaries free from any tax. If benefits have commenced (either the pension commencement lump sum or through income drawdown) then on the death of the member, before age 75, a dependant can receive a pension, or they and any other beneficiary can receive the remaining fund less a tax charge of 35 per cent. Death post age 75 provides for a dependant’s pension, but no lump sum can be taken and any fund remaining on the death of the dependant is hit with a tax charge of 82 per cent tax.

For any taxpayer, the benefits of making pension contributions are significant. For the growing number of people who make hefty contributions, and will have a pension fund in six figures, SIPPs offer a unique savings vehicle where the member can exert control over where their money is invested. Even if the member will always rely on an IFA to advise them on their investment strategy, the SIPP is a serious contender.

Source:- http://www.whatinvestment.co.uk/saving-money/pensions/pensions-in-depth/1068577/sipp-rules-and-regulations-explained.thtml

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