One in five retirees more likely to seek advice post-Brexit
19% of this year’s retirees are more likely to seek financial advice due to uncertainty caused by the decision to leave the EU, according to research from Prudential.
"Wth one in three new retirees telling us that their retirement plans have been affected by the referendum result, it is clear that uncertainty is having an impact for some."
14% say they are worried about the negative impact of the post-referendum market volatility on their pension fund and more than one in four fear that Brexit will have a negative long-term impact on their retirement finances
Overall, 33% of those surveyed said the result of last June’s referendum has impacted their plans for retirement.
11% of those who had planned to retire in 2017 have now changed their retirement date as a direct result of the outcome of the referendum. In fact, more than one in every 20 of this year’s retirees (6%) have actually changed the country they had planned to retire in including some, who had always planned to stay in the UK, now looking at options to move overseas.
However, two thirds of people planning to retire in 2017 (67%) say that the vote to leave the EU has had no impact at all on their retirement plans, and one in eight believe that leaving the EU will be good for their long-term finances in retirement.
Kirsty Anderson, a retirement expert at Prudential, said: “People planning to retire this year are expecting the highest retirement incomes since 2008 – so on the face of it, Brexit has had little impact on their retirement expectations. However, looking below the surface, there is a degree of uncertainty and nervousness among many of this year’s retirees.
“As you would expect, for many people who have been planning and saving for their retirement for most of their working lives, even the biggest of political upheavals won’t make a difference to their long-term plans. But with one in three new retirees telling us that their retirement plans have been affected by the referendum result, it is clear that uncertainty is having an impact for some.
“It is encouraging to see that faced with uncertainty, be it around the performance of their investments or where they plan to set up home after their working lives, the Class of 2017 are seeking professional financial advice. It is also important to remember that pension saving is for the long term and, irrespective of single events no matter how momentous, the best way for most people to provide for a comfortable retirement is to save as much as possible from as early as possible, into a pension.”
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