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Which preservati­on fund is best and how can I access money?

- email your questions to: money@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

QPlease, if you can advise, which is a better preservati­on fund out of the following: Sanlam, Alexander Forbes, 10X or Allan Gray — S Magagula via e-mail.

AIan Beere CA (SA) CFP®, MD & wealth manager at Netto Invest, responds:

When transferri­ng your pension or provident credit to a preservati­on fund, there are three things to determine.

● Who am I happy with to be my administra­tor?

The administra­tor is the responsibl­e custodian of your money and is accountabl­e to the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FCSA) for its safety and for investing it in the funds you select, sending you regular

reports, attending to tax and other compliance.

● What is my investment objective?

If you are close to retirement your objectives may be different to those of a young profession­al. A soon-to-be retiree may be more focused on capital preservati­on than on high growth and will use a defensive investment with a lower riskreturn profile. A young investor is likely to want the best growth over the long time with more risk and thus more return.

● Who do I trust to manage my money?

Now that you’ve establishe­d your investment objective, you must determine which asset manager will manage this investment for you. The administra­tor will have access to a number of different asset managers. Each asset manager will have a fund for each likely objective. Some investment­s use a passive approach and are not actively managed, which makes them cheaper.

Sanlam, Alexander Forbes and Allan Gray provide administra­tion and access to a wide range of managers and investment­s, while 10X primarily offers passive index investment­s, handling both administra­tion and investment management.

You should also have an option to leave your money with your current retirement fund in the default investment portfolio. All of your options are safe and regulated by the FCSA. To make an appropriat­e choice, it may be worth investing in good, profession­al advice.

QIs it possible to quit my preservati­on fund or move the money to a different fund or as a savings to gain access to the funds? I

withdrew a third when I resigned and put the rest in a preservati­on fund. I would now like to withdraw some of my money, but I am told I can’t Jonathan, via e-mail.

ACraig Gradidge, CFP® and investment and retirement planning specialist at GradidgeMa­hura Investment­s, responds.

There are two types of preservati­on funds; pension preservati­on and provident preservati­on funds. They are defined in the Income Tax Act and are governed by Practice Note 1/2012, and the rules of the particular preservati­on fund.

Practice Note 1/2012 states: “A member exiting their former occupation­al fund can access a portion of their benefit in cash

before transferri­ng to the pension preservati­on fund or provident preservati­on fund. Such a transfer is tax-neutral and does not preclude the member from accessing a further once-off withdrawal benefit in the pension preservati­on fund or provident preservati­on fund.”

From this it would seem that you should be able to access money from your preservati­on fund. However, the withdrawal may have been processed from the preservati­on fund and not from your occupation­al fund (your company retirement fund). This could explain why you are unable to access funds now. Alternativ­ely, the rules of the preservati­on fund you’re invested in may not allow you to take another withdrawal if you have already withdrawn from the occupation­al fund.

You may move your preservati­on fund to another product provider, but it will have to remain in a preservati­on fund wrapper (for example you could move from a Momentum preservati­on fund to a Stanlib preservati­on fund). This you can do via what is known as a section 14 (of the Pension Funds Act) transfer. However, this will still not enable you to access any funds from the new preservati­on product provider.

You will only be able to make another withdrawal — maximum one-third if it’ sa pension preservati­on, or all if it’s a provident preservati­on fund — from age 55 when you can retire out of the fund. This withdrawal is subject to tax using the retirement tax tables and will be aggregated with your first withdrawal when calculatin­g your tax liability.

There are a fair number of variables at play when you’re making decisions around retirement products and planning in general. These include tax, income planning and structurin­g, portfolio structurin­g, cost management and legislatio­n. You will get value from consulting an experience­d, qualified and independen­t financial adviser, preferably one who carries the CFP® designatio­n.

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