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Hargreaves Lansdown hits landmark 2m clients
Investment platform and SIPP provider Hargreaves Lansdown has notched up its milestone 2 millionth client and has also seen record assets under management, according to its 2025 Annual Report.
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Failed SIPP firm clients updated ahead of legal judgment
Clients of failed SIPP provider Hartley Pensions Limited - who have had funds ring-fenced - have been given an update from joint administrators UHY Hacker Young ahead of a legal judgment expected in late October.
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JPMorgan to replace Nutmeg with new investment platform
JPMorgan is to launch a retail wealth management and investment business with its own DIY investment platform next month.
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5 year gap between dream retirement age and expectation
While people dream about retiring at 62 they do not expect to be able to retire until they hit 67, according to new research.
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Sales of escalating annuities surge
Sales of escalating Guaranteed Income for Life annuities that have some inflation protection, accounted for a fifth of all sales in 2024/25 and have increased by 17% year-on-year.
Government may provide life expectancy estimate to consumers
The move would be part of a wider campaign by the government to educate the public about their retirement choices and how much income they may need in retirement.
Pensions minister Steve Webb told Sky News that consumers needed an idea of how long they might live on average so that they could make informed choices when it came to retirement planning.
According to Mr Webb, many individuals underestimated how much they would need to live comfortably in retirement and a significant proportion guessed that they would die earlier than the statistics suggested.
Mr Webb told Sky News: "If you are thinking about this, what do you do? For best guidance you probably think about how long your grandparents lived. But that is two generations out of date."
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It is likely he will ask pension providers to give people an estimate as part of pensions guidance to be rolled out next April. The advice is linked to major pension guidance reforms unveiled in the Budget. Budget changes will drop the obligation to buy an annuity and instead give people more choice about how they take their pension.
Mr Osborne said in the Budget that it would provide guaranteed "free, impartial face-to-face guidance" for individuals reaching retirement through a new "duty" on pension providers to deliver the advice.
However, while many Financial Planners have welcomed the move some have been sceptical that the relatively low sums to be invested in this service (about £20m nationwide) would provide anything more than the most basic, low cost advice.