Putting the scores on the doors reveals that I progressed to my Financial Independence number at a rate greater than 0.9% per month. In hindsight this wasn’t because of any one particular silver bullet but instead was made possible by focusing on the personal finance many, rather than a few, or even the one talked about so often, investment return. Putting it another way I focused on the personal finance AND. Mechanically that included earning more and spending less and an appropriate portfolio and minimising taxes and minimising expenses and investment return. Psychologically that included starting and determination and accepting I’ll make mistakes and never becoming a victim to name a few.
Over the last couple of weeks I think I’ve shown this trait again by maximising pension contributions while also minimising expenses.
I have two low cost SIPP’s (two rather than one is for risk minimisation reasons) in which I buy low cost tracker products. This is my method of minimising pension wrapper expenses and investment product expenses. However, even though I have these and they would enable me to defer tax if I invested in them directly I choose not to use this route. Instead all my contributions enter pension wrappers via my employer’s expensive defined contribution old school insurance company group personal pension. I do it this way as in addition to deferring tax like I could also do in the SIPP this maximises my contributions in a few more ways:
Over the last couple of weeks I think I’ve shown this trait again by maximising pension contributions while also minimising expenses.
I have two low cost SIPP’s (two rather than one is for risk minimisation reasons) in which I buy low cost tracker products. This is my method of minimising pension wrapper expenses and investment product expenses. However, even though I have these and they would enable me to defer tax if I invested in them directly I choose not to use this route. Instead all my contributions enter pension wrappers via my employer’s expensive defined contribution old school insurance company group personal pension. I do it this way as in addition to deferring tax like I could also do in the SIPP this maximises my contributions in a few more ways:
- My company does an employer match up to a few percent, which of course I take advantage of, however I also contribute a lot more than this for the two reasons below;
- My company allows salary sacrifice which means I get an extra 2% contribution into my pension rather than it being lost to employee national insurance contributions;
- My company adds 10% of the 13.8% employer national insurance contributions that they save if I sacrifice into the pension.