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CETV
is not a fair reflection of the pension value, and
that the divorce petitioner may suffer an unfair
settlement if it is used. Here are a couple of
examples.
·
An
army sergeant aged 39 had 19 years service with an
accrued pension to date of £8,000 per annum.
His CETV, calculated, as is required, on a normal
retirement age of 60, was £86,000. However,
taking account of his ability to retire at age 42
after 22 years of service, a “proper” value of
his pension is £214,000, a difference of £128,000,
more than twice the equity value in their house.
·
A
businessman aged 58 has a pension of £18,000 per
annum payable from his normal retirement age of
65. The CETV was quoted at £28,000. On enquiry,
it transpired that the TV had been reduced (as is
allowed under Regulations) because of the
extremely poor funding position in the scheme and
that the unreduced value was £262,000. There is
believed to be little chance of the company
becoming insolvent over the next 7 years while the
deficit is being run off so the proper value of
the pension could be taken as the full amount, an
increase of £234,000, again much bigger than the
house value.
We
have many years of experience advising parties to
a divorce, and their legal and professional
advisers. Our approach is based on a one-on-one
meeting covering the whole financial context, to
give a (usually much-needed) picture of the main
issues which need to be addressed. This is
summarised in a short report letter.
There
are sometimes technical pensions and investment
issues, where one of the parties has a complex
pension benefit, insurance policy of investment
asset. We can provide expert reports, either for
one party or as a single joint expert where the
parties have agreed that they, and the court, will
commission just one report on a specific issue.
Typically, this might cover the actuarial
assessment of the value of a final-salary pension
scheme benefit, where the standard CETV (cash
equivalent transfer value) may not value aspects
like future early retirement benefits and future
salary increases which may be significant in the
total family assets. The report will explain the
issues for non-specialists, explain the
calculations and the uncertainties (there are
always uncertainties in assessing the value of
payments long into the future), and give our
professional opinion on the issues put to us.
Other issues might include the merits of different
options of “pension sharing” if (typically) a
divorcing wife is to receive part of her
husband’s accrued pension in a final-salary
company pension scheme – is it better to have
this within the company pension scheme, or taken
out into a personal fund?
Actuarial
assessments will often help where there are future
income and payment flows needing to be taken into
account in the financial settlement – for
example interests in trust funds, the calculation
of future maintenance payments needed to produce
an eventual retirement income, or the value of
lifetime (or limited period) occupation of the
family home.
As
authorised independent financial advisers,
Excalibur Actuaries are able to arrange
transactions in pensions and investments, working
on a non-commission basis which can substantially
enhance the value of an investment. We are able to
provide a continuing financial advisory service
where needed, for example to help a client manage
a portfolio of investment and pension funds, and
to secure income through annuities and other means
at retirement.
Excalibur
Actuaries work entirely on a partner time-fee
basis, with a firm money fee quotation provided
wherever practicable in advance of work being
undertaken. All work is done by an actuary with
over 30 years consulting experience, and a benefit
to clients is that they get an overall financial
“health-check” and access to an independent
second opinion on financial transactions, where
many individuals at the time of a divorce have to
become involved in, but have little understanding
of, complex and large transaction
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