Showing posts with label mvrs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mvrs. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Norwich Union Imposes Penalties

Norwich Union Imposes Penalties

Norwich Union has imposed hefty exit penalties on customers' holding with-profits policies.

The market value reductions (MVRs) of between 13%-22% are a heavy blow to the already beleaguered with-profits (hardly an apt name given the ongoing diminution in value of these useless products) policy holders.

The MVRs will apply to about 1.2 million of Norwich Union's 2.4 million holders of with-profits pensions, bonds and endowments.

John Lister, Norwich Union's chief actuary, is quoted in the Times:

"Since the beginning of the year we have seen equity markets, commercial property and corporate bonds fall significantly in value.

MVRs are a mechanism to ensure that those policyholders leaving or wishing to take money out of the fund do not take more than their fair share of the fund at the expense of those policyholders who remain
."

All very well but I wonder, if the with-profits funds had been better managed and profits/losses smoothed, whether such a drastic step would have been really necessary.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Friends Provident Cuts Bonuses

Friends Provident Cuts Bonuses

Those long suffering endowment policy holders who have polices managed by Friends Provident will have been disappointed to learn that it will be slashing the final bonuses it pays to long-term savers.

Friends Provident state that the value of its with-profits fund fell by more than 7% during the first half of the year.

Whilst annual bonuses are being maintained, the final bonuses are being cut. Those in the main with-profits fund are being more than halved.

A policyholder with a 15 year unitised pension plan in the main fund will receive a regular bonus of 4%, but their final bonus will be cut from 18.7% if the policy had matured in January to just 2.1% now.

Those with a 25 year policy will be paid a final bonus of 17.5%, a massive reduction from the original 40% in January.

The ongoing credit crisis and recent falls in the stock market are being blamed. All very well, but what about the previous years when the stock market was booming?

A lousy result for those who have spent years investing in these policies.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Standard Life Price Reduction

Standard Life Price Reduction

The current rout of the world stock markets has forced Standard Life to cut the price range for its listing on the UK stock market next month by 10%.

The group's 2.4 million policyholders will have their average payouts reduced to about £1,540 compared to £1,700.

Needless to say, the policyholders are far from happy with this, some are quoted as saying that they are "completely disillusioned" with the company.

The price range for the shares has been brought down from 240-290p to 210-270p.

Sandy Crombie, its chief executive, said the board and its advisers "had a very serious discussion about delaying".

He compared the float process with "a juggernaut, difficult to stop once it is launched".

This is rather ironic as only a few years ago Crombie fought against listing Standard Life, and managed to persuade the policyholders to vote against it. That was back in 2000, when the policyholders would have made ten times as much as they are doing now.

A cynic might question why Crombie still holds office?

Phil Needham, a policyholder, is quoted as saying:

"I'm completely disillusioned with Standard Life.

My own payment was expected to be between 7,000 and 9,000, but this development will knock about 10 per cent off this figure. They ought to have demutualised five years ago.

As a company over the past five years its performance has been appalling
."

This fall in price leaves them open to a hostile bid.

Given this shambles, and the ongoing industry wide endowment policy fiasco, it is hardly surprising that people have totally lost confidence in Britain's life assurance industry.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Norwich Union Raises Bonuses

Norwich Union Raises Bonuses

In a rare piece of good news, for some of those holding endowment policies, Norwich Union has announced that it will be raising bonuses on some of its with profits endowment policies.

This will be the first increase since 1991, that fact alone shows just how badly endowment policies have been performing.

As noted many times before; why were these polices, when they were obviously failing, still sold by the life assurance companies?

Norwich Union said that it had decided to raise the rates paid on certain with profits policies in the CGNU (which includes General Accident) and CULAC (Commercial Union) funds, on those with profits policies taken out before October 1998.

The bonus rates will be increased from 1% to 2% in the CGNU fund, and people in the CULAC fund will be paid 1.5% compared with 0.5% previously.

Norwich said all other bonus rates would remain unchanged, and that there would be no changes to the value of maturity payouts or the current levels of "market value reduction".

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Abbey's Curate's Easter Egg

Abbey's Curate's Easter Egg

Abbey has presented its with profits policy holders with something of a curate's egg for Easter.

Despite benefiting from improved investment performance on with profits funds, Abbey will pay no annual bonuses on Scottish Provident, Abbey National Life and Scottish Mutual policies.

How nice of them!

However, they are going to reduce Market Value Reductions (MVR's), the penalties for early surrender, for some policyholders and reintroduce terminal bonuses on some long-term policies.

Abbey's Scottish Provident fund had a return of 10.5% last year, with Abbey National Life and Scottish Mutual showing 9.5% for the same period.

MVR's have been reduced by 6%. As noted, there are no annual bonuses declared for 2004, except where the policies carry guaranteed bonuses.

Scottish Mutual's traditional 25 year maturing endowments now pay a terminal bonus of 30%, an increase of 5%. The 15 year policies now receive a 5% terminal bonus, no change on the previous period.

Abbey National Life 10 year pension plans receive a 5% terminal bonus, introduced for single premium policies, and 1% for regular premiums. Scottish Provident?s 20 year endowment terminal bonus goes up from 0% to 7%.

These "improvements" are on the backs of large cuts in the past. So don't bother getting the champagne out!

At this rate, if MVR's continue to decline, investors will at least be able to take their money out and put it somewhere more useful instead.

At the end of the day endowment policy holders are being screwed left, right and centre!